The Montrose Democrat. (Montrose, Pa.) 1849-1876, July 24, 1872, Image 2

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    fon g o our institutions, the great principles
.., • one-which the' welfare of the Republic
rests, or the policy of a sound, consistent
administration of public affairs. His
government is a complete failure in every
respect, and its failure would have been
disastroits but that the reorifitiy has been
at peace. It is such; a President, whose
unfitness for tho Chief Magistracy of the
nation is striking and notorious, whose
reelection we oppose on every ground of
national policy and honor.
It is no*tiriewer to thest‘salid objections
to tell ns of Gen. Grant's niible exertions
and heroic exploits in the
,war. -Admit
all thLit maybe claimed for him - on that
score. It is not a Genend fide President
that we are •to elect. Gen. Grant was
elected to the Presidency in- 1868 solely
on big' inifitary record.. 'lliielection was
imexperiinent which has disgracefully fail
ed. He comes before the people now and
demands reelection not as General but as
President, and on a civil record which
Should cover his name with obloquy and
Make every patriot bang 'down his bead
fut him in very shame. And it is this
incompetent President who has not a
single qualification for the trust he holds
and whose unfitness has been demonstra
ted by over thme years of corrupt mis
rule, whose reelection we shall do our
most to prevent.
2M=123
IL.U.AWLEY, EDITOR.
BIONMILOSE. PENN•A t
44111,62Di2.1. 44 / 1 : 1 ' 24, 172.
DEMOCILAiTIC TICKET.
ton
HORACE GREELEY.
FORIiNE-Patt3IDEN'T,
BENJASIIN I GRATZ BROWN.
v• - a.
Fos GOVEIMOR,
"'" ..- 7 - PitABLES li. BOOKALEW ;
Of 00aipiiia.c.ounty,
sOitluDQ>,, VIE St:PBENE, COEST;
' IiON. JAMES,THOMI'SON,
Of Erie County..
AVDIIOI3 Grsia.ll,,
AUL 'HARTLEY,
Of Bedford County.
' :k)R-CONGRESSIIEN . AT LARGE,
r, .HON. RICHARD VAU?►,
' Ol Philadelphia.' .
JAMES It HOPKLNS,
Of Allegheny Connty.
HON. REND/ECK it WRIGHT,
Of Luzern° County.
DELEGiTES To TIM COSSTITUTioNAI
OONIT.NTION.
1.
Cisonos W. Woonm - Anm PhiladelpLia.
'2...lesibtriii S. 13Lacs, York
T. Witmer iltomm, Clearfield.
oLt J. Days, Somerset.
./1. WILLIAM. D. SMMI, Allegheny.
' 'O. F.:II:Gowi&, Philadelphia,
Cametuum; Philadelphia.
• S. S. Pi:Retscoms, Laseasmn.
• JaNEat ua, SchnykliL
10. a C. T. DODD, Venango.
!I. G. 3k. Dumas, Philadelphia.
-12, - ft A-itastuttrros, Dauphin.
A. A. -P,IMAN, Greene.
34.:Waf 3L Conasm, Clarion.
ELscrons.
, EDGAR COWAIi, of Westmorleand.
.OE:Op.OE W. Sinancrx, of Fraidin.
nirntszavrxricy,
• SELnon limns. of Erie.
' " . Rani S. Mtr.t.r.n, of linntingdon.
B. Gnoss Fll4, of Philadelphia.
.r. ..,,,......,.--• • ',"." ' . District&
•.I.4,Thoroas 1 Barger. 18. D. Lowenberg.
2. Stephen Anderson. It .J. M'Knight.
41, dobiiMedfaf.. 15. Henry Welsh.
41• uebitiat. Barrel IG. Henry J. Stabiey.
11 , [liokagreetlispon) 17. - R. W. (,'bristle.
$ lstial s. lioupt. 18. IV in. F. Logan.
2.4 Bo ;Lokoelit. Dyer. 19. 11.13. Brown.
.B...ltitSo G. Hawley. 20. F. M.- Robinson.
9. 1I: it Sivitrt. . 21. J. R. Molten.
10: :R.' Wm .. 1 22. T. H. Stevenson.
11. , john Runde. - - 29. John B. Bawl
It Y. W. Gunter. 24 George.W. Miller.
GRNEBAI. - AND PRESIDENT.
An exchange very truthfully says that
the qiiistion of Gen. Grant's military
abilities and record does.not enter into the
yreietat.campaign. It is not with General
Grant but with President Grant that we
inivoticdeal. When he hc;came President
he cease- tor be General, and shut the
door upon the sichievements and record of
career. lie entered upon
the new and untried field of civil admin
istration. And the sole question before
the American people to-day, so far as he
is concerned, is whether his course as
President has been wise and successful
enbagh to justify his reelection. Had ho
failed at Vicksburg, had he been disgrace
fatly defeated in a dozen of the earlier
.engagements of the war,had ho selected a
stare( miserably incompetent officers,
had he been more eager to get presents
and reward the 'donors than to win suc
cesses over the common foe, had he used
the army and all his military prestige
and influence to secure his own promotion
and , reward his own relatives and friends,
wlin is insane enough to imagine that the
American people would have clamored
fur hie advancement, or that the Govern
ment would'have placed him at the head
of our armies? And shall we reelect a
President whose Administration is a
confessed failure, and whose entire civic
career is a successi9 of blunders, if not
something worse ?'
It is with President Grant that we have
to deal. And it is because he has ignom
iniously failed to fill his high office as
.Cheif -Executive 4 of the natinn,• and has
degraded that office in the estimation of,
the people and the eyes of the Avesta,
that we oppose his reelection. His civil
saireerimadheippuinted the expectations
of his Wit friends. His cabinet has not
a single first-dlass statesman in it. unless
it be Mr. Boutwell. 'His chosen associates.
are men whein few of our best citizens
woala invite to their tables. Ile has billet-
ed his-personal relatives and favorites I
upon the country by appointing them to
offices for w,hich they are notoriously unfit.
He has' used the vast patronage of the
government as though it were one of the
penpfitites of his position,withoutiegard
to the pnhliaservice or welfare, pledging
eczy appointee to labor for his reelection.
