VoL. V, No. 47.] rmniz OF THE MUNTINGDOS JOURNAL. The JOURNAL" will be published every 'Wednesday morning, at two dollars a year, psid IN ADVANCE, andifnotpaidwith - Ah six months, two dollars and a half. :Every person who obtains five subscribers, forwards price of subscription, shall be kirsished with a sixth copy gratuitously for wise year. No subscription received for a less period than six months, nor any paper discontwued until all arrearages are paid. rj7" communications must be addressed to the E litor, Pos•T PAID, dr they will not • fie attended to. /Ayes tssetnents not exceeding one square, will he inserted three times for one dollar, and for every subsequent insertion, twenty fix e cents per square will be charged. If nn definite orders are given us to the time an advertisement is to be continued, it will be kept its till ordered clt, and charged accor dingly. AGENTS, The Aultlingdon Journal. Daniel Teague, orfilsonia; David Blair, 1 Esq. Shade Galt; Benj trnin Lease, Shirleys burg; Eliel Smith. Esq. Chilcotistown; Jas. Entriken, jr. Ceffee Run; Hugh Mad(.en, Esq. Springfield; Dr. S. S. Dewey, .1?,•r-i mingham; James Morr,w, Union FlO,l6Cr ; John Sister, Warrior Mark; James Davis, Esq. West township ; I). H. Moore, Esq .Frankatown; Ela. Gilbreath, Esq. Holli daysburg: Henry Neff, dlexandria; Aaron Burns, Williamsburg; A. J. Stewart. Water Street; Wm. Reed, Esq. Morrie township; 'Sol.,m.in Hamer. Aers Mill; limes Dysart, Phials Spruce Creek; Wm. Murray, Esq. Grayaville; John Crum, Manor Hill; Jas. Stewart, Sinking Valley; L. C. Kessler, Mill Creek. LIVER COMPL . Cured by the use of Dr Harlich's Gompraind Strengthening and German Aperient Pills Mr. Win. Richard, Pittsburg, Pa. entirely cured of the above distressing disease: His somptoms were, pain and weight in the left side, loss of appetite, vomiting, acrid erncta tions, a distention of the stomach, sick headache, furred tongue, countenance cluing ed to a t.itron color, difficulty of breathing, disturbed rest, attended with a cough, great -debility, with other syintoms indicating great derangement of the functions of the liver. Mr. Richard tad the advice 0; several phv sicians, but received no relief, until usioa Harlicli's medicine, which terminated in ef fecting a perfect cure. Principal °lnca, 19 North Eight strer Philadelphia. [don Pa Far sale at Jacob Miller's store Huntin DYSPFPSIA! DYSPEPSIA!! More proofB of the efficacy of Dr. Harlich' Medicines. Mr-Jonas Hartman, of Sumneytown, Pa. I entirely cured of the above disease, which he was afflicted with for six years. His I spmptoms were a sense of distension and op pression after eating, distressing pain in the pit of the stomach, nausea, loss of appetite, giddiness and dimness of sight, extrtme de liry, flatulency, acrid eructations, mine times vomiting, and pain in the right side, depression of spirits. disturbed rest, faint• ness, and not able to pursue his business without causing immediate exhaustion and weariness. Mr. Hartman is happy to state to the pub lie and is willing to give any information to the afflicted, respecting the wonderful ben efit he received from the use of Dr. Harlich Compound Strengthening and German ape rient pills. Principal office No. 19 North Eighth street Philadelphia. Also for sale at the store of Jacob Miller, Huntingdon. SYMPTOMS, nyepepsia may be described from a wan ot appetite or an unnatural nut! voracious one nausea, sometimes bilious vomiting, suddels and transient distensions of the stomach af ter eating, acid and prutrescenteructatiuns, water brash, pains in the legion of the stun itch, costiveness palpitation of the heart, uiz siness and dimness of sight, disturbed rest, tremors, mental despondency, flatulency, spasms, nervous irritability, chillness, sal lowness of complexion, oppressing after eat ing, general Janpur and debility ;this disease will also very often produce the sick head :ache, as proved by the experience of these who have suffered of it. 11VER COMPLAINT. Citis Alistase is discovered by a fixee ob tuse pain aoci weight in the right side under ft he short r:is; attended with heat, uneasi ness about the 0 of the stomach;—there is fin the right side al so a distension—the patient !loses Ids appetite and becomes sick and trou ble with vomiting. The tongue becomes rough and black, countenance changes to a pale or citron color or yollow, like those IO- C( (ed with jaudice—difficulty of breathing, disturbed rest, attended with dry caagh, dif Acuity of laying on the left side—the oody becomes weak. and fivaliy the'disease termi nates into another of a mure serious nature, which in all probability is far beyond the power of human skill. Dr Harlich's coin- Round tonic strengthening anti German ape Tient pills, if taken at the commr:ncement of this disease, will check it. and by continu ing the use of the medicine a few weeks, a perfect•cure cure will be performed. Thou sands can testify to this fact. Certificates of many persons may daily be eeen of the efficacy of this invaluable medi cine. by applying at the Medical Office. No 19 North Eight street. Philadelphia. Also. at the Folic of Jac.ob Miller, who Alpent for Woßthigiloo ,mtinty, .. * • 4 , 4,0 k. • • I ttAt,t. • e ;$,, • 1, ••• 4 41 .:4 T-.A` 4 . HUNTING DON, PENNSYLVANIA, w TREA TMEN7' The principal objects to be kr pt In view are Ist ' to free the stomach and intestines f ono offending materials. 