Ji ontrost gitmorral. A. J. GERILITSON, - Editor. .TMED.AY, DEC. 4, 1866. Meeting of Congress. The second session of the 39th Con gress commenced at Washington on Mon day.' Of the nature of the President's Message nobody seems to have any idea. He seems to have kept his own counsel, and most likely there is no person outside of his cabinet who knows anything about the document. We will publish it in our next issue, and give our readers a chance to judge of its merits or demerits them selves. Against Impeachment Ex-Postmaster General Dennison has written a letter on the political situation, in which, although differing with the President in regard to his restoration pol icy., he wholly rejects the policy of im peachment, and says. that Presider' t John son would have to commit many infinite ly more flagrant acts than he is yet ac cused of to enable an indictment to stand. Of course Congress will be bitter and vi olent ; but the " impeachment" theory is about talked to death. Negro Suffrage. The New Hampshire Patriot thus speaks its sentiments and that of the party in the Granite State upon this question : " We da not propose to go over to rad icalism just yet, nor do we propose to ad vocate bad measures that we have here tofore opposed, simply because they seem likely to prevail. For thirty years the Democracy have firmly resisted Northern interference with the internal affairs of the South. Upon that point the chief is sue between them and their opponents has rested. Slavery was the subject of con tention suffrage is now the subject. The right to interfere with one is no more ap parent than with the other; the right does not exist. We have so held in re gard to slavery ; we so hold in regard to suflipge. Each State has the undoubted right to regulate the matter of suffrage for itself; this is admitted by one half the radicals themselves ; and we hold it to be unjust, unwise and impertinent, for people outside of a State to interfere in the matter at all. This hag always been the Democratic doctrine and practice ; Yet now we are urged to abandon this safe, just and constitutional ground, to eat our own words as to such interference, belie tel our professions, and enter upon a crusade to force the Southern people to I adopt negro suffrage! And we are to do this in order "take the wind out of the sails of the Radicals"—to get ahead of them in their own line—to outdo them in their own work, and thus get them down! This may be "smart ;" it may be that the "negro question could thus be gotten out of the way ;" but we are very confident that the Democratic party would "be gotten out of the way" first. That party cannot abandon its great doctrine of non interference with the' internal affairs of the State. " We are as anxious as any one to see the negro question disposed of; but we cannot yet see our way clear to the "ad vanced views" of the Chicago Times. It is undoubtedly "wise to accept the inev itable when the inevitable comes ;" but because we think a thing, is inevitable we do not deem it wise to aid in bringing it about, while deeming it wrong and un just. Death is inevitable, but that is no excuse for or justification of suicide or homicide. The fact is, the Democratic party has nothing to do with the ques tion of negro suffrage in the South, except to oppose all efforts to force that measure upon the States. If the Southern States desire to grant suffrage to negroes, it is their right to do so; and if they do not see fit to do it, they have the right to re fuse. It is their business, and its settle ment should be left to them." These are sound views. They are foun ded alike upon sound principle and sound policy, and will stand the test of experi ence. =ZI Sr The Doylestown Intelligencer, .2. rad ical organ, in speaking of the two negroes being elected to the Massachusetts Leg islature says : 64 It seems to us that the Massachusetts people ,will be most creditably represent ed.' ; - Of course the " people" referred to are the Republicans who nominated and elec ted the negroes over their white rivals. Coal Coming. Down. At the regular monthly sale of coal from the Scranton, Pensylvania mines, held in New York city, on Tuesday, there was - a considerable falling off from the pri ces obtained October 31st, of this year.