I-Ie has accepted presents from all sorts of
,perkons,and rewarded the givers by official
hCieoss: Ile has tilled the southern states
•
with his creatures, and enforced their
extortions with the toilitary power until
(Me-third of the -Union stand to-day on
the'verge of ruiu.and anarchy. Ile has
bullied Congress into the support of his
pet measures, winked at ,corruption and
-fraud, retained infamous ..acers long
after their unfitness was demonstrated,
soproanded himself by a staff of Willful ,
,ofijoesi in violation of the Constitution,
trenidtta standard of our oar public service
nemprumised the . national honor
iu his. dealing with England; insulted
torao.rAle and p4triotio public servants
who base. opposed" his. wild or wilful
sehevnee, and.Re
publientr„'patty by insisting upon his own
renomination, all the.-power
and patronage et the government to sect=
it. 1.-Nothing he ties ever said-- or done
kyes the impression .that ha knows or
aboit either the , /etter'•or
Ihe - gilEit of the Constitution; the pilot
. .
"Prominent" Repotslimns.
What constitutes a "prominent" Re
publican ? We are told by a Radical or
ganist- that is attempting to play two
tunes at once, one for Democrats and one
for Radicals,- that there are eight "not
prominent" but "sound Republicans" in
31ontroso ..whi are supporting Horace
Greeley. We cannot interpret the mean
ing of "prominent" in this case unless, it
signifies that they do not belong to the
office gloating . " Ring" who ride the coun
ty in their own behalf and , administer
. "orange peel lemonade," for the want of
any other. Under this test they aro not
"prominent" They - tire known through
the county at honest, intelligent and
thinking men, a character - Wo !OMR which
is "not prominent" among the adherents
to the corrupt office-seeking "Ring."
How about their votes? Are they "prom
inent?" We would say for the further
benefit of the ," orange peel" brigade that
in addition to the twenty-one " not prom
inent" Liberal RepuUlicans, who signed
the call for a Greeley and 'Drown, Club,
there aro twenty or twenty-five others
whose rotes will be just as prominent for
Horace Greeley in November. Hadn't
the Ringmasters better take another lem
onade?
Facts and Figures.
It seems to be the political tactics. of
the Radical office-holders and Organ
grinders in this county, as well as else
where, to:industriously circulate that all
former Republicans are faithful to the
" W.ng," and also that-a good portion of
the Democrats are roing over to its sup
port, and everything is "lovely." We
have no disposition to quarrel with them
on this point by personal assertions for
effect, for we are willing that they shall
enjoy all the comfort they can, hum such
a fallacious source. Men have been known
to die of purely imaginary disease, and
by a constant and persistent assertion of
falsehood, they may hope to make it pass
as a truth fur a season. Orange peel
dropped into pure cold water, has the up.
pearance of lemonade, and even when
tasted if you "make believe very much
it's quite nice." The enthusiasm which
can be raised by such deception, may de
ceive for a season, but when tasted by
honest men, like orange peel lemonade, it
will seem as if it would bear a little more
seasoning. With all those who are on the
"anxious seat," fora position in the offi
cial brigade, the orange peel enthusiasm,
is the best they have, and they must trust
to a lively fancy to compensate for its de
fects. We give below a little demonstra
tion of facts by way of "seasoning," which
is not an "advertisement."
GICEELEY A. 31, Bnown Cvort—The under.
signed, Republicans ; of Montrose and Tidally,
respectfully invite so many of their Political
Associates as amens in the movement to meet
at the Court Rome, on Wednesday evening,
July 241 h, PM, at 8 o'clock, p. M., then and
there to organize a Liberal Republican Club.
J. S. TarbelL If. S. Parka.
S..AL 'Wilson. A. 0. Warren.
Geo. R. Lathrop. Byington Thatcher.
J. MI Robertson. C. Cushman.
P. Lines. C. N. Warner.
H. C. Limn. E.L. Weeks.
E. P. Stamp. Horace Smith.
Mb'. GriMina
John Groves.
Goa Frin k.
D. G. Leslie.
Henry Cnisier.
IL S. Baldwin.
Hyde Crocker
S. IL.Morsc.
For.the purpose of adding a little more
genuine "lemon" for seasoning, we would
state that a similar call appears in the
Grant organ, at Honesdale, under the
head of "Business notices," signed by
Eighty of the leading Republicans of
that town, and also . one iu a Binghamton
paper, with ninety-seen Greeley support
ers from the Radical ranks. Perhaps
these natnrally belong under the head of
" Business Notices," for they undoubtedly
watt business.
IH - The carpet-bag office-holders, at
Lamar, Marshall Connty,Mississippi, seek
to secure the colored vote for Grant by
pressing, upon the more ignorant' of that
race ridiculous teachings. .Ono of the
doctrines vigorously circulated among the
blacks in the above county is -'that if
General Grunt is defeated he will declare
war and pat them in the army. Arany of
these colored men have been repeating
these stories, and are absolutely convinced
of their truth.
rff - The folldwing, xnessw, written
upon a "Western 'Union" bla4, l aas found
on the beach at Long Wench 'the day
after Horace .Greeky received the Pemo: :
cratie nomination ;-4 -
m y sv L&TrviM: . r
mAItE HAY ,
Miterlent Questions and MIIIUMIII.
-Finn Snit:S.-4116es 'MC - Presidential
history of tho United. States record a sin
gle instqpce s iii.which the (ncunibent of
the highei‘officelti the gift, of the peo
ple-was a hubitruil ' frequenter of horse
racee ; Yes, one ;,Ulysses S. Grant.
DoesAhis history point to an instance
where a President appointed all his rela
tives.te, office ?Yes, one; and only one;
Ulysses S. Grant.
Does it.note a case iu which' a Presi
dent was made a mill iolipre by the gift
of office seekers? Yea, one; - Ulysses S.
Does it record anywhere the feet that
the Presidential office enriched its incum
bent? Yes, one, and only ono; Ulysses S.
Grant.
Does it make mention of any President
Who held stock in atone quarries, from
which'all the stone used
,on the govern
ment work at was famished?
Yes, one; Ulysses S. Grant. -
Does it tell of any President wboeought
to carry'state elections by the Airco of the
bayonet? Tea, one; Ulysses S. Grant.
See Governor Geary's annual- message in ,
1870.
Ni Does it record the fact that any Presi- I
dent deeming the schools of the United
States nut sufficiently thorough in thoir
system, sent his son to &rope to hare
him educated? Yes, one; Ulysses S.
Grant
Is it recorded 'anywhere in Presidential
history, that a convention com Prised al•
most iVholly of federal officials renomina
ted the tenant of the White house? Yes,
one; Ulysses S. G mut.
'An Item Ibr The Tribune."
Tbe following appearain p prominent
(which means "Ring") Radical hand or.
gnu in
canvasser
is county.
