Marshall County Democrat, Volume 3, Number 3, Plymouth, Marshall County, 10 December 1857 — Page 2
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H. A. 0. PACKARD, : Editor. PLYMOUTH, THURSDAY, December - --- lO, 1857. 2Those of our subscribers who wish to pay their subscription, in WOOD are requested to bring it.along immediately. Kansas and the Constitutional Convention. It 13 a proverbial fact in the history of mankind, that no great principle has ever riumphed but at the expense of a hard fought contest. This has been true from the history of Christianity and Popular Freedom doirn to the meanest truth of 6cienco. . We should not, then, regard, with any degree of surprise, the long struggle which must attend the complete tiiumph of the great doctrine of Popular Sovereignty. Once permanently established, as it one da) rill b it will be a monument of perpe .u.il honor to the American Republic; until that lime, let none of ifs advocates lose any of their zeal, but meet every difficulty vrith a becoming spirit, never, in the least, suffering themselves to compromise those principles for which they have so long contended. These suggestions seem apropos of the present condition of Kansas affairs. A new difficulty has 'prung up in that quarter, which the most sagacious had not anticipated; and that, too, at the very time when we had fondly hoped that the great question contained in the Kansas -Nebraska Act would be finally and forever settled. ; That Convention, in whom we thought we saw the salvation of Kansas, instead of carry ing out this doctrine to the strictest letter, saw fit, in their mighty wisdom, to -nduherato and retrench, until, instead of the genuine, a spurious article was offered to the people. Little harm, howover, could have re-! suited from this, had the entire Democra- j cy 6tood firm to thei trusts and pledges, and with one voice repudialod the action of that Convention. But such is not the case. A few of the leading Democratic
journals, and we are happy to say only a j hat we say. We can add but little to the ßic. have seen fit to endorse th's action. ; meed of praise already accorded to this popAt the head of these stands the Washing-1 "hir Journal. It has long maintained the ton Union, around which, as a common high position of one of the first Family venter, a few lesser lights revolve. Newspapers of the country, ar.d it has in It needs but few words, and less logic, to every respect fully merited it. It has alshow the inconsistency of such a course. ! ways carefully excluded from its columns The Democracy have always stood firmly j ill those long, indigested, fany-sick stopledged to the piinciples of Popular Sov- j i-'3, whicd only poison the mind of the 'oreignty. In the campaign of '5G they re- j young, and pollute our popular literature, newed their allegiance to that doctrine in j hut ha3 kept them well stored with that terms not. to be mistaken, -and President j which, while it shall plase, will at the Buchanan was placed in the seat he now i same tin,e instru:l an(i reGne occupies on this, and only this, issue. ! 1,1 a wort!' the Wor " uch as com How, then, in the face of all this, could men Js ,tself t0 fen- The Pr05--.mv cf that Democracy, at the verv mo- j Foctus cf 1C50. promises the very cream
aneiit when this principle was to haro its j 01 l,ie Fcai literature ot the British still greater tiiumph in Kunsas. turn round i Islos J iu sl,ort semething to interest and repudiate the samo by indorsing the c- So!. Essays, Stows. EngravCalhoun Convention? We can account for inos Agricultural articles, The News. Pollns in only two ways: either they grossly jtry, Anecdotes, The Wholesale and Remisjudge tho true import of the Kansas--' tail Markets. Bank Note List Ac. &. Nebraska Act, or else it is a diabolic at-1 II ßnall3r ls up with three good rea!empt at the destruction of that unanimity i sons "hT ,be rendin" Pub'ic ahould Sive 'n the Democratic ranks, which, hitherto. ! lhe preforenco to The Post: in whatever tide of opposition, has carried ! Jl h vP!r to V 'h" V2" of the '.hern safely over. sa me price. Charity would dispose us to accord to I h !s cheaPer than J other paper of hc-m the former reason. - .1 cVl!al mer'tL ' But let us for a moment examine the 11 lcUl U certaln io come c1'Cil l)aid for' true issue in this question, which is now j Terms; (Cash in advance) Single copy creating an excitement scarcely less than I 82 a year-four copies, 85.