2d, to improve the tone of the digestive organs sod energy of the system in removing noxious matters from the stomach, and obviating costiveness. Violent drastic purgatives should be avoided and those aperients should be used which act gently, and rather by soliciting the per istnlic motions of the intestines to their regu larity of health, than by irritating them to a laborious excitement. k here is nn medicine better adapted to the completion of this than Dar. 0. P. HARLICH'S GERMAN APERIENT PILLS. lo , prove the functions of the cle bilitatedorgao. and invigorate the i . , stem generally, no tot rli,•ine ,ver been so prominently ellic,cit-us a, DR. Compound Tonic Strengthening Pills, whose 'Outlay influence in restorihg the digestive organs to a healthy action, and re-establish ing health and vigor in enfeebled and dys , petit constitutions; have gained the implicit confidence of the most eminent physicians, and unprecidented public t,stiniony. Re member Dr. Harlich's Cempeund Tonic Strengthening Pills, thny are put up in small packets with full directions. Principal office for the United Statrs, is No. 19 North Eighth street Philadelphia where all communications must be adders, sed. Also for ;ale nt the store of Jacob Miller who is agent for Huntingdon County. RHEUMATISM Entirely cured by the use of Dr. 0. P. fi-a lick's Compound Strengthening and Ger man Aperient Pills. Mr. Solomon Wilson, of Chester co. Pa., afflicted for two years with the above dis tressing disease, of which he had to use his crutches for 18 months, his symptoms were excruciating pain in all his Joints, esp• tinily n his hip, Shoulders and :moles, pain increas rag al ways towards eyeing attended with heat. Mt. Wilson, was at a a time not able to move his limbs on account of the pain be ing so great; lie being advised by a kit nd of his to procure Dr. Harlich's pill of which he sent to the agent in West Chester and pro erred sam; on using the medicine the third day the pain disappeared slid his strength increasing fast, and in three weeks was able to attend to his business, which he had not done for 18 months; for the benefit of others afflicted, he wishes those lines published that they may be relieved, and again en joy the pleasures of a healthy life. Principle office, 19th North Bth Street, Philadelphia. ALso—For sale at the Store of Jacob Mil , ler, lduntingdon, Pa. CAUSE OF DFSPEPS'M. Ids disere.,ti often originates front a hob of cm erloading or cit.,',.clutiug the stomach by excessive eating or clrioking, or very prolrac ted periods of fasting, an ind , tleat or seden tary life, in which no exercise is afforded to the muscular fibres or mental faculties, fear grief, and deep anxiety, taken too frequent ly str ng purgeogniediemes, dysentery, mis call loges, intermittent and syasntodic uflec tiros of the stomach and heevels• the mu cotrimon of the latter causes are late hour, and the tuo frequent use of spultuos liquor From the Bcston Chro&cle, 10 We see by an advertisement in anoth er column that Messrs. Comstock & co., the American Agents for Oldridge's Balm of Columbia, have deputies to sell that ar rtide in Boston and elsewhere. R e know a lady of this city whose hair was so near ly gone as to expose entirely her phrenol ogical developments, which, considering that they betokened a most amiable dispo sition, was not in reality,' very unfortbilate Nevertheless she mourned the loss of locks that she had worn, and after a year's fruitless resort to miscalled resto ratives, purchased; some months ago, a bottle or two of Oldrulge's Balm, and she has now ringlets in rich prolusion, glossy, and of raven blackness. We are not puf fing, none of the rotundity has been sent to us, and indeed, we do not want any, for though we were obliged to wear a wig a year ago, we have noel, though its v;r tue, hair enough, and of a passable quali ty, of our own. To I Bald leadal,—Phis Is to certi fy, that I have been bald about twenty years, and by the use of the genuine Balm of Columbia, my bead is now covered with hair. I shall be ht,ppy to convince any one of the fact that will cull and see me Delhi village. The above article I bought at Griswold, Case & co.'s store, who had it from Comstock & Co. JO hN JAQUISH, fr. DAI? LV G FlitT D The Balm of Columbia has been imi tated by a notorious counterfeiter. Let it never be purchased or used unless it has the time of L. N. Comstock, or the signs tare of Comstock & co, on a splendid wrapper. This is the only external test that will secure the public limn deception Address Comstock & Co. II hulesale Druggists, New-York, No :2 Fletcher-street. Sept. 23, 1840.