THE DEMOCRAT. E. E. IrA TVLEY tf CO., Elilora Wednesday, dune 25, 1873. Taigas is nothing like plain English or speaking. Butler says Brosvulow is mil:Ad-fool, and Brownlow retaliates by saying that better men than Butler have been banged. Soxri of our exchanges are complain ing because Grant's salary is so high— being 8137 a day. Well freights are high, tariffirare high, taxes are high and Grant himself is high pretty often, ac cording to the temperance people. Al together these are high old times. IN a letter from Florida Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe says: "With suitable in struction, alligators may yet be seen in the Legislature. They certainly would not be more grasping and voracious than many in the situation ; and there is a fine openness about their planner of doing things that is prepossessing." THE Washington Capital gives a sad account of the Americans sent out from America to fill places in the Japanese GovernMent,. and mentions the case of Mr. g: Peshine Smith, who called on the Peruvian Minister in a state of intoxi cation, improperly attired, and accom panied by a Japanese girl in men's clothes. THE New York Sun takes a disrespect ful journal to task for saying that John A. Bingham the Credit Mobilier and back grabbist has at least one qualification for the mission to which he has been oppoint ed by Grant namely, blatherskite. This the Sun thinks, does injustice to Grant's latest choice. Bingham has other quali fications and - among them is a capacity to drink more Bourbon whiskey without getting drunk than any other citizen, not excepting Gen. Grant himself. Let us be just to all our foreign ministers. WE have been told repeatedly by stump speakers and others that this is (or was) "the beat government the sun ever shone upon," and now the present administra tion has given us another view of the matter, that it is the easiest government to run the world ever saw. It requires only one man to run it, as Secretary Fish is to-day the only person connected with the executive department that remains at Washington. Poor Ulysses is obliged to go to Long Branch to recuperate his func tions, so as to he able to draw double sal ary. It is a very heavy draft for so "cheap boss." AN exchange, on the strength of spe cial telegram to the effect that Giant and family have moved to Long Branch, in dulges in the following neat satire : "Sincethe adjournment of Congress Mr. Grant has been visiting east and west, and until Congress meets ho will tarry by the sea side. Some very mean peo ple have grumbled at the doubling of the President's salary by th 3 back pay bill, bat they ought to know that an Admin istration cannot be run at Long Branch for less than doable the money that is re quired to ran it at Washington, where all of Mr. Grant's predecessors in office were foolish enough to remain the year round attending to their duties. There is rea son in everything?" GENERAL GRANT is the wickedest man connected with the salary grab. It was wholly concocted to cover his scheme for a doubling of his already more than suf ficient pay. If he bad been doing a los ing business at 525,000 a year during his first term,he well understood it before he laid his plans for a second nomination, and should not have- entered the cam paign ; but it is _-absurd to suppose his salaries were insufficient for his legal mate necessities, comforts and even luxu ries as lirciident of the United States. He committed a gross breach of faith with the people in signing the bill which increarl his cotnpensation, and violated, too, the spirit of the Constittition,whieli says his salarysball not be increased dur ing the time tot which he was elected Presi ~o.,&An4iii, co Examiner. - False and Iteeldeis The Albany Argus comments with natural indignation npon the ostentatious display made t by the arrival of the Presi dent's household at Long Branch, when eight furniture wagons transported the luggage from the railroad 'station to the house, followed by fire carriages and nine or ten horses, for pleasure taking. This mag,nificient, the Argus thinks accounts for the President's signature of the sal ary grati bill; but it is mistaken in sup posing that thistlispliii is all Maide at the expense of the Chief Executive. Ii fails to notice the fact that many of the articles thus brought to Long Branch were not the President's property, but he longed.to the nation, and were retatived from the White House and its surround ings without due regard to the rights of tbe.real owner. Gen,Jackson is credited with the remark that the man who trades upon borrowed 44441 should 'break.