Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 7 October 1854 — Page 2
THE REVIEW. ail,VrOSB!IT!&L8,
SATURDATMOBNINO, OCTOBER 7, 1854.
FEINTED AND
PUBLISHED EVERY SATUE DAY MORNING BY
CHARLES H. BO WEN.
pTThe Crawfordsrille Review, farni*he4 to Subscribers at 11,50 in advance, or 12, tfaot paid witkia tke year.
I ItC I- AT ION
LARGER
THAN ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN
Crawfbrdftville!
Advertise", call up and examine our list of HT SUBSCRIBERS.
A.U kiada of JOB WORK done to order.
To Advertisers.
"Every advertisement handed in for publication, •hoaldhave writcn upon it the number of times the advertiser wishes it inserted. If not so stated, it will be inserted unt:l ordered out, and charged accordingly.
Agents for the Review.
?E.
W. CARR. U. S. Newspaper Advertising Acrent, Evans' Building, N. W. corncr of Tliird and Walnut Streets, Philadelphia. 1'a. 3 S. II. PARVIN, South East corner Columbia and
Main streets. Cincinnati, Ohio is our Agent to procure advertisements.
XW Wc wish it distinctlv understood, that we have now the BEST nnd the'LARGEST assortment of KEW and FANCY JOB TrPEevor brought to this place. We insist on those wishing work done to call up, and we will show them our assortment of typs. cuts. «fco. Wo have pot them and no mistake. Work done on short notice, and on reasonable terms.
MP Temperance Resolution Adopted at the Democratic State Convention. Rr.soi.vEi, That Intempcr:inc is a great moral and social evil, for the restraint and correction of which legislative interposition is nccessnry
S "The right of the people to be secure in their per-
»oni,
and
proper but that wc cannot approve of anv plan for the eradication or correction of this evil that must necessarily result in the infliction of greater ones: and that wo are therefore opposed to any
law
upon this subject that will authorize the SEARCHISO for, or SEIZURE, CONFISCATION, and DESTRUCTION* of private property.
Read I Read I Read!
HOUSES, papers, and EKKIXTS, against unrcasonable SEARCH or SEIZURE,shall not be VIOLATED." Sic. 11, Const, of hid. '•No man's I-ROPERTT shnll be TAKE* BT LAW, without just COMPENSATION." SEC. 21.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
For Supreme Judge, 4th District, ALVIN I'. 110 VKY, of Posey county. For Secretarv of State, NEI1EMIAII IIAVDKN, of Rush county.
For Treasurer of State,
ELIJAH NEWLANT), of Washington county. For Auditor of State, JOHN P. DUNN, of Perry county.
For Superintendent of Public Instruction, WILLIAM C. LARRABEE, of Putnam county.
DISTRICT TICKET.
For Congress—Sth District.
Dr. JAMES DAVIS, of Fountain county. For Prosecuting Attorney, .SAMUEL W. TELFORD, Tippecanoe county.
COUNTY TICKET.
For Representative, THOMAS J. WILSON. For Countv Treasurer,
JOHN1 LEE.
!. For Sherifl". BENJAMIN MISNER. For Commissioner.
SAMUEL GILLILAND. For Coroner. ,-MATTHEW R. SCOTT.
For Snrvpvor, JOIIN BUCK. Di-tri'.-t Prosecutor. ABNER V. AUSTIN.
DISSOLUTION OF PARTN ERSIIIP.
NOTICE
is hereby given, that the Partnership heretofore existing between the undersigned has been this dnv dissolved by
0^7" M. D. Manson and several other gentlemen will speak at the Court House on Monday night.
(£r Democrats look out for fraudulent Tickets! Beware of false charges gotten up on the ere of the election for the purpose of deceiving you! Democrats do your duty and a glorious victory awaits you.
'0iT" Maaterson the Know Nothing can-J didait for county Treasurer, in order to counterfeit th« Democratic ticket, has had Lit printed with eagles at the head. Look out for them.
JBT We call attention to the letter of our friend LKW WALLACE. It is a vindication of himself from the low and contemptible insinuations in the Journal of last week. We are sure Mr. W's. independence and JMDKBCM will command respect, while it ptoportioaatelr sirks Maj. Mact and T. W,
*1-
TO 1IENRY CLAY WHIGS. Certain Ami-Nebraska orators are in the
habit of appealing to the old line Whigs for assistance. In such appeals the name of Henry Clay is invariably used. Henry Clay they assert was in favor of the main: tainance of the Missouri Compromise and were be now living would be at the head of the People's party.