the great monetary crisis itself. In accordance with a legislative act the citizens of Kansas elected a Convention for the express purpose of framing a Constitution. This done, their duties were at end. But! they transcended the bounds of what was only an implied power, and not only framed, but adopted the entire instrument, save one clause, whiöh they graciously condescended to submit to the people. This was five question of slavery or no slavery. Admitting that this was the most impor tant clause, yet it does not in the least excuse fheir conduct. - If the Kansas-Nebraska Act required the submission of a single clause it required the submission of the whole. There js no chance here for refined distinctions. It ; demands that all the citizens shall have the right to voto on each and every article of their constitution with, out reserve,' giving no preference to the slavery question above any other. If it did anything less than this, it wcujd be a libel on its face. If, then, the members of the convention wish to screen therasolves on the ground of being the representatives of the people, we would ask them why submit any clause of t'.e constitution? why submit the slavery question even, if your.will, as their representatives, is the expressed will of the people. Let them take whichever horn of the dilemma they chooie, their position is alike untenable. The, whole question now turns on wheth or the Tiocompton convention shall be su?-
k"nHl or lne DöMOöracy remain firm and unyielding lo their principles as declared
i I the Kansas-Nebraska Act, and reiterated j in the Cincinnati Convention. Governor Walker lias shown himself faithful to his pledges by denouncing the action of the convention, and we have too much confidence in the wisdom and sagacity of the President and Cabinet, to fear any sanction at their hands. A good many conjectures have already been paraded about, as to how the President would receive it; none however very satisfactory. We admit that the question may be somewhat puzzling, even to the long-headed Executive; for, inasmuch as the convention acted under an implied power, a semblance of legality, at least, attaches to their acts. But whether or no. they had an implied power, their courso was certainly impolitic, and a base fraud upon their constituents. The latest news from Washington announces that the President will refer the entire matter to Congress without note or comment. Thereby showing that whim as an executive officer he was bound to respect the laws, as a DemoTa, and a Democratic President, he could never give sane tion to such a palpable fraud on their most sacred principles. Congress will make quick work of the Lecompton Convention. Repudiated, it will sink into forget fulness, and on its ruins the Democracy will rear another Temple to those principles, to which their dearest faith is pledged. iCiTGoDEr for December is in our hand and as usual, splendidly illustrated, and full of rare stories. The engravings "Christmas Eve." and Christmas Morn." are exquisite. The Saturday Evening Post. This is one of the oldest Journals in our country, and as has been said of it "a ;mpcr that never suspends." It is now entering upon the thirly-sev enth year of its publication, and has, in the numerous corps of its contributors, some of the most gifted writers of our country. We need only mention the names of Wm. Howitt, Alice Gary, T. S. Arthur and Grace Greenwood to confirm For the Democrat. Kansas. Mr. Editor: Let me inquire whether, in your reading, you find anything that enlightens you as to the cause of the course pursued by the Washington Union? Has it got into the hands of some Southern Fire-Eater, or some Black Republican, or "Plug Ugly" in disguise, who, whi-e prelending to be a Democrat, is seeking a chance to divide the Democratic party, and thus defeat it? The wonderful unanimity of the democracy, iu the prompt expression of opinion on the action of the Constitutional Convention in Kansas, should make the rabid portion of the Republican leaders blush with shame, for their ungenerous and unjuit charges so often made. The whole democracy east, west, north, and south insist upon a strict enforcement of the principle contained in the Kansas-Nebraska Act that the people of Kansas alone shall make their own domestic institutions, and come into the Union with their own Constitution, and shall not be cheated or juggled out of their right to receive or reject such as their representatives may make for them, by any means whatever. If the Convention in violation of this principle has made no provision for the submission of the Consti tution, to the people, that, Constitution should, and will le, promptly rejected by Congress, and the executive of Kansas will be instructed to ca1 a. special meeting of the Legislature to provide for a new Con
tention to make a Constitution to be' 6i submitted. ? Mr. Buchanan will doubtless sustain tho action of the Convention, for