— WhOther the saying is correctly applies- Ble to legitimate business transactions, or not, there is no• question of its correctk ness when applied to political or ofacial displays; and no ono can gainsay the gross impropriety of Piesident Grant ear tbst away from the* White Ifonse to Long Brunch the _nation's • property for the mere , purpose of ostentatious—hrg. prig itsteretations—display . and assuming thOpearipele: Arai *Of mnpiticideall rut. . err. - I A uProtective Tariff; , Onr. next issue of the DRalocnex will be subject to the postage embargo, which our subscribers will'understand is five cents per quarter, or ten cents for - six months. While each of our subscribers is only subjected to this smell sum of so many cents, we are mulcted by this law in more than that number of dollars each quarter, for postage on our exchanges.— This may be classed, emphatically, as a legitimate outgrowth of that "important local issue" a highprotective tariff which onr neighbor, of the Montrose Republican says he has descanted upon with such in dependence, force and talent, and we are not desirous of accusing him of misrep resentation. The object of this law would seem to be to centralize into the bands of the metropolitan journals a monopoly, to the detriment of the country press, and "protect" them by a tariff of postage, un known before In the history of our young Republic, and which, perhaps should not be unexpected in a "back pay," thieving, ' Radical Congress. If it had any other signification, it was equally mercenary and corrupt, and was enacted to punish the people through their watchmen, 'the country press, for demanding the repeal of the franking privilege which was be i lug prostituted to the basest of political purposes, end robbing their treasury to enrich a Congressional banditti, who al-. ready were paid more - than their services were worth. By this means they.suay have supposed that the people would cry "enough," and compromise by allow ing them to reinstate that law, fora relict from this. Without pondering closely up• on the subject, the people of the country may think that they are not particularly interested in this matter, as they can drop their home paper, and take a city paper, and thus escape the burden, and punish the government by not paying the 'tariff." This very idea is just what the enactors of this law desire them to entertain, and we are quite certain that the peeple are too intelligent to be caught in this trap. We vi ish to say right here, that every community, where a local pa per is published, has more at stake in the success of that paperthan the editor him self. When a blow is shuck atyour local champion, your home paper, you will find in case of its failure, that it is struck at you. There is no man, or class of men, who are competent to assume the duties of your local champion, as an editor, who are not also qualified to maintain them selves in some other manner. The "workman is worthy of his hire," and we speak for ourself, that when it shall be come necessary tcrask our patrons for that support, in a begging and beseeching way, which we now feel that we can de mand, as justly due for value received, we shall most assuredly seek some other occupation. Just independence we ad mire in others, and we claim to have some in our own organization. Our advice to our patrons is to pay not more than six months' postige, which is ten cents, for if we mistake not,the next Congress will find that they are more indebted to the peo ple of the country, and their home press, than to any other-source, and that they have begun at the top to build a chimney to fumigate their corruption, which must ultimately fall upon thorn of its own weight. T.1.1E Cincinnati Commercial says:— There is a terrible outcry because the farmers of Illinois, who are fighting the railroads, made a stand and elected their candidate in a judicial election. Well, the railroads have been looking after ju dicial elections tor a long time. A great number cif judges on the bench are own ed by railroads. Hundreds of others' are running op and down the country on free passes given them with the purely busi ness purpose of affecting their decisions favorably to railroad interests. Why should not the fanners own a few judg, sy There is not a railroad matt of large in telligence in the country who dues not know that the great corporations have their representatives in the lowest and the highest caucuses, and es keen an eye on the election of judges as on that of members of Congress, and it is popular knowledge that the Supreme Court of the United States was, in the opinion of the Chief Juste himself, packed in a railroad interest: The °mourn:lo the teountry it wouldlil be ikoverned by some little eenTiel he Owed to the feelings of decent people, when he was exposed to public view; but Gen. Grant don't appear to have any such idea of the eternal fitness of things, or else his gross appetites have so gotten the mastery of him, that he is a very slave to their power. - The - Indianapolis Sentiliel in speaking of , --this-mattes, so annoying to every Ameridan citizen who keeps himself out of the gutter,:gires day and dates, place and circumstance, as follows. Fot r iostancs, in Chicago, the President attemped to, receive the guests ,at a le ception given him at , the Pullmans. He was so 4dened with liquor that he could not recognize a friend, and his condition was so plainly ,recognized by the guests that the ladies were forced to keep away from him.'