We affect for the memory of that great man no sentiment conflicting with what we have said of him while he was in life. We hare said he was great, true and honest.— We now say he was an orator, a statesman and patriot. Old Whigs may be proud of him—he was not only the founder of their party, but he was its soul. His death was the falling away of the last great column that upheld their political structure.— There are none now living worthy to wear his mantle.
Would Henry Clay have been at the head of the People's party? Are the old line Whigs now working in the ranks of the old line Democracy, traitors to his principles and memory?
As to the first. We hare no better way of deriving the truth than from the speeches of the man himself. Those speeches were left by him as the vindication of his life and principles. He suffered them to be preserved for no other purpose. When he was dead, and when the marble above his breast was not colder than his heart, they were to live after him, by their silent syllables to convict his slanderer and exemplify his motives and renown.
Now, what is it to be a leader in the People's party? It is to be an abolitionist, and an associate of abolitionists. What honest Whig but will grow indignant at the idea of Ilenry Clay sitting down among abolitionists? Henry Clay the partner and associate of Twining, Dougherty, Hull and Dr. Brown! Is it not the very climax of defamation? 2. It is to ben Know Nothing. How do Whigs like to think of Henry Clay meeting at the hour of midnight, in a cellar or a garret, plotting against the rights and happiness of his fellow citizens? Henry Clay seeking to rob Irishmea and Germans and Scotchmen of their citizenship! Henry Clay warring upon inoffensive men because of their religion and conscience! 3. It is to be a Maine-Law Prohibitionist. IIow can Whigs fancy Henry Clay abandoning the affairs of the nation to prescribe to the individual whathe shall eat and drink? Henry Clay a bigot and fanatic! Henry Clay bending at the feet of Neal Dow, the bully and the infamous, taking lessons in that statemanship which has to do with the gullet and the belly, with whiskey and its consumers! 4. It is to be the ally of a band of •political clergymen. What will Whigs say to the idea of Henry Clay crying "amen," while three thousand clergymen threaten the Senate of the U. S. with the wrath of the Almighty? Think of Henry Clay justifyin^ a clerical crusade against the liberties
O
mutual
consent.—
The business will hereafter be conducted by Mr. Bowen,who has purchased the interest of Mr. Stover.
CIIAS. II. BOWEN, B. F. STOVER.
TO THE POLLS!""
Come every Democrat! Come every National Whig Come every lover of the Union—ever friend
of religious liberty The Ides of October are at hand. The events of that day will decide whether a sectional or a national party shall rule in the State of Indiana! Disunion follows the success of the fusion
party. Shall they gain the day? COME ONE,'COME ALL!
FOREWARNED I FOREWARNED!
"William Schooler in a speech at Shan* nondale, publicly declared his intention to bare printed democratic tickets of every kind, with his name on them instead of Mr. Misner'i. Here is a fraud boldly announced. It is one among many that will be resorted to by the Fusionists. Look to your tickets everybody!
of the people! Henry Clay lending his hand to the demolition of the State, and the erection, on its ruins, of a church, or many churches, invested with political domination! Henry Clay casting away a Republic for the institution of a Hierarchy! 5. It is to be (juilty as an assassin of the Whig party. Whigs, think of it! Where is your old party? Who murdered it?— Who tore down its organization? Who followed in its funeral line, and flung clods on the coffin that contained its principles?— Think, then, that Henry Clay himself founded your party. Would he himself have shouted Hosanna over its downfall? 1. What said he about the abolitionists? "With this class (abolitionists) the immediate abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia, the prohibition of the removal ot slaves from State to State, and the refusal to admit any new State, comprising within its limits the institution of domestic slavery, are but so many means conducing to the accomplishment of the ultimate but perilous end at which they avowedly and boldly aim are but so many short stages in the long and bloody road to the distant goal at which they would finally arrive. Their purpose is abolition, universal abolition, peaceably if they can, FORCMLY IFTHEY MUST"
Speech
on
Abolition petitions, Feb. 7 1839.