•3m I. Fisher & A. K. Corny n. ATTORNEYS AT LAW• 020 WILL carefully attend to all business committed to their care in the Courts of Huntingdon & Mifflin counties. Mr. Cur nyu may be found at his office, iu Market St., opposite the Store of Mr. Dorris, in the borough of Hunting:lon. MM. Sep. 9, 11140. "ONE COUNTRY, ONE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY•" A. W. BENTeDICT PUBLISH F' \ i4 4 Proclamation. VHEREAS, in and by an act of the General Assembly of the Common wealth of Pennsylvania, entitled an 'Act re lating to the elections of this commonwealth, • enacted on the 2nd day of July, 1E39, it is pru vided that the eclectors of the several coin ties of the Commonwealth, qualified to vote for members of the General Assembly shall an election at the same places at which the said members shall have been voted for at the proceeding election on the fifth Fri day preceding the first Wednesday is De cember every fourth year thet eafter, for the pulp , se of electing electors of a President and Vice President of the United States. Now, therefore, I, JOSEPH SHANNON High Sheriff of the County of Huntingdon, in pursuance of the duty enjoined on me by the auove recited act, do Issue this my, proclamation giving notice to the freemen of said county qaulified to vote fur mem bers of ihe General Assembly to meet at the several election districts tkerein on FRIDAY THE 30th. day ti OCTO BER next at the several election dis tricts therein, as follows, viz: Ist Distiict composed of part of Hen derson towt.ship, west of the line begin ning at Mifflin county line on the sum mit of Jacks' mountain, thence west so far as to include the farms owned by Mi. child Speck and the heirs or James Kell% o Al ill f2reek, thence up the said creel. to Wcst township line, thence along sitio tine to tt e line of Mifflin county, and al so a part of Porter township, and all that part of Walker township not in the 20th district, at the Court blouse in the Bo rough of Huntingdon. .9.nd District composed of Dublin town ship at the house of Mathew Taylor, jr. in said township. Sd District composed of Warrior mark township and parts of Tyrone and Antis townships, at the house lately occupied by Christian Buck, in Wartiorsmatk. 4th District composed of the township of Allegheny, at the house ofJacob Black sth Dish ict composed of that part of Idle township ol Woodbury, not included _ . . . in the 6th dii-triet and part ofMortis, at the house of Christian Flee it, in Williams Gib District composed of all that pol of 1; etolbury townzhip, inying 6outn of a line to commence at the line of said titivoship on the summit of Tussey's noun Min, thence to r•un westwardly, so as to include the house of Joseph Everhart, and .otth of the house of A aron Burns, John Ditch, and Pete• Sorriek, so as to include the pun cc mill on Piney creek, and thence to the line of said township on the sum mit of Canoe mountain, at the Public School house, on the premises of Samuel Rhodes, on the Piney creek rand lead ing from Springfield furnace to slartins t•ur 7t h District composed of the township of Horewell, at the house of David Si mooton, in said township. Bth District composed of the townshi'p of Hume, at the house of John Harper, in the town of Salesbury, in said town ship.. . . i 6111 District composed of the township I of Shirley, at the house of John Lutz, in Shirleysburg. loth District composedof the township of Antis, including that p.art of said town ship which was formerly attached to the Sd district, at the house of John Bell in I said township. 11th District composed of Porter & part Itenderson & of so much of the township of Hest as is now included in the fol. lowing boundaries, to wit,—beginning at or near on old line kilt at the west end of Jackson's narrows. thence eastwardly to intersect the north line of the farm now occupied and owned by '1 (Mitts Kaufman, thence north east to intersect the south line of the fat ni of Michael 11I'Guire„ thence west to 'l'ussey's mountain, to! intersect the line of Franklin township, thence along the said township line to lit tle Juniata river, thence down the said' river to the litne kiln and place of begin- 1 ning, shall be and the s me is hereby an nexed to Porter township in said county for all township and general election pur• poses as fully and effectually as if the same had been originally included there in, at the public school house in the town of Alexandria. 