"A canvasser and,collectorfor the IN
DEPENDENT REMBLICAN, with has been
travelling in the different townships of
Snsquehanndand Wyoming counties most
of the time since Greeley was nominated
at Cincinnati, in all his travels met with
only one Republican who declared .him
self ,for Greeley."
That man, whoever he is, deserves and
undoubtedly has been promised a pension
for life, by the "Ring masters," for to have
spread himself out so thin all' over two
counties, must have disabled him for life,
for trith and veracity. A little more
"oral se peel," if you please, Gentlemen.
terWashiitgion ; Judy 13.—Hon Ga-
Inaba late Radical Congress-man,
writes from Texas that that State will
give Greeley 50,000 majority. He will
stump the northern counties of Pennsyl
vania for Greeley in September.
i:7 - Greeley men are being hunted
down with reinurseless fury by the Grant
henchmen in tbo: Custom-House, Post,
office, Mint and Navy-yard of Philadel
phia. By order of Simon Cam&ron.
gay - Lieut. Gov. i'm6litmck and State
Senator Campbell, colored, made Greeley
speeches at a republican meeting in New
Orleans. Pinchbeck was helofore in favor
of Grant.
mr-one hundred Republicans in Wa
terbury, Conn., have joined a Greeley
club. Jewell's majority in the State for
Governor last spring was t).B. '
GENERAL BANKS FOR GREELEY.-----
The Herald's Boston special intimates
that General Banks has espoused the
cause of Greeley.
:W .- Governor Curtin will be at home
about the first of August to take the
stump for Greeley.
lair The Administration scheme of
compiling a pamphlet composed of all
the hard things which Mr. Greeley has
-said of the Democrats does not appear to
excite any apprehension among the Demo
emtio supporters •of the Reform ticket.
The iiineinnati Enquirer • admirably
disposes of the question in this ,manner:
"Of oonrso the-Grant compilers will find
immense amount of matter in which Mr.
Greeley has spoken of the Democratic
party and of its principles in by no means
complimentary terms. This is so well.
known that it seems abstrd that a book
or a phamphlet should be written in order
to prove it. Mr. Greeley will be suppor
ted by-the Democratic party in opposi
tion to Grant not on account of, his past
records, but in defiance of theta, for the
reason that the present and future are
more important than the past."
M - If nothing more •is stolen from
.
flip south Caolina treasury, it OM be be
cause there is actimity nothing left to
steal. The State 0 oveni men tis paralysad,
the financesare.exhausteg, and the system
of public instruction is brought to a stand
still for the lack of funds. The carpet
baggers have actually "cleaned; out" the
State. And it is a noticeable fact that all
of the carpet-baggers are for Grant.
PAIIDONED:-GUY. (Iraq yesterday
issued papers for the pardon of Harry
Ward. This act of, esecutivci . clemency
has been .eztended'on the recoinendation
of three physic:awl, who ; state in their
petition that the eoufluement ;to which
he has already been subjected has greatly
impaired his health and that a further
imprisonment would ho prodUctive of
still more. serious resulta—Rarrisburg
Patriot.
Giee the
other two Uncommitted. Of his cabinet;
Smith and Bates are dead, Cameron is for
Grant, and - Chase, - Wells, and 'Blair are
for Greeley. .This don't look like Gale.:
publican party tieing a unit for'Grant. '
. .
—Never feurpeopie ;thinking you are
forjou aro so, ehetherlbeythiuk
800 r 11( .4.. 2 .
~ ;
vp 8. o." =
Charges and PriKolls
— On Mr. GreeTertfrotti . iii frotii his south- •
ern tour a year ago says,an Exchange, he
made a speech at the Lincoln Club Room
in New York - city, in which (as We • find
on referring to the newspaper reports in
theinerning's-jOitrnal);he used the fol
lowing 'just, rough, and characteristic
'word's: • ,
"1 allude," said he, "to What are known
as the thieving rinprt-baggers!' [Ap
plause.) Tho Mimi/a carpel4.oera are
a mournful fact ; exist there, - and
I have-seen them.'
.TheY, aro • fellows -who
cmaded'down South in the' tmok of • our
armies, generally at :a very safe,:,distance .
in the rear; some' of theta on sutler's
'wagons y some bearing cottdn' permits ;
some of them loeltinz sharply to see what
Might tarn np . ; and they remain 'there.
They at once ingratiated thertiselves with
the blacks, simple, credulous; ignorant
men, very glad to Inlet:Me and to follow
any whites• who professed to be the
champions - of their rights,' Some of them
got elected senators,others representatives,
some sheriffs, some judges, 'and, so on.
Aud there they stand, right in the public
eye; stealing and plundering, Many of
them with both arms around negrees, and
their ban.'s )n their rear pockets, seeing if
they cannot pick a paltry -dollar out of
them ; and the public looks at them, does
not regard the honest northern men, but
calls every carpet-bagger a thief, which is
not the truth by a good deal. , But these
fellows—many of Ahern long4aced, and
with eyes rolled rip, are greatly concerned
fertile education of the blacks, and for the
salvation of their smile. [Great Imighter]
Let ns pray," thersay ; but they spell
pray with an "e," ugh, thus spelled, they
obey the aspostolic injunction to "ppray
without ceasing." They got into the Leg
islatures; they went to, issuing
;State
bonds; they pretended to use them in aid
of railroads and other improvements. But.
the improvements Were not made, and the
bonds stuck in the issuer's pockets:. That
is the pity of it. What the southern peo•
plo see of us are these thieves, who repre
sent the north to their jaundiced visions,
and representing it, they disgmc.! it.
"They are the greatest obstacle to the tri
umph and permanent aseendlincy of Re
publican principles at the shah, and as
such I denounce them. [APplanse.)
Gratz Brown, himself a sontberner,
both by birth and life-long residence, and
an eye-witness or the abuses which he de
nounces, corroborates Mr. GrzTley's testi
mony against the Carpet-baggers as fol
lows:
"At the Math," says Mr. Brown, the
tpirlt of dominion hits been the synonym
of Federal authority in the shaping orall
iocal organizations; open control of large
bodies of dependents, interference to sus
tain worthless officials and ruthleSs viola
tions of the rights: of persons. "There
the substance of entire sections has been
plundered, debts mortgaging generations
of labor coo tnietect; taxes • levied to the
point of eon Ilse:akin—all done under
agencies upheld by the . .. National Govern
ment. Could the two hundred and . fifty
millions pillaged by the carpe 4 t-bag gov
ernment have been permitted; except nn
der a dissolute pnliticd morality that con
nived at Tammany in a ten million steal.