There were successive steps he said, the last of which is the refusal to admit any new State with the institution of domestic slavery. Dan. Mace has solemnly pledged himself to that very opposition. Is not the traitor standing in the last step'l and is the day of coercion far distant' 2. What said he as to the mergence of the Whig party into the abolition party? "Bnt if the Whig party is to be merged into a contemptible abolition party, and if abolitionism is to be engrafted upon the H7iig creed 1 renounce the party, an2 cease to be a Whig. I go yet a step farther. If I am alive, I will give my bumble support to that man for the Presidency, who to whatever party he may belong, is not contaminated by fanaticism, rathe* than to en# uho,
crying out all the time that he is a Whig, maintains doctrines utterly subversive of the constitution and the Union." [Speech on Compromise Measure, 1850. 3. What said he about prohibition, or temperance urged by legal coercion? "I protest against any inference of my being inimical to the Temperance cause.— On the contrary, I think it an admirable cause that has done great good, and will continue to good a* long ASJ LEGAL COERCION IS XOT EMPLOYED, AND IT RESTS EXCLUSIVELY
UPON PERSUASION, A.ND IT3 OWN INTRINSIC
MERITS. [Speech near Lexington, June 7, 1843. 4. What said he as to the Missouri Compromise compared with non-intervention, which is the doctrine of the Nebraska Bill? "Sir, while I was engaged in anxious consideration upon this subject (the Compro
mise Resolutions,) the idea of the Missouri Compromise, as it is termed, came under my review, was considered by me, AND FINALLY REJECTED, as in my judgement LESS WORTHY. of the common acceptance of both parLies of this Union than the prospect which I ofer to your consideration."
Whigs, is the abolition party dead? Is it not rather flourishing with renewed vigor? Did it not swallow the greatest portion of the Free Soil party of 1848? And has it not swallowed up most of the leaders of your old party? Were not Julien, Harding, Stephens, Hull, and Robinson delegates to the new party's convention in July.
The Whig party may be dead finally, or, as Henry S. Lane said, it may be dead for the present. But now when it is sought to merge you into a "contemptible abolition party," will you not be like Henry Clay? Will 3?ou not cease for the present at least to be a Whig? Can it be denied that Lane, Nay!or, Orth, Brier, and such smaller fry as James Wilson and T. W. Fry, in their present coalition with Twining, Dougherty, Brown and Ellis, are all the time crying out that they are Whigs? On that ground alone, do they not claim the right, whether you will or not, to transfer you, body and principles, into the same unholy coalition?
Whigs, will you, by acting with this New party, allow Prof. Twining to wave his hand over your heads, crying—"WE ARE ALL ABOLITIONISTS!" And remember that Fry, corrupt and false as he has been proven, has not denied this speech of Twining's but by his silence, he has admitted its utterance and given it approval.
Will you be of those who are ALL ABOLITIONISTS?" In the matter of prohibition, remember the words of Henry Clay!
And as to the Nebraska Bill, when'Larie and Wilson addresses you, claiming to be Whigs, recollect that Henry Clay weighed the Missouri Compromise and the project of NON-INTERVENTION in opposite scales, and declared NON-INTERVENTION TUB MOST WORTHY or THE TWO. Then think that non
intervention is the principle of the Nebraska Bill. The declaration that Henry Clay is the author of the line of 36-30 is a willful lie.
Then why not. follow Henry Clay? Why not pay his memory the compliment of faith in the present emergency? Why make war upon the self-regulating right of the people?
It is a slander to suppose that Henry Clay would this day have favored consolidation of power in Congress. Beware the canting hypocrites who, having once been Whigs, now protess even worship for the founder of your murdered party! The People's party declare themselves fighting the battles of freedom that is true but their freedom is that of the CLACKS, while the Democracy seek that of the WHITES, our fathers, brothers, nnd sons now going to the Territories.
Whigs, what are the alternatives before you? Are they not Democracy on the one hand, and Abolition on the other? the constitution and disunion? Will you not prefer Democracy and the constitution0 As Henry Clay was your oracle and guide while living, will you not folk the paths he has blazed before you in the wilderness of politics? The national democracy will look for you at the polls on Tuesday!
PROSPECT OF A B31T3EZE. The Know Nothings are quite indignant
at their prohibition brethren for inviting an Irishman named Edwards to lecture at this place. It appears a foreigner can no more lecture than he can hold office without the permission of the Know Nothings.
•..•"Cold water may do for the Locos, Or a little vinegar stew:
But
give US HARP CIDER AND WHISKZT,
To drink to old Tippecanoe."
Such used to be Thomas Whiskey's hymn. In 1840 he sang it to a charm.— He and Mace since then have'nt changed their opinions at all it was with the utmost difficulty the Maj. prevailed on Fry to alter the old hymn. But he did, so that it runs now— "Cold water may do for the Anti's, •. ..
Or a little wine in its place But give me old Bourbon or Rot-jut. To drink while stag-dancing with Mace.