.This is, no beresay. -The dis graceful and humiliating fact can be and is attested by hundreds , . of the best nit'• zeus ot Chicago, and, even Mayor !Gain who has always championed the-Presi den wealorced to admit his gross mis. conduct. It serves no particular purpose to wake thqe _grievous exposures; but it may convince the—peOple that this busi ness of Icapin tp ‘ the party lash keeling too much, under, whs.% purports to be .a Iteptiblicturfi.rok of government. If the etePlerinliter !he 4iototieP 9f. a putt may be forced into electing a ilrunkardywhere is the line to be drawn s What manner' of creature will next •be fastened upon us.,;• Now if this man had been the choice of that party which the double -refined Radicals delight to stylefthe dirty Demo crats," how shocked would the pure and moral Radicals liave been ; but now with the boot on 'other .leg, they convert habitual drunkenness into Bright's dis ease of the kidneys,. in. order to endeavor to enlist popular sympathy for their tin lortunate.leader. - (Imes habits - have been those of a drinking man since he entered the Army from West Point ; and they have con tinned in the same line, with intervals of lessening duration, ever since. . Subverting If we may believe the Hon. Mr. Dawes, of Massachusetts, "the patriotic mind of the country" was severely "shocked" the other day by occurrences in connection with the ceremony of decorating the graves of soldiers in various parts of the country. For at several places in the South, as we learn, the surviving friends and relatives of confederate soldiers were premitted to decorate the graves of their dead on the day and hour appointed by the Grand Army of the Republic for the regular decoration day ceremonies. Worse than that—more shocking still to the patriotic mind—in several places the gravei of Union and Confederate soldiers were strewn with flowers indiscriminately by the survivors of both, so that no one would have supposed, looking upon these ministrations of bloom, beauty and fro. , grance, that the dead died fighting or the living had ever been estranged. Especi ally was the _patriotic mind shocked in St. Louis, 'ere the veterans of the Union and Confederate armies marched side by side to lay their floral offerings upon the graves of the Blue and the Gray alike. • A Union officer delivered the oration ; a Confederate colonel made a brie(speech pleading .for genuine peace, mutual forgiveness and fraternal feeling; Finch's equisite poem, wl'he Blue and the Gray," was red, prayer offered, and then 14,000 graves, Federal and Con federate, White and colored, were sprin kled with flowers of a tender and beauti ful remembrance, and not one was passed unhonored. It was at the very hour when these ceremonies were passing that the Ron. Mr. Dawes, of Massachusetts, was saying that "the decoration of the graves of rebels soldiers would shock the patriotic mind of this country. They were indeed brave; they dared, they suf fered, and died like heroes, but it was in a cause which did not command the ap proval of mankind. They fought against, while these fought for, free institutions. and universal manhood: To decorate their graves with those of Union soldiers would, therefore, be to blot out the dis tinction in the causes of which each laid down his life—between loyalty and dis loyalty, patriotism and treason, between the arm uplifted to save and that raised to destroy. It would blot out, ton, all distinctions in actions of men, and can : fonud right with wrong, unwilling the very base of society itself." Not-quite so shocking to the patriotic mind, but yet having the essential quail+ y which the Massachusetts statesman de lints as subversive of the foundot'ons of society, was the transaction at Mobile, where, upon the conclusion of the usual address in honor of the Union dead, beautiful briquet of flowers, in which the blue and gray were intermingled, was received with a card Which red thus : "The Mobile cadets of the Confederate army honor the memory of those who, though their