As the above assertions of liar=
Greeley and Gratz Brown—though made
before they were candidates for the presi
dency and vice-presideney—have been de
nied as filar, we propose to exhibit the
facts and figures whhich proves them
true.
Showing the Debts of , the Southern
States before the War, compared with the
increased Debts . afthose same States an
-4l their presen t - Carpet-Bag Govern
ments.
Before the War, At rreleal,
Alabama, tlt 7,945.000 852,761,917
Arkansas, 2,084,179 19,398,000
Florida, ' 370,617 15,4'97.587
Georgia, 2,670,750 42,500,500
Lonisana, 11,000.900 40,021,734
Mississippi, . nine 1,697,431
North Carolina, '12,689,245 34,887,464
South Carolina, 4.407,958- 22,480,516
Texas, . 2,009,000 14,930,090
Virginia, • 33,243.141 47.090,896
Now let any honest man look at the
above figures, and be amazed! They ex
hibit a record of rascality enequalled by
any frauds iu modern history. not except
ing those of the Tammany Bing! .Here
arc ten States whose debt now are nearly
four times as great as they,were before the
war, and yet these same ten states had
nothing to do with contributing to the
expenses of the war, but have incurred
this quadrupled indebtedness solely thro'
theinfamous swinaltng . by the carpetbag
governments which_have cursed them un
der Grant's Administration. lief the
sum total of theirintlebtedness wit sev
enty-six• millions; at present t a sum
1 7
total is 291 milliong showing an 'increase
of 215 millions!
,-.• ~ -
• And in order dint:these flgures maybe.
seen in their trim proportions, be it re
membered that the remandu r e• -27 states,
which did- incur the war debt, foot up
their.sum total.of ind.btpclucatt.(war and
all) at only, 293 m111161)8 • so that the
pier° increase in the iudebtedness of ten
southern states, under carpet-bag ride, is
greater by,l2 millimes than the entire ag
gregate indebtedness of the 27 other states
or the Union ! In other words, ten south
eni states, which did not contribute to the
expenses of the war, have a total debt of
215 millions, while 27 northern states
which did contribute to the expense of
the war, have only, a total debt of 203
millions:. Such antl , so great is the differ.
once in public honesty between the legitimate
state-governments of the North and the illegiti
mate catpet.bag stategovernments of the South!
What has beNsue of all this squandered
money? Nobody kupws—except the purloin
' em of it, who are thepatget-baggers themselves.
Thoycart tell where it:Ls—but nobody else'can.
They have stolen it from an impoverished mn
ple and used it to: enrich themselves Their
administration, beginning In usurpation and
endingin rapine, constitutes one of the black
' eat blots on modern civilization, If the South•
ern pople arc to - get no better idea of the North
than is retleeted - to them from the Wiens spec
tuck presented,try Aimee swindling and thieving
carpet-bag governors and legislatures —with
„their rings, and rings within - rings—they
will sever cease to' Into, us. These wretched
, and damnable state admbnistratkini should be
swept away like the_Tammany-regime—eleans
(A like the Angina stab!lied like the
moneychangers front the Temp e- Every vote
for Grant la a vote to sustain these villains and
,theft vlllany. Every vote for Greeley la a blow
for their desirtmion. ,•- . - - -.• " •
ribhcons who
!ofik first be-
thirteen"the
Spenoerfirays, a negro Military
company m Nett York, hare offered to
make Tenni° their Captain, And
yet, the Y - 14 tta that the negro has more
fesPeckfor himself now than he lad ba•
fOro the wer.l-45)41.10:4ottnick,
Tho following is an' extract %from • a
speech made by Senator Doolittle on.tak 7 '
ing the chair as President of the
more Convention : •
-
: .. Tlipie are'questions..Which, you tire .to
detide here; that yea will 'decide Wisely,.
I Cannot - doubt, nor can any one doubt
who iookioverthie body 'of;imin, repre
senting-es they. do, - three millions- .of-riti-
Zeus, and who feel; as every one most feel,
the high and patriotic purpose which in
spires you. Gentlemen, what means this
great rising movement which ycu . every
where see? • , What metins, - this proposed
-union of three millionti bf Democratic Re
publicans, with a million, it may.. bey of
Republicans? What Means this union
upon li cottitrion phitforin and this pro
posed union upon the sumo candidates—
' a union so sudden, so compact, so earnest
as to surprise its friends and to confound
its enemies,.[applausea which comes as
the winds come, which, to borrow a figure,.
overwhelms the ordinary cnrrents of pub
lie opinion, as the great' storm - always
runs countr to the-surface currents?—
What means all this ? • There are some
things, gentlemen, it does not mean. It
means no abandonment of what is trne,
of what is-just, of what is good in human
government. [Applause.] It means no
onion of tire dead upon dead issues, but
a union of the living Upon the issues of
the present. [Applause.) • It means no
union for the spoils of Office. [Applause.]
.But it means a union of men of the same
faith, upon the great and paramount is
sues of the present hour; a frank; manly,
honorable and equal union of men who
have the sagacity to see, and the moral
courage to accept the situation. [Cries
of " gooL, good," and loud cheoring.]- 4 -
It means a.union of men who have the
sagacity to see what is past and to deal
with the issues of the present, anti for the
,future to do their duty to their country,
their God and their fellow. men. [Ap
plause.] The issue of tq-day is not the
repeal of the Missouri Compromise; nor
-the question of slavery in the territo
-ties, upon which alone the Republican
party was organized in 1856. -It is- not
_upon that which followed, when the -Le
comptou Constitution for Kansas divided
the Democratic party In , twain, and elect-'
ed Abraham Liucoln to the Presidency in
1860. It is not the question of secession,
nor of war to pat down rebellion, nor 1.'.::
abolition of slavery in the Stag I.v 711i
tary order, or by cont', ut s susi ,6„ (. 1_
I 'Bent,. uPcm. - inch Mr. Lincoln was re
ek":tu in '1864 ; nor yet is it the question
of re-construction, or of the Fourteenth
or . Fifteentli Amendments; nor the (pies-'
tion of negro suffrage; nor of the estab
lishment by federal power of universal
sffl•age, as a condition
. precedent to the
States of the Routh having any rights, or ,
nay existence even as States in the Union
It is none of these questions that is now
in issue. All these have been issues in ,
the past ; great issnes, anflicient in them
selves
to create and dissolve political par
i tics, because ideas are stronger than men
or political parties. But they are all past
issues. They have been fought out and .
fought to the end, in the forum or on the
'field, and they are no mire au issue of to
day than the Mexican war, or the war of
the rebellion. [Applause.] We could
not re-open them if we would, and they
falsely misrepresent our purposes who say
that we would re-open them if we could.