AMUSING.—To
hear Dr. Brown cheer
while the anti-Nebraska speakers are rillifying William J., his brother.
3- THOMAS WILSON. As anticipated, the opposition papers are teeming with outragous lies manufactured for the injury of this Gentleman. Among others they have published him as declaring
himself in favor of Catholic predominance. The words they attribute to him are to the effect, that he would rather live under Catholic rule than the rule of Protestanism. The authors of this story are far gone in malice and lies. Their depravity is almost with out a paralell.
Mr. Wilson's sentiment was the sentiment of every patriot. He expresses no preference for the rule of any sect of the Christian school. He wants freedom for conscience equally for all denominations, and domination for none. It was for this, as much as lor anything else, that the revolution was fought and as our fathers wanted no church of England, their children want no church of America, fostered by the government, and sustained by the general treasury. He asks for Catholics and Protestants fair play—nothing more. This they both have an equal constitutional right to and to destroy their equality, is to destroy the brightest feature in our system of government. Thus are Mr. Wilson's sentiments wilfully perverted by lying presses and unscrupulous editors for their accursed political purposes.
THE TICKETS COMPARED. Thomas J. Wilson is a practical farmer, gifted with unusual fluency and sound judgment.
He is neither a bigot or fanatic, and is without any predisposition to sectionalism. A man from the people, he is a people's man. Thus, he is opposed to the Mainelaw, though a temperate man be is favor of popular sovereignty in the territories and he is opposed to anything that looks like war against any portion of the people, because of their place of birth, or their political or religous principles. He is the nominee of the 5th October convention and will receive the support of the Democracy and the better and purer part of the old Whigs.
Mr. Earl, his opponent, is a Dr. Whatever principles he may have, the public has never been the better or the wiser of them. We can only ascertain them by the complexion of the convention that nominated him. He has been perfectly mute. Hundreds of people could not swear whether he is white or black, heathen or christian. He has been a mere pawn in the fingers of abolitionists and prohibitionists, movable at their will. He has had no hand in politics save in the organization of Know Nothing Lodges. He will be supported by Abolitionists, Prohibititionists, Know Nothings, and fanatics of every shade and color and that we opine is sufficient to doom him.
John Lee, our candidate for Treasurer, is almost universally known. It is unnecessary for us to say anything about his character public or private, moral or political. All that the most envenomed malice has been able to find for urgence against his election has been a letter addressed to the Banner of Liberty. As a business man, he has few equals in the county. His honesty is unimpeachable. His politics since childhood has never wavered from the Jeffersonian standard.
Mr. Koons, his opponent, is the nominee of a Maine Law convention. His acquaintance is limited. It is enough that, though a rabid Prohibitionists, his name is on the same ticket which anti-Temperate Dan. Mace heads, and whiskey-keeping Balser tails. If he is a Disciple at all, he has chosen the Pharisees for his brethren.
IfyWe understand that threats have been made with a view to deter Irishman and other foreign citizens from the exercise of their voting right. These threats of course come from the Know Nothings, and they are part of the "hell-broth" which they have been boiling for sometime in the upper story of the old seminary. This plot will never do. It will not scare any body, but will redound upon the heads of the lawless machinators. Let every foreign citizen come to the polls.
REMEMBER!
Voters of the 8th Congressional District, that Daniel Mace is a Know Nothing.—In favor of repealing all naturalization laws— in favor of excluding all foreigners and catholics from office and all native Americans who are not Know-Nothings—in favor of establishing a Religious Test in violation of the Constitution of the U. S.
That Daniel Mace is a sectional agitator, in favor of dragging the slavery question back into Congress upon the pretence of restoring the Missouri Compromise—opposed to self government, and in favor of the repeal of the Fugitive slave Law.
That Daniel Mace stands upon the Fusion Platform of the 13th of July with the abolitionists and Maine-Lawites. That Daniel Mace is anything & everything for office.
Remember, also, that your country has a right to ask one day at your hands. Go therefore to the polls early on the 10th of October and stay there late, and let the Ballot Box tell the tale for the Union that even Know Nothings will understand
/^"Thomas Whiskey Fry's beard a week or so ago was black. As the election approaches it undergoes a change absolutely miraculous. HAIR DT* won't save it from being white on the 11th October.
[For the Review
Mr. BOWEN, Sir:—In the course of the campaign, it has been ray fortune to speak of Thomas W. Fry. With a strict regard for truth, I have several times called him an ass. If I reccollect rightly, I have also spoken several times of his pill-bags.