enemies in war, were men, and brave enough to do their ditty." Ali !how soft, and silly and sentimental we are. For we are not statesmen. We ere only human and fallible. Anil this sort of recognition of a common linniani: ty and a universal brotherhood in these converging currents of sympathy and 'affection makes us forget that we are blotting out all distinctions in the actions of men and confoUnding right with wrong. From our poor common point of view--,-the view point of the average man uncultured in statesmanship—we look very tenderly on such scenes as those at St. Louis and Mobile. We seem some how to forget our differencesand our anger, our strife and war and blootl, and to think kindly of those we lately hated. We are so weak and so childish, that we see it all with moist eyes and talk about it in low :and tender tones, that are not the tones of Mr. Dawes, and then we forget—forget tsris..l4s z: :at we are viewing with com pfreerTcritte,- ding of right With wrong and the subvlfound ations of society. Ah ! well inlciAolv , .s us that we have statesmen among us whose emotions are held in subjection to their intellectual perceptions—moo like Hawley, of Cortnecitcut, who, during the last Congress, protested against the pay ment of-pensions to the rebel survivors of the war of 1812, because that - tended to confound right with wrong; men like Boutwell, who saw infinite danger in "clasping bands across the bloody chasm;" or, like Dawes, who with the great gifts of this oratory under the June sky of Massachusetts flings in nature's face his stern rebuked -nature's careless ohem,istry that scatters bads and blossoms, fragrance I and .verdne, • over- - the. Union and the -Rebel dead alike, confounding right with Wrong, and !dating out all die , • Unctions:between. patroitism all treason. Let us - be thankful for -such statesman. ship. , ELse we shotago round, like care laa• *tire; decorating - all ourgraves alike, • . .. forgetting passion and lessatinent, let. ting.the, via pecricairq , gently chip our woandtund tied our.ecars, bkitting out enlivettinusuelefuder awakening from a teuder mood 'lt +Wylie; i!•hest OfEC43 of would harsh and strident interruption of the sweet offices of charity abd love; but let us drum 'town the lute and stiffen tip the revival of dead. and 'buried 'hates..` We are not children ; let us be men, and an gry, unforgiving men, lest we subvert society. And God, in mercy,lo us,• krant!that the white winged angel, as she turns her face away from a Christian people , Wito forget Christ'S life, may not• •see -the crouching form of Greed and. Avarice and Lust of Power, of Bigotryand Cruel-. ty, Rapacity and mad Ambition, lurking behind the misty sham that under the name of Patriotism keeps alive the em bers of a burned out hate.-2.1r. Y. Trib- 410. The Modoes SAN FRANCISCO, Juue 13.—A dispatch from Boyle's Camp, June 11, states that the captive Moducs are to he taken to Fort Klamath, where the Commission will sit to try them. Some of the wound ed troops have already been sent. It is generally thought that Bogus Charley, Hooker Jim, Steamboat Frank, and Shackuasty Jim, having volunteered aid to capture Jack, will escape punishment. Those noted for murder will be forward ed to Aleatroz. Jackson's troops will start for Kalmatlt this evening for the re ception of the Mode° captives. A dispatch from Jacksonville, Oregon, says that General Ross, of the Oregon volunteers just arrived, denies that the massacre of Modoc prisoners was com mitted by the Oregon volunteers and says that they had other and better chances fur the murder of the prisoners, if they desired. A Commuldst to be Prosecuted. It is announced that the Minister of Finance will prosecute Gustave Courhet for the recovery of the sum expended by the Government in the restoration of the Vendome Column. Courbet was the chief instrument of the Commune in de stroying the Column. Conference TIVIth the Pope LONDON', June 14.—1 t is said EK-Queen Isabella is about to proceed to Rome to confer with the Pop upon the prospects of the Bourbon family in Spain. Emperor . William EL Los DON'. J one 15.—The Emperor Wil liam continues serionsly ill. Private ad. vices represent his condition alarming. To Be Transported al Last. PARIS, June 13.--4 he Government haw decided to immeitutdly tral sport IL nn limbefort to New CuledouLt. The Pope In Eseellent 11lentil' ROME, June I.l.—The Pope hos cum pletrly recovered from his kW indi.sp , tst tiou. Special Notices. e THE CONFESSIONS iF AN I:CV PrEll•Hin A) , 11 WAIINSIcti m.d let the bro. .. Totrin M to • to el mud. who •uffer fit at I. TV. LOS. OF 11A N1i0(...1), etc I, InF rat n... n, ‘ . ./ . ..1(T1TT• 0 I. eec AM:II6/nd hlnt.ell oft 411derunitig fra.lll , lll.le ;OrrielLy . ," id reel an.. en to. 