[Loud chreeriug.]
This gloat union, tt•ervfore, means no
step backward. [Cheers.]. Forward! is
the word. [Loud cheering.] Anil first of
all, it means to-day for alt the other States
of the South what it has already done for
Missouri. [Cheers.] Instead of proscrip
tive test-oaths, suspension of habeas cor
pus and military despotism, it means per
sonal freedom for the Individual and re
publican government of all. [Loud up
plans.] Instead of negro supremacy, up
held by proscription and the bayonet, it
means equal rights to nil men—white as
well as black. [Loud applause.] In
stead of thieving governmenfs, organized
to plunder subjugated States, it means '
the domination once More of intelligence
and integrity, instead of strife, hate and
, robbery. It means justice, liberty, peace,
1 loyaltl and good will for our whole coun
try; Last and West, North and South. It',
-means instead of a war President, trained ,
only in a military -school, and whose
whole character has been formed in the
ideas, arts, habits and despotism of mill
tury life, instead of this, it means a peace
President, [cheers,) trained in the ideas,
arts, blessings and republican simplicity
of peace and universal freedom. [Loud
cheering.] Of peace not enchained, of
liberty not under arrest awaiting trial,
sentence and execution by drum-head
court-martial, but that liberty and that
'peace which the Constitution secures by
placing the civil law above the sword,
[loud applause], by preserving in full vig
or the sacred writ of habeas corpus, and
1 the right of trial by jury. [Applause.]
It means another thing, and perhaps the ,
most important of them all, it means to
arrest the centralization of power in the
Federal Government. [Loud cheering.)
It means to assert the vital principles of
our republican system, in which it lives
and moves and has its very being, that
are made by the people in
their sovereign capacity for the express
purpose of defining and limiting the pow
ers of Governments4applease)—powers
or all Governments State or National. It
means that we aro dotermiricil that Presi
de,uts and-Governors, Congress and State
Legislatures, and every Department of
_the Government, shall obey the Constitu
tion. [Prolonged applause.] It means
also a genuine civil service reform, begin
ning with the Presidential office. pep.
plause.] It means to put an endforever ,
to certain practices which have grow% . p
with this Administration, which lave ,
driven so many , of the'ablest Republicans '
to join this liberal movement, and which
have deeply wounded the hearts of all
Republicans as well as Democrats, in this '
country— [applause]— practices which
never .existed under any other Adminis-
tration; which -are but too well known to.
all the world, and whiclionr nation'sgood: '
reputation will be best consulted' by not,
naming, , [Cheers.] Ittneantit,; also,
to give strength and stabilityto our finan
cial affairs and our national
.credit. by .
bringing-honesty and economy.andtideli-•'
ty, to mess , - pmitions--Federal, State -and
tniinjoipal,whero publictnomes are clist
bused. , [Cheers.] It means, Also,- the
lioness payment of all our .cibligatiotiz.—!
, [Renewed applause.] , It means,' to give
higher tone and greater vigOr-to ,the ad
ministration,ef our.foreign and domestiC
,
affairs, so as to command the resit* and'
, the confidence of our own people and of
all, the eiriliied world. Itmeins to place
-in the _highest offices of our :Government
Men of whom All the nierld will say,:'!.theY,
tiMheuest and they: are capable.' . Op,
-pleased ' - kielittemen,'l bare thus--briefly.
stated
,late:eittnititini, Oe:dtitice , 34 flzo:
876,415,6911 $291,626;015
Speech of Senator Doolittle.
purposes which bring us here. A 'great
responsibility rests upon . this Convention.
If its action should.be such, and I have
no dOnlit, it will be, as to put an end to
inisrule 'which, for the last few years, has
afflicted our beloved country, this genera
tioLandtefierations to come after us, will
remetiiher.with pride and gratitfide the
Corifentiou. of Baltimore ou the•Bth of
July, 187.2.
DottiOcrallo Unanimllsr
Forney's Prpes makes the following ad
mission :
The unanimity with which the Demo.;
cratic journals of Pennsylvania , : , have
hoisted the names of Greeley and Brown•
is as • emphatic: na.. their-:n °mina ion s. at
Baltimore.:' We have yet to see a single
one that-Opposes :Greeley.: :His flag has
been simultaneously unfurled all-over the
State, while:-the great organs at Ph Haile!.
phia, Harrisburg; and „I'ittsbarg have
broken out : with . estretnest:!landations of
his,carcer. The epidemiejof Liberalism,
as it has been culled, has developed as
strongly here as-in New York or Indiana.
We confes s ,tek n - decided. feeling..of stir.
• prise as We read the Democratic papers of
Pensylvania ; -at the Philadelphia Age
and Herald and Pittsburg Post accepting
the nomination of Greeley without quali
fication and prdiniaingliim a hearty sup.
port ;,at the West Chester Jeffersonian and
Bellefonte itia(thman-4be first a high
toned old-fashioned Democratie organ
and the second a pro:slavery, rebel sheet
declaring that they a - ill not - revolt; and
at the Harrisburg, Patriot and lamcaster
filtSftetCt* julitlating pier the event.
To the Editoi of the Chimp Tribune :
An Insult to the."Bors In Blue."
I see in Boinside's call for the veterans
to meet at Pittsburg, in 'September, he
says, referring fo , Grant:.
-"We have full faith in him as a peace
ful Man; because, hatlhe felt disposed to
exercise his power as, a personal Gover
nor, he would have done it while nearly a
million of men. werein arms:and. under
his command." .
The inferenceis that, bad—Grant seen
lit to tarn Dictator,
those, million of men
would t hnve supported him.
General Burnside, may 117:m' the
lives of his soldiers:tit f:„ ,
for proof
.: 1 , ‘..Liti'n .1 refer. to Fredericks
;lnd this covert insulo . .hy 'Which he
tries to prove Grant ' s fitness for the office
of President shcnti that ho holds their'
flirt riotisnias worthjitsCalxint as, much as
their lives were worth at Fredericks
burg. •
If Grant hail attempted anything of
that kind when be had a million of armed
men nader-his command, the . Boys in
Blue would have thought,.
,ns little of
stretching his neck on the, nearest tree as
they would of putting. a bullet through a
"John,. Iteb," in a battle.- Ido not think
General Grant would have ,attemptell
anythin,g. of the kind; but it isitist as
reasonable tn..say that: all that deterred
him from declaring himself Dictator of
the Republic was-his fear of having . his
neck stretched by his - soldiers, ns it. 13 to
insinuate . that ho would have
,received
their support in such a course.