In return for this mildness and courtesy, Mr. F. has saluted me with a variety of notices. Thus, he has made me happy by calling me a Reviewer, and a critic, prefixing to the sarcasm several funny adjectives also a little giant, a hireling editor, a changeling, and a host of other expletives as nearly nothing as himself. On one occasion he even said I was unprincipled. This was rude—very but I philosophized upon it, and laughed. Better men than myself have been belied seldom, however, by so an a an
1
In the last Journal, however, there is an effort unnsually malicious and contemptible. It reads—
JtarWe have every reason to believe that the man who copied our remarks from the Journal recently stolen from our office, SPONGED upon Major MACE some sixty dollars worth of buggy hire and tavern bills during the last Congressional canvass. Is he not literally the Jackdaw in Peacock's feathers?
My name, you will perceive, is not mentioned and few persons, probably, would fasten the insinuation on my humble self.— For that reason, perhaps, there is no necessity for my noticing it. But for reasons of my own I choose to do so. I choose to acknowledge myself the subject.
As to the facts. When a candidate for Prosecuting Attorney, I became indebted to Maj. Mace to the amount of sixty dollars. At the time, I was just beginning life, and was very poor a condition quite common with young men, and respecting which I am sorry, though not ashamed, to add, that I cannot boast of a great improvement. My indebtedness was not for buggy hire, however. The Maj. drove his own horse, and traveled in his own buggy, in which, at his invitation I took a seat. The canvass being ended, through the kindness of Joseph Ristine, of Covington, than whom earth has no truer nobleman, the funds were at my disposal to pay the debt. And it would have been satisfied accordingly, had not Mace himself delicately suggested my poverty, and offered to accept my duebill. Lured by the manner of the man, in whom, at the time, I suspicioned nothing, I took the pencil he handed me, and executed my paper for sixty dollars. Once since he requested payment, if convenient. It was not convenient at that particular time though, thanks to friendly clients, there have been several times when it would have beeu convenient had the bill been at hand.
Of course, Sir, I was very grateful to Mace. Thathasbeen shown at least once since. For the truth of the assertion, I refer inquiring friends to the Hon. J. E. McDonald.
Now, however. I am satisfied that I mistook my man. He accepted my note, not as a kindness he was looking ahead, and his real purpose was to bind me to him for the future by a pecuniary obligation. He thought to buy me. I am now perfectly satisfied that, when he turned traitor to his party,—he has no principle to serve the same way—and accepted the nomination for Congress of a half abolitionized coven-
O
tion, he counted on my silence and neutrality, if not on my co-operation. But if I mistook him, he mistook me. A debtor, though poor as myself, is neither his creditors tool, nor bound to do him service.
When he was in Crawfordsville last, I got to see the gentleman but twice once while he was speaking, and again when he was traversing the street arm in arm with Prof. Twining, a man whose abolition sentiments, exccrable as they are, are among the most worthy of his nature. The Major left town without a call from me but at the same time he left behind him the infamous and unmitigated lie, that I had sponged the sixty dollars buggy hire and this because I had dared be independent.
It matters little, however, when he imparted it one thing is certain—he could not have left it in dirtier hands, or a baser heart, or a brain more willing. Sponge, indeed! Fry knew Mace lied when he said it. This is proven by the manner of the publication. It is insinuated, not charged and no name is given. But who is Thomas W. Fry, that he should insinuate such a story to anybody's detriment? Has he no sponging capabilities? Here is an example.
Sometime before 1848, William Bausman borrowed two or three hundred dollars. Henry S. Lane became his security, and had eventually to pay the debt. Bausman sold the Journal office to Fry and Keeney, and, in the arrangement, they became responsible to Lane for what originally was Bausman's debt. Now, with the exception of a Land Warrant, worth about $75, the indebtedness is yet existing, notwithstanding Lane has repeatedly dunned Fry.
Again: Maj. Winn aad Jobs Fisher are part ownen of the same Journal o®ee.—
1
Fry, however, has never intimated to them that the stock was profitable. Now, I do not understand that to owe a debt is to sponge. I will be generous even to Fry. I will not say, that owing a debt for more than six years, and living all the.timr off the office which was really the subject of the debt, is sponging it is only an approx* imation thai way vastly closer than in mjr case, particularly as, if not rich, he haa abundance with which to pay, while, I am &
1
poor.
It is possible to enumerate other cases.—. The two, however, are sufficient to establish my point, viz: that as "dirty dog^ and liar." Mace is only equaled by Fry.