'ring,. rorl•psiA d , nctril-eurclopr. SClfferere are Invited to endive/I.om anther, I:ATIIANIEL 14AVF.Allf. Box 153, Brooklyn, N. Y. June 10th, 1875 —mu .31ED ficlN A L POLYONB O.V THE TEASE The patriarchs took no mercury, no bismouth no iodine, no bromide of potassium, no stryc horia, no quinine. floppy old gentlemen! th.-y did not even know Or the existence of these - specifics," and yet they lived until it seemed as if Death had forgotten them. Their mede• vines were herbs and roots. They have left this fact on record, and the world berm; to be now taking note of it and retnrulne in e lire! principals of medication. Ifostetter's Stony Attters, the purest and most efficacious vegetable restorative of the day, is tl a most popular. Thousands of persons who only a few years ago believed implicitly - in all all the poisons which figure In the pharmaempia, now pronounce this palatable tonic and alterative an all-sufficient remedy for dyspepsia, nervous debility, constipation, billions complaints, head ache, intermittent fevers, and all the ordinary disturbance[ of the stomach, the liver, the dis charging organs and the brain. The time is not far distant when most of the powerful alti veno mous drugs now so recklessly adrobt :red by practioners of the "heroic" school, in uses that might easily he controlled by milder treat ment, wilt be utterly discarded by all philoso phical physicians. . As It Is. the thinking pnblle, who or* gpnerdly ahead of the prof intlecala, bare already . pat the daneerooP prep ,rat ton aside and adopt flostettees Bitters In tto le .lead as a safe and - excellent household thedevlae, ad. opted to almost every ailment except the orvude and deadly contagions diseaoes. For more than twenty years this famous restorative and preventive has heen annually streugthnine Its hold upon the public ron ddenet. and It now takes rho lead of every advertised =deems nsuattfselored In this country. TINT FAVORITE 110.11 E ,lIEYEDY, PALM-KILLER, Has been before the public over YEARS, and probably has a wider and better reputation than any other proprittary medicine of the pres ent day At this peridil there are but few unac quaiuted with the merits of the PATN-KILLER ; but, while some extol it as a liniment, they know but little of its power in easing pain when taken internally; while others use It internally with grunt success, bdt arc equally ignorant of its healing virtues wheri applied externally.— We therefore wish to say to all,that it is equally successful, whether used Internally or external ly. It is sufficient evidence ut its virtues as a standard medicine to know that it is now used in all parts of the world, and that Its sale Is consta ttiv Increasing.. No curative agent has had such a wide spread sale or given such uni versal satistaction. DAs/El ' PAM -KILLER is a purely yegetablo compound, prepared from the best and purest materials, and with a care that insures the most .p• rrmity In the medicine; and while t a meciy . for pain, it is a perfectly' me 1i e lost unskil ful hands. It Is eminently al'innt;i• 31grocm - E ; ail • o: being kept ready for immedinie !wort, will save many an hour of suffering. and many a dollar in time Bmi-doctor's bill . . Altar over thirty years trial, it is still reedit ing the most unqualified testimonials to its vir tues. from persons of the highest character and responsibility.. Eminent Physicians commend it as a most effectual preparatior. for the extiuc tion of pain'. It isnot;only the best remedy ev er known for Bruises, Cuts, Burns, etc., hut for DyscntFy, or Cholera, or any sort , of bowel complaint, it is a remedy unsurpassed for plency, and rapidity of action, In the great cities of India. and other - hot climates, It has become'the Standard thedicino for all such conk plaints, as *ell as for Dyspeptia. Liver Coot plaints, and all' other kindred disorders. For Coughs and Colds, Canker, Asthma, mild -Rheu matic difilmiltles, it Ixas been proved by the most 'abundant. and convincing testimony to tie en invaluable meklichte. "- We would caution the public against all imi tations or our preparation, either -In name, or style of, putting.up.. New Advertisements tincuiortti testalOesits• Ka '7 to jbo estate of IWO Orrea. law of Byldowo! p onmtr:d _Mitilipt ll . 4l, =l 9,,, ,Ve c t: l 2. ( glat zmoloocalopaymetc, and thaw baying do mo..sicsinot the same, arcyrevertel tq present, tticßill4q?sit ;•` - t • DAVID *ARUM , Al• ;'• • , .-Jarr.t.Ap*BAßna-.7.,-N - Midgiwitteraane New Advertisements S EC-BETARTS Cir ORIBIT 13112 D DORO.BatIOOL. 