— The difference in the prices was in favor of the; consumer, in this instance, which is assuredly a gratifying fact to all class es, and especially to the poorer ones, in view of the winter now at hand. 1=1:=1 'lark is said that the story that Maxi :oin sailed from Mexico on the 22d ult. proves to be untrue. The St. Louie Republican ea,ya the Eon. John Hogan will conteat General Reknit in the next C011greill: The Democracy of the West. If there is one principle more deeply in terwoven with the fabric of Western De mocraoy than another, it Is that of op• position to the elevation of the negroes to full political equality with white men. The legislation of all the States in which they have had a majority proves this fact. Nowhere in the free States have the laws regulating the negro race been so radical and far reaching as in the West, and no where have they been so uniformly en forced. While the civil rights of the ne gro were respected and guarded, he has not been permitted to approach the bal lot box or to become a portion of the gov erning class. When these facts aro taken into consideration it is not wonderful that the movement of the Chicago Times should create a decided sensation among the Democracy in that section of the Un ion. The people en masse are opposed to the new position of the Times, and the Democratic journals are unanimous in their denunciation of this abandonment of one of the cardinal points in the Demo cratic faith. The Illinois Democratic country press, in particular, do not sym pathize with the Times since its apostasy from the old landmarks of the party. If Democracy had any cardinal principle at all, it was unqualified opposition to ne gro suffrage in all forms. The Times is not going to take any considerable body of the Democracy into the camp of the Radicals. The Ottawa Free Trader, after declaring the Times' proposition " brutal ly insulting to the Democracy," adds : We could respect the Times even yet, if it made professions of an honest con version; but to be a turn coat from no higher motive than a cold, selfish, hypo- critical, time serving expediency, is more than contemptible. If the Times has de termined to cut loose from the Democrat ic party, why, much as we shall miss the keen, caustic pen of Storey, we can only say, in the language of the great Mose, " let'er went." It has said many good things, and some bad ones. Always dic tatorial, it as often chilled as it warmed the life blood of the Democracy. We shall try to survive its loss. The Cairo Democrat declares that "the Times is not a favorite with the Democ racy of 'Egypt.' It may teach the weak to bend in Chicago, but it will have no influence to change the sentiments of the Democrats in that part of the State." The Bureau County Patriot also repudi-, ates the course of the Times upon the ne gro suffrage issue, and announces the con clusion of the Democracy of that region to stand on a white man's platform, and " fight it out on that line," whether vic tory comes early or late. These expressions of Democratic prin ciples from the West show that the at tempt to fire the camp of the Democracy by the negro suffrage torch has failed in that part of the country. The Democra cy will not agree that the foundations of the constitutional party, laid by Jefferson and his illustrious associates, shall be un dermined by the dark and turbid stream of expediency on the negro suffrage ques tion. They know the first surrender of principles will lead to others, until all the distinctive marks of the party will be de stroyed. If for expediency, for the poor and beggarly pittance of a few offices, the Democratic party yield to this fanatical spirit on the negro question, the next de mand will be that they abandon their po sition on the tariff issue, on the currency question, and all others upon which they antagonize the ruling and dominant fac tion. The position of the Times is in ad vance in that direction. If the Democrat ic forces are moved to that point, the transfer can be more easily made, and a union consummated by which the time honored flag of the Democracy, will be trailed in the dust, and the banner of big otry and fanaticism will be raised in its place This movement has been repudiated by the sterling Democracy of the West in most unmistakable terms. They will not abandon their old principles, or strike hands with such men as Butler and Ste vens and Sumner and Wade and Phillips in their efforts to destroy the Union and the Republic at the same blow. They will not sever themselves from the party of the Union upon this issue. Illinois will not abandon Pennsylvania in the hour of danger to white men and their liberties. The old platform of the Democracy is still broad and strong enough to hold the party in all sections of the country. In this State the Democracy are opposed to negro suffrage and equality. Upon this issue there can be no compromise. The tone of the Western press shows that the same sentiment and spirit of determina tion pervades the ranks of our Western brethren. A few may waver and talk of concession. The many are as fixed as fate. Thus united, the truth must pre vail at last. If the. Democratic party re mains a unit, they can weather the storm of bigotry now howling through the land, and preserve those liberties which for more than half a century were guarded by Democratic men and fostered by Dem ocratic measures. ilgrEight