Yours, dt c.
P. S. As early as possible I will deposits 860 subject to the order of Daniel Mac*. I will do so, however, with a strong feeling, that to ride with Mace, to sleep with' him, to guard him from excessive pota* tions, to soothe his cowardly fear of cholera, to listen while he repeats the same stupid speech twice a day, and to be bored a* one can only be bored by such a trip witkhim and his brandy flask over the 8th Con* gressional District, are fully worth fira times §60.
THE WAY THEY DO IT.
We like an open manly fight. We likai a focman who stands up before as foot tofoot and face to face, and looks us in tha eye while he strikes. This is democratic. In what instance has a democrat failed to do it? t'-'li-
How is it with the abolition, Know-Noth-ing, Prohibition people's Party? What ia their course of electioneering? They hold meetings in the cellars and warehouse garrets they meet in the alleys and by-ways they choose the hour of midnight they appoint spies and doggers, who, under the mask of friendship, mix with democrata and the unsold Whigs for the purpose of betraying them tax them with it, and they lie, according to oath they are to be found behind counters poisoning while they sell whistle, and they are on hand by the score to stamp and groan down a democratic meeting, and silence a Nebraskaoratoi they are lurking in the villages, scattering cor*
O O
We appeal to the people. For what has" John Beard been beating every bush, and' re in at re id an in in at every well, and exhibiting such unusual solicitude for everybody's welfare within the few days just past? Why has Billy Galey been manipulating the public with so much of sanctimonios piety? Lookout! Tl.e serpents are abroad. Look well to sudden developments of knavery. Theres is no hope for the People's party that is not the hope of political swindlers. I «*,
"ASHLAND DISMANTLED, A correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette, writing on the 20th Sept., says that the workmen were busy tearing down the
old homestead, and had it nearly all downu level with the ground, which we think is a a shame. It should have stood as long as one post of it could be made to stand upright. We were not prepared to find the dwelling totally demolished, but all that remained of it was part of a brick wall, which -, had once served to divide the parlor from the library, and upon this some half dozen men were at work with crowbar and pick-' axe, leveling it to the ground. All, there-• fore, that remains of the old homestead of the statesman is a pile of bricks and rubbish. We were told that the present proprietor of the estate—a son of Henry Clay —is about to erect on the site of the old. dwelling anew edifice of its exact form and character. This will make some amenda for the work of demolition he has completed," but it will hardly pardon it. The old hou9tf might have been repaired it should not have been destroyed. It was one of those consecrated spots, those shrines of liberty, to which the pilgrim would oft retire to r«vive hope and strengthen his love of countjT-
MESSP.3 EDITORS:—Flense announce the name of:I M. D. WHITE as an independent eundidaU! for the oifiee of District attorney. f.-r the Court of Common Please for the counties of Motngomftry »nd Boope, and you will oblige MANY VOTERS:
Messrs. BOWEN FC STOVTR.—Please announce MJ name as an independent democratic candidate for01 the office of Treasurer and Collector of Montgomery county, at the ensuing election.
11
THE
r,
LEW WALLACB.
9
9
ruption, and hoaxing the innocent, and taking advantage of the carious tbey are in the shadow of the woods, sabbath as well as week day at church, they initiate the foolish, while the minister prays, and weave their webs while the congregation sing* they glide and sneak, never moving erect like a fearless man like the Jesuits, they select their agents according to fitness for their task, and teach them their duty with repeated rehearsals.
JOSEPH D. MASTERSON.
SALE OF REAL ESTATE. RI-
UNDERSIGNED Administrator with th» will annexed, of the estate of Jonas Sutton, dccetsed, in pursuance of tho provisions of said will, will Mill at private sale, the following real estatc in Montgomery county. Indiana, to wit: West half of tho north west quarter of section 30, and tho oast half of north east quarter of section 35, all in township 19, north of ranjro 3 west.
TERMS: The two third3 of the pnrcbase money will be required ir. hand and the remaining thirdjn. one year fr Jay of sale, the purchaser giringhi* note with security, waving valuation or appraisemoot laws, with interest.
DAVID SUTTON, Administrator with the will *XMOXA&.
Oct 7th 1554, v8-nl3-w8
NOTICE
IS
hereby triven that the undersigned has appointed Administrator with the will anaaxed. of the estate of Josaa Snttoa.' lato of.
county, Indiana, dacaawd. Said aatato is solvaafc DAVID BVTTOy, AdmUMnm. Oct. T, 1M4. rfl-nia.wS.