12th District composed of the township of Franklin, at the house formerly occu pied by Win Lytle. - 13th District composed of Tell town ship, at the Union school house near the Methodist meeting house in said township 14th District composed of Springfield township, at the school house near Hun— ter's mill. 15th District composed of part of Union township, at the house [(innerly occupied by L. S. Laguard in said township. 10th District composed of that part of Uenderson township not included in the 'lst District, at the public school house in' the village of Roxbury, it AND PROPRIETOR. 'EDNESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1840 17th District composed ofTyrone town sip, including that !wart of said township which was formerly attached to the 3d. election district, at the house of James Crawford in Tyrone township. 18th District composed of Morris town lip ut the house of Frederick Kuhn in said township 19th District to be composed of that part of /lest township nut included in the 11th district, at the public school house on the farm formerly owned b) James Ennis in said township. 20th District composed of those parts of the townships of of Hopewell and Wat ker in the county of Huntingdon, nithin the following boundaries, to as ith: begin ! ing at Hartsock's Gap in Tussey's tnoun tarn, thence down Gardner's Ran, so as , to included the house of Mathew Garner, 1 Isaac Bowers and Geo. Brumbaugh; i thence in a straight line through Forshey's i Gap, to the (lawn township line, thence 1 down the same to a point opposite David Corbin's, thence down on a straight line, ncluding the house of David Corbin, to the cm ner of Porter townsip, on the Hun tingdon and Woodcock Valley road, thence along the said summit to the place of beginning, shall hereafter be a generate election district, snd that the general glee Lion for said districs be held at the house occupied by Jacob Magahy, in the village of McConnelsburg. 21st Diitrict compoied of that part of the township of Union, in the county of Huntingdon, now composing the town• ship of •ludd. beginning nn the line o! fled ht county where the line of Spring. field and Union townships meet, thencl by the line between the townships to a point nn said line, nearly opposite John Caufman's so as to include his farm, thence by a straight line to Hopewell town ship line at Furshep's Gap, on Terrace mountain, thence by the line of Ilopewell and Enion townships, to Bedford county line, thence to said place of beginning, soon hereafter be a generate district, and the eit,ctors thereof shall hereafter hold their ;eneral elections at the house now occupi,tl by by J. Henderson in said dis trict. 22nd District composed of that part of 11 est t wnship on the sooth-east side of ll arri. , r ridge, beginning at the line of 'Pest: Henderson township, at the said ridge to the line of Barree . . . r ship; thence ny tr.e timTio o iom•IS Barree and If est townships to the sum mit of Stone mountain, to intersect the line of Henderson and ft est townships thence by said line to the place of begin ning, shall be a seperate election district, to be called "surrey's Run district," and that the electors therein shall hold their , zeneneral elections at the the house now ozcupied by Benjatnin Corbin on Murrey's Run. 25d District composed of Cromwell township, shall hold their general election at the house now occupied by flin Wear rel in Orbisonia. 24th District composed ()fall that part of Frankstown township, lying east of the following lines viz: beginning where the Al legheny township line crosses the Brush run, thence down said run, thence down the Beaver dam branch of the Juniata to the forks above Lowry's mill; thence up the south fork of said run, to where the great road crosses the same, leading from Hollidaysburg to the Loop, thence a straight line to the It oodbury line on the north end of the Cove of Loop mountain, shall hereafter be , t seyerate election dis trict, and the electors thereof shall hold their general elections at the house lately occupied by David Ditch in the Borough. of Frankstown. 