passenger conductors on the Pennsylvania Railroad, between Pitts. burg and Altoona, have been discharged for peculation. They had been living for a long time " faster' than their salaries warranted, and a corps of detectives were set to watch them, resulting as mention ed. No prosecutions have been entered. Some six or seven years ago, a similar discharge took place, for similar reasons, and no prosecutions were entered ; in fact the Company were compelled to kep the scamps in their employ for a time to in alma the new conductors in the bugs. ass. —Twenty cars loaded with cotton pass over the." air line" road from Memphis to Norfolk every der Somata:lilectoriocks Report myth° Nitional Financin. The forthcoming report of the Secreta ry of the Treasury on the national finan ces has been completed and printed for distribution to the country on the day of its presentation to Congress. The views which it will present will not be new, in so far as a line of financial policy will be laid down, yet the resume of acts and fig ures will show the national financial situ ation to be in a much more flattering con dition than at the opening of the First Session of the Thirty ninth Congress, or at the close of the fiscal year, on June 30, 1885. The coming report will show that the fiscal year ending June 30, 1888, was one of great prosperity. The balance of the Treasury on that day stood as fol lows : Cash on hand Juno 30, 65, $858,309,15 It " " 66, 130,669,815,19 Net gain, $129,811,506,04 The gold on hand was not estimated at a currency value, or else the balance would have exceeded $150,000,000. The receipt and expenditures for the years 1865-'66 the fiscal year ending June 30, 1866, are as follows : RECEIPTS. From customs ' in gold, $179,046,630,64 From public b onds, 665,031,03 From direct tax, 309,226,812,81 Miscellaneous sources, 95,125,966,40 Total reefs from all sour ces, This revenue, it is believed, exceeds in amount that of any other nation on the globe, for the same period. EXPENDITURES Civil foreign and miscellaneous, $41,049,965,95 Pension and Indians, 16,253,300,44 War, 284,449,701,82 Navy, 43,519,632,21 Interest, 133,074,737,27 Total, $518,347,337,70 Total receipts, 556,039,195,06 Total expenditures, 518,347,337,70 Excess of receipts, $37,691,857,36 This excess of receipts all occurred du ring the last few months of the fiscal year, and is not a fair criterion of the ability of the government to liquidate its debt. For instance, the war expenses for the quarter ending September 30, 1865, were $165,- 000,000; but during the quarter ending June 30, 1885, they were but 812,000,000. The balance in the Treasury on June 30, 1885, was but $858,309,15. The year ending December 31, 1865, showed a de ficiency in the Treasury of- *819,000,000. But six months from the time (Jaffe 30, 1868,) there was an excess of receipts over expenditures of nearly 07,0004109. The estimates of the War Department for expenditures for the coming fiscal year would be nearly $250,000,000 less than for the year 1865, were it not for the Equalizing bounty Bill, passed at the last session. But the revenue from all sources for the next fiscal year is estimated by the Sec retary in the neighborhood 0f5600,000,000. The full expenditure for the next fecal year is estimated within $350,000,000, in cluding interest on the matured debt, and a fair sum over for a sinking fund. The Secretary's report will also state that, under the law of Congress, the Treasury has withdrawn from circulation daring the past six months the limit of ten millions of dollars of paper money. The total amount of United States legal tender notes in circulation is ther.fors $386,000,000. The most important and gratifying fact of the report will be in the reduction of the public debt. It will be shown that the public debt has been reduced during the past twelve months nearly two hun dred millions of dollars. The actual fig ures of the reduction are $163,637,721. Seven millions of compound interest notes (legal tenders for their face) have been canceled, and the temporary loans reduced nine millions. The full amount of currency authorized for national banks has been issued; which with the United States notes, gives a cir culating medium of nearly $700,000,000, not including the fractional currency. On the let of last November, the total, including the fractional currency, amoun ted to $734,218,038,20, and *95,000,000 of authorized national bank notes remain ed unissued. The Secretary of the Treasury will not present in this report what may be called strictly a new plan for returning to specie payments. He has changed none of the views which he maintained in his last re port. and which were enunciated in the Fort Wayne speech. He believes that the Secretary of the Treasury should have power to control the currency to the ex tent of