4n9 F " V,.a lt e i ll d fa b gai dn d ' iro'f j 7T e $ $1.23000 ' uaatt rcc'd tram all acauTes, 1.70949 91.79725 Aral Paid Teachers Wages, 127360 . for fuel &coutiogentiell, lll :B interest and repairs, 19263 debt,' ' • 900151 =frit cosh on hood, • 0011 66-1,797 23 - A rn't of indebtedness June 17. 1673. 00000 Less amount cash to hoods of Treasurer, acsa ATTEST: • 691 , Jorte 111, 14111.-11 w. A. B. NVIIITMO, See.y.„ SUBSCRIBE FOR TRE • IMTROSE DEMERIT, TERMS: $2.00 per year. Mliier cfc Clan - to • DEALERS IN FLOUR, GROCERIES, and PROVISIONS, MAIN STREET, Ildcw2a.t Jona SS, 1873.—tt flyer's Hair Vigor, -Tor restoring to Gray Hair ita natural Vitality and Color. A dressing which is at once agreeable, healthy, an d effectual for preserving the hair. It Ma restores faded or gray hair to its original color, with tho gloss and freshness of youth. Thin hair is thickened, falling hair checked, and baldness often, though not always, cured by its use. Nothing can restore the hair where the follicles are de stroyed, or the glands atrophied and decayed; but such as remain can bo saved by this application, and stimu-s lated into activity, so that a new growth of hair is produced. Instead of fooling the hair with a pasty sedi ment, it will keep it clean and vigorous. ' Its occasional use.will prevent the hair from turning gray or falling off, and consequently prevent baldness. The restoration of vitality it gives to the scalp arrests and prevents the forma tion of dandruff, which is often 'so un cleanly qnd offensive. Free from those deleterious substances which make some preparations dangerous and inju rious to the hair, the Vigor can only benefit but not harm it. If wanted merely for a HAIR DRESSING, nothing also can be found so desirable. Containing neither oil nor dye, it does not soil white cambric, and yet lasts long on the hair, giving it a rich, glossy lustre, and a grateful perfume. Prepared by Dr. 1. C. Ayer & Co., Practiad and Analytical Mends% LOWELL, MASS, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral, For Diseases of tho Throat and 'Lungs, such s 3 Douglas, Colds, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis, Asthma, and Consumption. ......... . .. ,,vc, nic A re mo rc. ng ,i the value e grea to t ~, .i i.., discovcncs of modern ,-., • • 6.. 'I f' • - science, few are of • • '''.'''' --.. ' ~-.-..;_.,.,". ' =lliad than this ef fir . V i t ; ' - '4 • foetus] remedy for nll '"-' diseases of the Throat .. 4, " and Lungs. A vast i t .i . trial of Its airmen, P : ' 1k throughout this and 0:i•I' , - other countries, has shown .that It does - • surely and effeatually control them. The testimony of our best cal. sena, of 'ell classes, establishes the fact, that CIIEBILT Pat-roast, will tad does relieve and co the afflicting disorders of the :Throat and ..t„ 2nd any other - medicine. The most dangeritdusAs,,,... . a 'the Pulmonary 'Organs - yield to Its posreire. -:-.-.. -..... t ~Ect r i, env ? , tlon., cured by this preintrati6n.'lltut..: . 1y known , eo remarkable as hardly to .4 -- bii-" - • Eased,. were they. not proven beyond dispute. . As a remedy it Is Adequate, on which, the public, may rely for full protection. By curing Coughs, the foierunners of more serious disease, it raves unnumbered. Jives, and am amount of suffering not to bo computed. - It challenges triaL'and con vinces the most sceptical. Every family should , keep It on hand use protection against the early and unperceived attack:et Pulmonary Affections, • which are easily met at first, but which become Incurable, and too often fatal; If neglected' Ten, 'der longs need this defence; and it is unwise to bo without It. , Asa safeguerd to children, amid • 'the dlstressitt' diseases which beset the Throat and Chest o fchildhooil,'. Cuannv rezronat. '- It ~In'IVICIAbIII I: for, by, its .timely, use,,tuultl tortes are- rescued from premature graves; and saved to thedere and affectiOn'eentrill on them. - It acts speedily and smelt. agaliet ardiniwy colds, securing sound, and tamith.restoring sleep. • :lo . . 'one will suffer troublesome Influenza and pain. ful fironchltbk, when they know hew costly •they eau be cured , : , -. •' ' - .. •- ' • ' • Originally the prodnci of long, lelorlotts; and 'eucceuftd chemical inveitigation, no - met - or toil Is:snared taxman essay baths ,to shit utmost : . ' gTupo lble ' Perrect ' im i'q W r t? b fri 4M lC e b n 4 Y 71' f - e.2.lllbitel:l344llrrerple.of e pr v odircligi otire f li F its :.- , neemunahle,u the greatest.it hes met effected: i - i ,,, ' '-- ' astri . .iti' '' - -, - - M ac,,;; PP t. G; NORA co : ; ebizt Bit ALt=roduals zninittatait ''' Clothing, etc sa JA .c— -wa Montrose. Hay 25, 177, soiyai:laf:iyiaeSiop3Vo:% . 4:jo)• DRY GOODS, CLOTHING , Carpets, MILLINERY GOODS, HOUSE-KEEP ING GOODS. HATS CAPS, ETC., ETC. ' t At the Poplar Store of Guttenberg