525th District composed of the town• ship al./lair constituting a seperate elec• tius district to I old their election, there• fore at the public sehocl house in flo lli daysburg. At which tinte and place will be elec. ted. THIRY Y ELECTORS, for President and Vice President of the United Stales. And the Sheriff of every county in the Commonwealth, is directed by the said act of Assembly to give notice. ...That every person, excepting justices of the peace, who shall hold any office or appointment of profit, or trust under the government of the United States, or of this State, or of any city or incorporated district, whether a commissioned officer or agent, who is, or shall be, employed under the legislative, executive or judici ary department of this State, or of the United States, or of any incorporated dis trict, and also that every member of Con gress, an d of tho State Legislature, and of the select or common council of any city, or commissioners of any incorpora• ted District, is by law, incapable of hold ing orixercising, at the same time the of ficer or appointment of Judge, Inspector or Clerk of :toy election of this common-, wealt, and that no Inspector, Judge, or other officer of any such election, shalt be eligible to any office to be then voted for." "In case any clerk, appointed under the provisions of this act, shall neglect to attend at any elecion during said year, it shall be the duty of the inspector who ap- pointed said elm k, qualified as aforesaid, who shall perform the duties for the year. And the return judges of the reaped live districts are required to meet at the Court house in Huntingdon, on the Man day next (which will be the second day of NovemLer) and there to perform the duties enjoined upon them by law. Given under my hand at Huntingdon, the 23d day of September 1840, and of the independence of the United States the sixty-fourth. JOSEPH SHANNON, Sheriff. [God save the Common w 111 The Oppressors of the I'oor. Or hard money Rulers Appropriately co termed, because it will be hard to obtain. Reduction of wages. WORKINGMEN will you consent to be placed upon a level with European serfs ? (Jr will you resolve to live like Free Aster icon Citizens? In avowing a desire to reduce wages to the lowest standard, Mr. Buchanan, Mr. Grundy and Mr. Calhoun have brought upon themselves the just indignation of that large class of people who earn their bread by the sweat of the brow and the honest labor of their hands, and who have shown themselieS more conversant so ith their own interests—zealous and watch• tul of their own rights, than these gen tlemen seemed to expect. He who can suppose the people of this country will sanction any measure, or support any set of men whose object is to reduce wages to the loosest specie stan dard, must 'grately underrate the intel ligence of that class of people whom they would thus trample upon, and take them to be the degraded and spiritless beings they would make bon. Thank Gud the American people are not yet prepared to • receive the yoke of vassalage nor submit to the schackles of oppression ; they !know their own value too well, and esti mate their own dignity too highly to allow LORD it over them to tot,. ...•_ . BUY their LABOR FOR cr TIIENTY GENTS II DAY: The standard of wages in the hard mo ney countries to which Mr. Buchanan and Van Buren would reduce labor in this country, is as Wows— In France, Ploughmen get limn five to eight dollars a year, and beard themselves —Laborers get but 19 cents a d .y and . found— Farmers servants get S to 6 cents , a day. In Germany, Laborers wages is 9 cents a day. Farmer's servants get five cents a day. In' Italy, Li borers get from eight to ten cents a day. Farmer's servants get 4 to 6 dollars a year, Anil this is the condition to which the administiation proposes to reduce the 'roe labor of this country. This is their plan for improving the condition of the labor ing community, lthat a commentary on the hard money policy? What hope is there for a man born the son of poor pa rents ever to better his condition? W hat ray of hope is there to stimulate him to exertion? —None, none! Ile who is born there a peasant, dies r. peasant. Tloise born to the plough, die at the plough tail; and all that the honest life of a laborer's toil can procure for them is coarse and scanty means of subsistence. Are the people made happy bccausc theirs are hard money countries? Is this an exam ple worthy rof our imitation? Will the high blood of American Freemen submit to this? Never! From the Ntw York Democratic Press. IF orkingaraen itead the Fel WU lug We learn from the Boston Atlas, that there was a great gathering of the people at the North End last week. The lion. Samuel 6, Goodrich, of Ros bury, was present, who was warmly and enthusiastically received, and who u dressed the audience in his best and hap piest manner. We have only room fir a sketch of a story winch he introduced and which was nearly as fllows. Read it at tentively, mechanics and workingmen. THE MORTGAGE AND THL•' SUB TREABURY Let us suppose a case. On Saturday evening a mechanic of one of ocr Nor folk towns sit down with his wife fur a cum lurtable chat. 