being authorized, at his discretion, to sell bonds, bearing interest not ex ceeding six per cent., and redeemable and payable at such periods as may be condu cive to the interests of the government for the purpose of retiring all United States notes. He will ask Congress to authorize•a long five per cent. bond, it to be exempt from taxation, in which to fund the obligations that are soon to mature. He will lay great stress on the question of urging Congress to adopt at an early day a fixed policy of contraction, which, when adopted,. will cause the business of the country to gravitate to it, so that specie payments may be reached without a.great diminution in the revenues, or a wide spread financial panic. He does not pro. pose to state any definite time for the re sumption ofspecie payments, but believes that with a proper 'system it can be at- Weed with the retirement of over two hundred millions of United States notes. It will be shown (by the figures above given) by the Secretary, that the govern ment is on the high road of prosperity in reducing the national debt, and the Tress. ury will cling to the simple and experi enced policy of liquidating the debt by keeping the national revenue above the national expenditures. To this end, a draft of a bill prepared by Mt. Wells, the special revenue Commissioner, will be submitted wit lithe report, (or at some fu ture day) proposing equalization in inter nal taxation, and a modification of the ex isting tariff. Important reference will al so be made to the raw cotton tax of 3 cents per pound, imposed last session. In 1867 and 1868, $830,000,000 of sev en thirty notes fall due. A large amount of the first series are now being funded in five twenty bonds. Improvements in the national banking system will be suggested and urged. The senseless charge is constantly re peated by the Radicals that President Johnson, in proposing to admit loyal rep resentatives in Congress from the States lately in rehel;ion, has betrayed the party which elected him to office. But did not Mr. Lincoln, from the first propose to do the same thing. Was not Mr. Lincoln bitterly assailed for his policy by Ben. Wade, Henry Winter Davis, and other men of " progressive" (?) ideas ? And was not Mr. Lincoln sustained by his party and renominated and triumphantly re elected, with Mr. Johnson's name On Ilk t ickvt ? W e copy belnw a letter written by Mr. Lincoln to Hun. Edward Sturdy. whyri he was about to return to his duties as niili tary Governor of North Carolina, which clearly indicates Mr. Lincoln's views upon reconstruct ion : $556,039,195,06 Hon. Edward Stately : My dear Sir— Your note informing hie that you will leave for North Carolina soon, is received. Your conduct as military Governor, as re ported to me by General Burnside, and as I have heard it personal:3r from yourself has my entire approbation, and it is with great satisfaction that I learn you are now to return in the same capacity, with the approbation of the War Department. I shall be mu,h gratified. if you can find it practicable, to have Congressional elections held in that State before Janua ry. It is my sincere wish that North Carolina may again govern herself con formably to the Constitution of the Uni ted States. Yours, very truly, Peterson's Philadelphia Counterfeit This periodical, which is a regular hand book iu banks, offices, counting houses, and Stores, is issued on the Ist and 15th of each month, and has become a necessi ty to all business men. Besides distinc tive articles upon forged Treasury Notes and imitations of National Bank Note., it shows the par value of all notes, in ev ery State in the Union, and gives regular lists of all new Counterfeits and Broken Banks, state of the various markets, finan cial and Commercial News. Peterson's Detector is carefully, ably and honestly conducted and edit ed, and frown its large circulation, ne cessarily is a good advertising medium, though its space for that purpose is not very large. Some people think because our currency is nearly all national bank and United States notes, there is no need for " Peterson's Detector." Why now is the time to have one ready for reference. The facilities for counterfeiting have largely increased since the adoption of the National banking system, under which all the banks use a uniform plate for each de norn4ation, with only a difference of lo cality. This fact warrants a liberal ex penditure on the part of the counte ftit era in getting up a fat:: simile t i n any one of the National Banks, which, when de tected ou that particular bank, is imme diately adapted to some other bank by simply chringing the locality, and so on through the whole two thousand nation al Banks; whereas, formerly, a counter feit on any State Bank, when detected, at once became worthless. For these reasons the Detector daily