- • .T. K. Vivuour.
CH icAcm, July .10.
gegat. Aducrtiomtnto.
CD/TOWS NOTICE.—The tindersmm.lom Auditor
.tx appointed nT the Otphan's Court. of Surquehalues
County. to matte report on the exceptlonel filed to the
account 0 f Oro. W. Mackey,. administntor of the
estate of David Markey. d• cured. mill /attend to the
dunce of his appointment. n t the °lnce of Wm. U
Jessup, on Thursday tli.tiLiday of July. In at I o'clock•
P. M.. at which time and plasm nil parik*lnto ested wit
be loud. H. C. 3L2SL'r, Auditor.
Juno $l. 1872.'
AI'DITOTr3 NonCE.—The ®dove .r ed, an Andl.
tor appointed by the Judges th e Orphates Cow I.
in and for the County of Susquehauns, to distribute the
funds in the hands of the ddmittlittrator of - the estate of
Thomas Driknorth dammed, wilt itteod lathe dull. of
his appointment. at hia olDen. fa 3lontroite, oa
Thnroday the lat. day of .b* UN, A. D.; ISI7, at one
o'clock in the 4Deriaooll. All part les interested are here
by required to appear and present their claim., at the
above . into and place or be forever debarred.
Ladt,altrsiLED, Auditor.
June
Administrator's Sale of Real Estate.
'FIT VIRTUE of no oilier 'of the Orphan* Court of
So ilorherion Comm, the tindervir,ned Adminhi
trator of the legate e ta uten C. Vail: deeetwed, will
veil at orbit wile the fierrowinz dmcdted seal
to wit :
All that certain piece of teed sitnete in the township
of Jackson. Colony el rinattrtehanne.and State of Penn
sylveufs. described as falkirce, to It; ilenning at
the comer of a lot sold. formerly la John Begley
thence aloti4 the waimtdee line of Jew es Bradley. south
41 tierce.. care &imam to She toad; thence moth
the-sameng 5O degrees web. 20 and &.1Q perches ;
thence meth 61 degmeoweaklB parches ; thence math
.41 degrees weet IT and Qlq Starches; thence math :PI
dente.. wag Lt perches to the Inc of Cartes -Martin's
lot; thence by the come twtth.4l degrees weft 06 and
5-10 per hes to a corner of John Martin's 104; Medea
north 411 degrees coot perches to the pine of begin
ning. containing 40 acres end he perches—more or less.
Sale to take placaon. the &bow tlessribellt premises
on Stosittey, the gbh day et Jets. A- 1ih.114% at 10
o'clock. ti X.
ALSO—AII that certain piece of land Waste in the
town-hip orGibsoa.Conntynt Ithsrptivhamennild Slate of
Peutwylvanin, bounded and described as Ni10...t0 wit :
Beginning sat the north-west. corner of the new mill;
thence along the end of etid mill, annum the creek
youth SIX degrees east 3 perches and 11 link* to the
top of the wall 9n the southerly We et the creek ;
thence along the *aid wall north 71 degrees cast 2 and
8.10 perches to We top of the still-data, ate point 38
feet from the sawmill; thence acrowsthe taillponduerthi
37 % deurees east eleven and 2-10 perches. m the north.
margin of the tomcat the upper side of.the bridge or
'cameway ; toence north 1% degree. , west 6 and 640
perchen to a post and stouts; thence south 00% dr-ree.„,
went 16 and 240 perches to a post and stones ;multi 4t
degrees west 7 and 8-10 perches toe post and stones
in a line of O. P. Edward's land; thence oleo the lint
of the Fame and screen thole; road youth 22 ' devrees,„
met and /40 potcbes to a pool, a corner .o said Ed
ward's land ; theme by the same south 1 degrees ems
2 perches nod 11 links to a poet another - corner of the
came ; throne by the same youth degree. cast t per-
Wes and 4 Inas to apost,acornetpl O.P. Edward'. Beep
lot ; thence along We line of the same north 71 degree.
east 5 perches and 11 hok a to the place of beewnlng.
containing 1 acre af land--More or leM; end being the
same which Reuben C. Vail and wife, by deed dated
Marsh 1);1801 And recorded in the °Mee for-recording
dm**, In St.qqtichatina County. to deed book No. 41,
Page 840 and conveyed to Samuel Vail, and snidest to
the rovervidlonn therein contained and restrictions
therein contained and referred to.
Salo to take place on the above dtserlbcd premises.
on Monday. the 21th day. of July, A. 11., 1811. at 2
o'clock. P.M.
ALSO—AII that certain piece or lot of tend situate to
p orc m g a or Now Milford, County of Susquehanna,
and State of Penney!raids. described u follows. to wit:
Dr.tinnloy, at too north.eratenrner of Harvey Gritlihnt
In tinimiddie of DP/talon Sreet ; thence along the north
line of eald Chi illog's lot north 84 soda, mientra
west 109 , feet • to Delawaro. . Lackawanna and
Western Rail Road Companies' lead ; thence by said
Rail Road Co's Medi:moth ex degrees west 12300 d 3.10
feet to steamer •; thence south 84 degrees 33 minutes
east lA. feet . o. middle off:11011u Street ; thence
alongthe middle of said Strut Mob 6 degrees and 25
minutes west. 123 feet to the. place at, beginning-
Contablog Amite= thomund are hundred feet Of land
—more or .
Deserving theeorner of said lot sold to Daniel Hager'
and the put of raid lot told to Harry ttridlen '
• Said to take place on the premises, an Te • esday the
NU dot or Je/y.-A.D. 1872. at P: M. .
ALSO—AII that eettain piece of land situate to that
Borough of New Milford, County of Buonnehunna and
State of Pennsylvania, described as Won. to wit:
fkginnieg at a stake In the northeast corner of htt„No.,
ff ; thence 5 degrees and 23 miuntce east akett the west
line of lots No. 5 and 10,100 feet to a slake fora conies
on Ward Street; thence alon Ward street. Mal 1 4
degrees and 00
mlantes welt feet to a stake the north.
west ear . ner of lot No. St Monte' south 5 degrees 23
minutes west along the flue of land releasod to Hie
Dohoram, Lackawanna and Western Rail lined Dam.-
Pony. 100 feet to the nortlswest corner of let 2 0.6;
thence loath 81 degrees .13 minutes east' at bet to the
place of beginning. Containing ste .thentand art of
land—ha the same morgue Ices.. Being lots No T end
.as laid down on map_of-sillage lots sitrveyod by T,
u
Boyle for C. L. Ward, May A D . and recorded
the *M far recording du I
de n and bertha weld County,
red book. No. N: page 530., easy tererence Nucor!.
to will more !ally and at large appear, • '
- rfiale to take' place onthe promises. an itleadtlf. top
ttehj...falaf . 1, 4 A. P. 1872, at 9 o'clock, P. 31.