'the children are all in bed --the week's work done—its cares are laid aside. The husband has just retur ned from the Springfield Convention, and his heart is lull of democracy. Ile can think of nothing else—he can speak [Wizoix No. 255 of nothing else, in the fullness of his heart he calls his youngest add demo, mcy, and us he kisses his wife on his return, he calls her democracy also. Every thing he loves is democracy---every thing he hates is Ilartford Convention Blue-Light Federalism. The conversation of the mechanic and his wife, on this occasion supposed, natu rally turns upon politics, and the follow ing conversation ensues: vt IFE. Well ilusband, you talk a great deal about democracy—now I ,ttm a wo man, arid know nothing about politics; but pray tell me what democracy is? MECHANIC. Why,democracy democracy. W. Indeed! who told you so? M. Bancroft told toe so. I have heard him say so more than fifty times— and Hellett says so, and Rantoul and Ever ett;_they all say so. W. Well, if they all say so, it must be true. But what does democracy mean? Pshaw! You women never under. stand polities; you have no head for it. Nuw I'll read to you out of the Boston Post what it means. Here are the resole lions of the Democratic Convention, pre pared at Boston last fall. They were written by Brownson, or some of the great guns. Here it is—" Democracy ss the vvpremacy of man over his accidmts:" W. Whew! Democracy i the suprema cy of man over his acciii.qits!!! what a critter it must be. But to tell the truth I don't understand any more about de mocracy to to I did before; I suppose it's because I'm a woman. But look here, hue band, I want to talk to you about the Mortgage of Squire Grabble's upon that house and land. Ile called here while you was gone, and he said a part of it must be paid, or he'd sue for it, and then the house and land would all go, M. Why didn't you tell me of this be f‘: re? W. Because four head was so full of democracy and the Sprinp,field Conven tion, that you would'nt listen to me. I've mentioned it three times and it went in to one car and out at the other. Now husband, I've been thinking about the mortgage, and it worries me; your wages have fallen MT of late, and some of the time you have no employment. When your wages were a dollar and a half a day and Sou had fall work, you could port the family well, p ay a b un d ie 'd dollars a year towards citaring the mort gage. It wee a pleasant thing to work, and be economical and sviti,r, when rt. had the prospect of having a house of our own, without Squire Graball's clutches upon it. Now you can hardly support the family, and when I ask fir money, you say you are running in debt. This is a bad prospect, if we are to lose the house and land alter all. Al. Oh, never fear, wile—times will be better soon. They've got a Substreasus ry now, which is to make pis all rich, cx• cqtthe aristocrats. . . 'W. I don't know about that. The times has beet getting worse and worse. It's four or five years since you talked of having better times, and now thet they have really got a "Sub•treasury," they say it is going to reduce the wages to fif ty cents a day. %l. Well, that's true, but every thing we buy is to come down at the same rate. W. And what advantage is that? Be sides seine people say that sugar, and tea, and collee, and spices, and all foreign things, will be as high as ever, because the Sub-trea.ory don't work in those countries where l'hese things come from. But if wages are to come down, how are boa to pay the mortgage of $5OO to Spi er Graben? Xll. How I am going to pay the most. gage? Yes, if your wages go down to fif ty cents a (Jay, how can you ever pay it? It will cost all that ou can earn to sup• port the family. M. well 1 must sell the cow, and the garden lot. W. YVA, but these have gone down half price, and they won't go tar toward re ducing the mot tgag , M. well, I inu,t sell the house. W. But that has gone down halt price too: so timt nll the property you have got won't pay Squire Graball's mortgage— . we must be turned out of house and home and still you are in debt. You are a ru hied man if the Sub•treasury goes into ' full operation. NI. I never thought of all that befere. There is something wrong hotnewhere. // , There is Andeed i,usband, II hen they toade the Sub-fremury to reduce thu poor man's wat , es, and the poor man's property, , ‘l . .y Aunt they nmke it reduce tic prow &hi? Answer me that. When they redo( e a umn's means of pay ing Vis debt, Wit. didn't they reduce the debt too; Al. I Can't'or, upon my word. W. well, these men who made the sqh treasury. pretei.de to be the poor men': trienti—hut it seems to w. that they ard
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