grows of more importance to the public than ever. Terms of I•ubscriptiun to Pe tersons' Contiterfeit Detector, corrected by Drexel (47 Co., bankers, is, for the Monthly issue•, (per annum) 81 50; Semi monthly, (per annum) $3,00; single num bers, 15 cents. To agents $lO a hundred net cash. Subscriptions may commence with any month. Terms cash in advance. Address all letters to T. B Peterson & Brothers Philadelphia, Pa. While the Radicals arejabilant in their rejoicing" over the Chicago Times declar ing for negro suffrage, one of their organs —and a leading, one too—the Cleveland Herald, seems Utterly insensible to the pleasure it affords them. In its issue of Wednesday, the Herald copies, approv ingly, an exhaustive article from the Na tional Intelligencer, in opposition to the whole negro suffrage programme, and ac companies it with some comments, which we would like to see answered by those who dissent from them. So, instead of the Chicago Times making converts to a policy which it has, until lately, vehem ently opposed, the chances are that, be cause of the utter' hopelessness of the South accepting the Radical programme, that party will themselves abandon it, thus leaving that paper out in the cold, to reflect at leisure upon its absurd, Moon'. sistent and most grotesque performances. —ln the mountain towns of Colorado bay is now selling at three and abalf cents per pound; chickens one dollar a piece; trout, four dollars. a pound. Flobr is steady at 'eleven dollars, according to quality: Who has Changed ? WHERE THE CHANGE IA Executive Mansion, Washington, September 20, 1862. BMIEE Detector. A Fair 0 ir:et. x or ZI MC OEN . —The Chicago Times and Boston Post are alone in their glory on the woodpile with Bainlxi. —lf a bigamist was sentenced to live with his two wives in the same house, the crime would soon become extinct. —Death comes to--4/ good man to re lieve him ; it comes to a bad one to re lieve society. —A disloyal sheet in Virginia favors the Senatorial aspirations of Horace Gree ley, " because he was an influential ' orig inal secessionist.'" —Major George E. Glenn, n paymaster, was robbed at Fort Boyes, Oct.s, of $50,- 000 in legal tender notes, and $50,000 in vouchers for money paid out to troops. —A lady was recently sent from Gal veston to New York by the Adams Ex. press. She was transferred from one mes senger to another like any other "valua ble package." —The Democratic press of this State are a unit, in opposition to the idea of ac cepting negro suffrage as one of the doc trines of the old party. —The robber who so adroitly spirited away $B,OOO worth of diamonds from Jac- card's store, a few days since, was arrest. ed at Odin, Llinois, on Thursday last,and the diamonds recovered. —William Whit hem, while at work on the spire of the Baptist Church at Rock port, Me., on Thursday, suddenly said to another workman, "I am going," and died before assistance could reach him. —All business was suspended at A t h ens, Ga., one week day recently, while the merchants attended a religious reviv al meeting. —The importance of one vote is made manifest by the recent election in Detroit. The Radical candidate for Sheriff• of ne county heats the Democratic can didate just one vote out of a poll of thir teen thousand. —Thu Dolmen:tic party will not agree that negroes shall be made a component part of the governing and ruling class in this country. —A Mr. Radcliffe, of W . allaceburg, Canada West, died last week of exhaus tion, resulting from an unmanageable bleeding at the nose, lasting over thirty hours. —The Siamese twins have been sued fir $lOOO in Findlay, Ohio, because a team took fright at a canvas picture of them, and slightly injured a man and his wife. —Rev. Isaac Craw, of Kelloggsville, Cayuga county, New York, has celebra ted his one hnndredth birth day. He vo ted for Washington for President, and has been a Baptist preacher for more than eighty years. —The editor of the Chicago. Times finds, that, in the negro suffrage business he has been dancing a regular break down.—Prentice. —At a wooden wedding in Detroit last week, ono of the invited who was un able to be present, sent his regrets, writ ten on a shingle, to the lady of the house. —A savings bank in Mobil-, established by negroos, collapsed the other day in consequence of the depositors withdraw ing all the funds to attend a circus. • -Two new Democratic members of the New York Assembly have died since the election—Dr. Daniel Shafer, of Soho harie, and A G. Baldwin, of Sul ivan. —George Washington, a nephew of Washington, died suddenly a few days since in Wilmington, Clinton County, Ohio, while attending a ease he had in Court. Ills remains were taken to Prince William County, Va., for interment. —A young g irl of St. Louis fell into the Missi-sippi whilst returning from a ha , l on Friday night. A young