..:"T=..uS made known at time of Salk .2 •- •
sa.uutg, yay., Adoilzhlcator .
1.1nne=„18t....45. • • ' • •
AD J ILVOZO . Ir ts 'I;IOTiCt.;-1 Me Asstato of
`letters
Of Now -Milani licaough,
hasoMGM., ths-,4stossod; letters of Administration In
tho KIM Mists bating boon grantst,to tho tmdersigned,
al) persons amine wad rotate, are recanted to mono
Immediate
is
end - persons haring.delmf
median sststosre requested to present tinsaiNitboitt
, .
doisy. --. ' '
" - .J• SVI
: NO4 Nntorl,'Vai.o4.oi/%lJ,—lr
gituts
Tao lines in Mt eDicceforltone ifectri,ol,R.•
each ridditionaiiine. 50 Of. • -
NEW MILFOUIz
!jIA I .INDS DANK. NEW-VIIIFORD.-51xp6 titisl. las
•• tetteton all Deposits. Does agent/al Dobkin". Mtgs.
nest, , 1311:41' • • D. MASS CO,
C. 1.1114 lettOLAo VZOINAIMEI4,
Maley tageonlno Cqwrlaster. PraDgroagf,
W. 'L MOSS &CO Dealers fn Dry floods.Mats.cips_
- Boots sad - Shoes, sell General Merebaadise, w nits
atreetsecaad door below the Eplsorpalcharea. • ,
UNION ITOTRL; tceptityVlLLlAlf enzTU:Ott
etryci,near.rbo Drpot.--* .
fir;•Silitg.tikiroire.4l7.,ol anger In Vows and othiii
utensils, ono door from Flamer, Uotd, WO
•
N. V. EMBER. Camsge Nakefsid•ttodostiker. jisr
Mal tit:vet, [eta iloork.bpicir:l.lswltel tita.%
• •
Dealers. Opium, ate
Provisions, on 24sIn otrost..• - •
H. outran , a BON: Deafens root. Peed. Utak,
ARID, Lime, Cement. an:wear...pad prundpippi
Biala Street, oppoette the Depot.. ' .
~ . .
W. it. T. HAYDEN,
. 1 1nuareetarerif.of ant
Wholesale dealers fa "Nukes Notions . *ad Tolls,
Good*. on Mint &rent:below riff rinfrilChstrek. •••
ISIOSS•k. 107 AP. trithrzli.anntactierre siadeitas
in Nit Ott* Igor Jim, ac., near 440;41.44TM •
AINEY IIAYOF.N. DeMors In Drag./ itaSiedlethas
•dd Unotifactorors of Chao,. pp Nilo. Cantu Btu
the Depot
W. STEPatt7t. . Home Ithaelnnenacinerali!epaithea.
on 31etb Sifter, gentile; th e Nitre.
. .
I. DICTEEISSIAN.:Tn, Dialer in jzenerat metraultie
and Clathlne. Erick Store."ob Men Street,
GREAT BEND
L. P. LEMIEUX, 112nuf4cturfr of Leattler.anittialti
to gem , taklterdut4dlrs on Yalu Ottret.E. _ . .
Il.l'. lt.> N..llcrehaut Tabor and drater Raab%
Slade Cluthl nz, Dry Goods, ttrocerlea and Prorialpas
• Italn Street.•
I.4NOXYILLE. ,
11111.3.,4 .WIIITF;,' MinnWitmer of and dealer - IS Va
or Psr
100 and CaFtlnfz.i..
GIBSON:
TINGLEY—Dettler to Storer, 21n, Copper. /kin
dad Ithretlrrett Ware. Vortlor. .11fe. Air*. ealusttetur
er oCBhetl Xetals to order. &re Trotteb.nd Jove Fir•
!mines. Attended to ot fair peal-131420s "follow,
Peono7lrar.lo.-Iy.
DIVARDS a BRYANT, -3( filell'acierrZe of Wagon
and Sleighs, pear the legally' JM
. _ .... ...._
• . '
110‘.'" 1'09 , 14.
0, ' t
n.:7o3E—Connty Sareepar, erSasineiriiisik:teveto
. :s. Odlce in the Cope t House, 31 on titos..-tt., •
ABEL TIIRIZELL. Destel'ir nine. 311kidicl.les; U.
lino's. Paints. 011", Dia Slaftf. Jtrocerf . e.,. JiricAll7.
Notionio r et. ton; :
JA3,144 E. CAREALT; AttOnmei At Law: Opf.* eta
door below Tart?ell.llazie,EAbliclavaut.•
Luurnat * co., ulnae'', ren Torero
saga Tick. ts andDrails ocr raigtand,ltelsadAst
J. IL FLEIVIIER'S.ISAIng.S2Ieen . thepoiteAw pi
Ice Crete. 3; Oreten tad CLarcui, to efeelnfir•Plialekk
• •
street. , „
•
BILLOWS STROUT, I 1 eurra Piro and LI& 'agar.
nm: :Lana : stroondl Itillmaa and Accident Tlekata
tones 'fork and Phlladelsdida. I.W.ca atm door tut
of the Uank. :
C1120.43)LE1t: tkuoral inmirance and Sas Istslia:
chine3:ent, Palle Arrnue..
•
nturss watch, gritinirmisA
ei aes. eirito,Tobacev,Pfper; Purket-tiooky,' Sped*.
cies; Taukte Ittatiesp,A;c; reek
WV. L. COI: Manny., maker and tleAkeha en &reeks
usually kept by the trade, oppeette the atiak. •
BOYD 'I CORWIN. Dcalens lo Shoes. Hardware,
and TtrinnEeterrrent Tin and Shretirun ware, cones
of 31kin and Turnpike sirens.
s. U. 1101$8, Ito/aunt 'Tat *ad - 1 n
Cloth.. Trimming.. and Priv:ll4lln; Gn.sdr. and
It...nay-31,1de Ilea r, 3!alnittet t, a, it Lee
11.19 Lltuld and 11:alaokes,Law °Me.
A. W.-DUI:LAUD. Mailer fu Groceries, Ptandriontis
Boats. titailonrzy and Yankeu Notions, at Asa& t
Put lla Avenue.*
T. SPORE a -CO.„ Oralrrs lin:Rfateti RatifirEN,i
Agricultural tuntirtuculti. Fluuraud Ucuccves,eppo
site Tarbull Lluctay. ,
MANH9OO; HOW LOST, - HON RESTOREM
;feud pritilldtetl, a um edithra of DR. ,
CULVER% ELL'S CELEBRATED
BAY un the litntcahccnnitrlthont 4 ;2
noel of SrEILIIATINSIMILt. or • Seminal .
Weaklier.. Incolnuiary Semirml Lowey, -Impotency
Mental nod Ptivelral Ltruyneity. Impedimenta to Mani.
age, etc ; attn,Cotramptlun. Epilepey, and Tit*, induced
by wit indulgence no 4 remint extravagance. . •
'Mr Price, In a waled eticelidni, only a Vellti. •
Thu celebrated author. In this admirable may, Clear
ly demonetuitm. front a thin; yrau'iraoreetehOyemirtre
'that the alarming cimemptences of teiraliere shrieks
mdleally cured without. the dangerona am of laterud
condition or the ap pikidlitn. of the knife; pointing oat
a mode of core at Duce. simple. certain. mid effectual,
by memm of Wild; crag Waterer. no =not When Ifite
condition WSJ be. may corn: himaclt thaply, prbrat
and radically. '
f3PTbls Lectern ehradd ta Alto Asada Of clip:
youth and very man Intae land. • - • -
Stmt. under tio.4. Ina plain envelope. BIABN kii 12 ,11 . 1 )
postpaid on Twig wf cent*. or two pool irniklini.
AL.. Dr. dleterociro -Marriage Gnide," price CCM
Address the Publirktra,
. - .
• • CIiA4..I.C.RLLVB
127 D3R•Ty. New Turk. Post4.lolcie Bog AUL
tole TORONTO OHIEF,
tog,
_ • , .
ITIRGIONTO GUMP% fn.' Tide nearly thornesfl.bleff. •
I:stallion' will stand thoprart n t season tbr Mates: "
season commenting April ist and ending filly EGOS*
and Sabin:tat Led McnW tieof J. 3. Torben, bettontrose,
the rest of the snick at the subscribers. °tut mile east of
Althorn 4 Corners. on the rend IfedloglotdprtnrfUle.r-
PEDIGREE—Tian Toronto Chief Yr. wan *WC by
Toronto Giffet, 'atm foe'rescat and, tibasta in aline of
any stailluttonoteceri. Be trio sized by ?Dial ikOTS ,
and his dam by Blackwood. oaf of no Zaps* Mare,
naval George eta by Black
,Waoto„r -anfi he by Impoq
ect Vippo ;end barley Messenger, of Eniand.'• • • •
Tounsrm Caul", rt.'s dent teaselled by thallium:Ob.
bred Jegirrsoe. oat of a lifslest, mate. Jetifessno mat
by Virginia; .he by Sir. Archie, the sire of ' =3 „.. /
suit gramtstra of American Star — dam by flit" .
Second *meta Air. ' • ' •
. .
Iliintemin Cum% Ja.: Is a %OW bay with blaellinta
fall tall. weighs IMO Tbs., IGN bands b•gb,. ban
training. hut has good gall. and for Ma treightla baldU>
beet. Cal:land fee him, &adjudge for yonntelves. rimer,
sf Ids gut eon be seen at the sabseriber's. Masai pastor.
sd on tessonabletertas :Actiiilents and
,earcapr the
owners' tisk. - '
(Klufr rules inittostornary. Wain, kitaitire
fdrackisaranite Maar pa hie Much 11878. •
. -Propicnnv.
Anintne4Cossenkrtr., Muth 13.1Erar1101.3-40:',
ILOMS
Iliseratarey Art and Boni
IS the best soiling trot* eSiiiotered.. firenmldeeitlte
humor of *dem:tote, the wittetistrof team fbeliTaNtrs•
tun of history arot bbmapter, the sweetness and math:
of poetry. the esqutsito suusie.srin, ,, l4o Ittetthik
Ihlilloetrattobs..„.
••ttol id resullae for :awe tootoenti:plessesseptienum
to Manual, Wet ttoors:so4V;rts.elf sets MAYAS Ittutta.
Au Agret Writes. "Eolifri Mies Rib *404 .Ylll7
sellOoo Oats mou th day.% ~
, Our nu/ System of esztrussini SOUS' r oArtt e b..
patters totho.txratoem , ,Parlttelant Dee. 41.171Oggir
prrrunt tat votary nourtuent, - - ..„
.• INTERNATIONAL TITBLISHDIG Ce.„ ftrard. gAi
lint= Se.,Nereliork. —l . • • "
!ley _ ,
_
VFONTROSE RAILWAY CO.—Stoehholders of tie
litl Montrose Railway ecenipany are -hereby itoUlial
tart the remaining Instalments of tire dollars per share
each, called:or by resciliniun °Libra Board orDlreeteri
payable as follows:
Fifth Instalment ;. ' ..liketaly l / 4 1418*
Sixth Instaireent -
Seventh Instalment March 15th, 1
Eighth InatalnientAptit'lSitt;
Ninth Instalment • Alay
YeLth Instalment • • - Jute Lith,l
As the tentless pfrogresslng meat raverablyt.lt If
lidestrndand absointely neeesaary, that the erassiestot
*hyoid be prompq met on the out of StockheiderK
L, DROWN, ActratAry ' •
U:CO*PMTroaanrei.
llontrose„ Deeember •
A T the ()ill &MUT 110r6C. In iioiiTliOilikik`
PAZIHICIktABLE DILIDIS-11/1.11,
to Intwotta
;York City.. *Attire qttesetloa will be van nu wb
%Tin favor hey with MIL' t3T11.&1:4 SWING
in the NIF4MT
• • V421`..".00 .
!ApEsilwgclgz.i.!. •
Spat for AIMS — RATED CIRCVLAII4 , 2 PRIC3LIST:
• mucciquiat & MLL, , „
Monittaetunirs. Xo 2 coi quo, sfortfultaal.
iresP '1?-,sis• • -
FOR SALE ' - ' -- 2 -
AVetWa r atoo9lMatkoV 4 7o
1 1 %1 08, —. T 4l - 445 .. 16 .97°C "
- -N9Do s lol 4 ll*.lra- , it - 47419RPL