man jumped overboard and tried to resue her, but, af ter keeping her up for fifteen minutes, his strength failed, and she was drown ed. —Hon. Cave Johnson, formerly a mem ber of Congres4 and also Postmaster Gen eral, died at. his residence in Clarksville, Tenn., on Friday last. This was not un expected, as ill health, whioh had been continued for some time, compelled him to resign his seat in the State Senate of Tennessee last summer. —Gen. John F. Hartratift has declined the appointment of Colonel in the 37th Regular Infantry, that was tendered him some time since by the War Department. He will therefore remain in his present of fice of Auditor General at Harrisburg. —The revenue commissioners estimate that over 42,000,000 gallons of distilled spirits, 186,000,000 gallons of fermented liquors, and 10,000,000 gallons of impor ted liquors are annually consumed in this country, costing $500,000,000. The Gov ernment revenue derived from the liquor business is estimated at $47,717,276 an nually. —The wife of Rev. Daniel A. Mason, of Somerville, Mass., was brutally out raged by a vagrant negro, on Friday eve ning, at her own house while the rest of her family were absent. —The Boston Post says that if Btitler, expects to impeach the President he "must bestir himself." To which the Louisville Journal replies : "Indeed you must, Butt. So, stir! stir ! stir—with all your teaspoons !" —The negro Glenroy Baker, who assas sinated Mr.A. Judson Motley, near Fred erieksburg, Virginia, on the 15th of, last August, was hung at Spottaylvania Court lipase on Friday last. —Mrs. Everheart, a soldier's widow, re siding near Terre Haute, has, daring the present season, with the aid of her little girl, (shopped fifty cords of wood' on a contract for the purchase oft small house and lot. , FOR SIXTY DAYS ONLY. X:11=1: 4 2" Car0031:18 NEW YORK WHOLESALE PRICES, AT THE :1 7 ffaiTWO Branoh iStore. NOW IS THE TIME TO SECURE BETTER BARGAINS Than will ever be offered to the people in this vicinity. New Styles Coatings in BE.AVER CLOTHS, FRENCH CASSIMERES, AND BROADCLOTHS, • . Made to order to the moat Fashinnshhi Styles tit Pitobilif Cllo[o:lidepi):4l.l:itylitosied Under the Superintendence of MCk. ISICIIMTML,r "WC:101:71V1211., A Pint Claes Cutter, very highly recommended by the well knows JOHN G. STETTLEI:, and others frareattlng done to order, on eltort notlee._4o I. N. HINE & CO. Montrose, Nov. 11, 11168. H ATS & CAPS for MEN & BOYS, IA the Fair&in Cheap Store ESTATE OF Al ICIIAEL RILEY, deceased, Late of Auburn township, Susquehanna county, Pa. Leitmotif administration upon the estate of the shore named decedent having been granted to the undersign ed, persons indebted to said estate are hereby IRO tied to make immediate payment, and those twin claims nmeinst the same to present them duly autkeett ailed for settlement. ELIZABETH FILET, Adn'i Auburn, Oct, 30,1666. Wit. DO:MO, Adair EMPORIUM Of NEW STIRS! NEW GOODS. A.Burritt 1, 6 11 7 .7 p 'sop sad rir f 14111. 1 110 6 1 " - ^2.r. 6 ‘ 141 Embracing extra varieties of Fashionable Drees Web ' in plain, striped and figured Defines, imperial Lustree, Merinoes , IParamattas, Plaids and Prints., Cloths,. Cassimeres, Flannels, Broehe and Wool Shawls, Balmoral and Duplex Hoop Skirts. Ladies' and Genii Furs, Buffalo Robes, Carpeting, Floor Oil Cloths, Wall Papers, Window Shades, flat. and Caps, Boots, Shoes. and Clocks ; including also as usual a general aslant met& of other Dry Goods, Deem; Trimmings, and Yan kee Notions. Groceries, Crockery, Hardware, Iran. Nails. STOVER. Drums. Oils, Paint., &e which he will sell on the mat favorable terms for Cash, Fre duce, or approved Credit. Now Milford, November, 1806. • T" REST BOOTS ac SHOES In market at the Falrdale Cheap Stole• A. Pli Atm, IFt. NE, CONTAINING 132 acres, two miles west of Mont rose, for sale CHEAP, by D. BREWSTER , Montrose, Nov. 13, 18GB. tt DRY GOODS from N. Y. sections. et the FaWale Cheap Store NEW fill & WRIER STOUI STONE & WARNER. Have Jut received theitir tau assortment of Wirier BOOTS & SHOES, which we propose to sell lower than any drat In the - County, for ready pay. Also, READY MADE CLO?HIND, on hand. and made to measure when desired. HATS ce CAPS, GLOVES a NIT- TENS NOTIONS, AY. iirt. iftman:sr Cilroclenrilow away down btlow the market, Blighimton,ov le7 44. or man. Can and see and gaudy yourselves. Fernier** Produce received and 'hipped to new Tail free of charge. 0:14: filTolo3. - • . 11. 8. WARNS Montrose, Oct 16,1866. • r..a . 00 COIEL A labile/Don paper to raise additional welkin AIL capital or the DONTROSS GOLD CO, will be for the present to the heads or S. C. Tyler or J.ll. 11 e* Collate, Dag,, where those wishing to take stock with fair chance of doubling their teensy tit a for wells cal can anal* so.. . . - - • . C. -TTLI.2,_ Pro I tset• 4144 5 Co* Ilicatroto, Sept. 4,