j he is reported to shy, " that his wishes are, and his will would be, to havo the Constitution submitted to the pasple; but in ns much as Congress authorized the Convention, and they were required to submit the slavery clause only to the people, having done that, hs must sustain them, and leave it to Congress to send back tho Constitution to the people." In this, he and Gov. Walker are at directly opposite points. The Governor insists that the action of the Convention shall be repudiated, at once, and an enabling act passed for a now Convention, to submit the Constitution to the poopie. In this position he is sustained bv the whole democracy of the country, and if Mr. Buchanan sustains the Convention, he will find a majority of Congress, and nine- : tenths of the democracy of the Union against him. As a simple matter of Iiplomacj', or rather propriety," in adhering to fixed rules, probably Mr. Buchanan is right in his position. He stands sworn to execute the laws. The Convention has acted within the limits of its authority, and were compelled only by the abstract, or understood and not expressed principles of the Kansas-Nebraska bill, to submit the Constitution to the peopli, and not by any positive directory lav; and having done so, Mr. Buchanan could only 6ay, as a democrat, and not as Executive, that he would like it otherwise while as Executive, he would be bound to recognize the action of the Convention as valid, they having done what they had a right legally speaking to do. But with Gov. Walker, and the people, and Congress, it is different. The one has the right to demand, and the other to command that the Constitution shall be submitted to the people for sanction or rejection, and if it has not been done, (and the Convention had the light to io it,) it should bo done now, and will be done; or every man who opposes it, will merit and receive the unqualified condemnation of the American democracy. And tho removal of Gov. Walker on this issu3, will be regretted and reprehended by the whole people, without exception. Neither the Washington Union, nor any other p.'.pr, nor nt,y number of them, can make the Democrat ic party and unmake it, nor principles for it, at their pleasure. Its piincipl-.'S arc time-honored consistent, progrestive.psrmar.ent, and unchangeable; and when lead ers undertake to innovate, or interpolate, or temporize tha sound and independent S2ntiment of the masses will crush them by their straight forward, unswerving movement So it ought to bo, so it will he, so i3 it now manifest from the universal expression of tho people on this one question. The long continued efforts of tho blatant Abolitionists ol the States to erect their i xt party in Kansas, has proved a total failure; and the honest few anions the Re publican? in the States, condemn Jim Lane and his cotomporai ies as, heartily Tas we do There ar- but two parties in Kansas, among those composing the decent portion of the actual residents, and those are tl. Pro Slavery and Fice State panics" regard less cf all other political considerations As soon as the ballot-box was resorted to there for an expression of opinion upon this question, all doubt was instantly dispelled by an unequivocal majority against slave ry; thus putting at rest forever that, question. Willi this action of the people of Kansas, the last plänk was drawn from the platform of the Republican party in the Stitch, and left them with nothing to stand on but the ground of "opposition to the Democracy," ' without a . why or wherefore." The New York Tribune tacitly admits this by saying that it is best to, let the Democrats have it all their own way now, and let them carry out their ideas in full, for they could never have a better time. We think that thiH though uttered in the spirit of tho fox to the grapes is "the truth fitly spoken. " The only thing that remains to be done now; is to 6eo that the people of Kansas adopt their own Constitution at the ballot-box, and whatever it may be, the true doctrine of our confederation will have been carried out, and an eternal monument erected to the truth of our party principles. The wailings over "bleeding Kansas;" the bowlings over slavery; the blasphemies from the pulpit; the denunciations of the Union, and the treason against the Government, which the last to years have witnessed on the part of our opponents, wiil all have gone for nothing; and must remain on the page of history as a living evidence of the stability of popular government founded on the virtue and intelligence of the people. In every age, from' Jefferson down, we have had fools, fanatics, demagogus, and their followers, who have clamored for ä dissolution of tho Union, and denounced the laws and liberties that gave them leave to utter the denunciation; while they despised that liberty they could not appreciate nor understand. As we floated on the tide of Time farther and farther from the days of the
Revolution, and its fires warmed us less, its spirit was lost in the fullness of uninterrupted peace and unexampled prosperity as our numbers increased and cur territories enlarged, and 'extravagance in living kept pace, in the universal struggle for wealth, and amid unequalled and we had almost said too much liberty, we were near losing steht of the cost of the dear bought blejsings we enjoyed, and forgetting to establish, beyond question, all of the principles that should govern us, knowing that our opponents wore constancy intending and occasionally endeavoring t.i ener the wedge that was to divide us. To Stephen A. Douglas, the naion owes
eternal honor, for lining in his phifc. and I (though comparatively y ung in years. and though surrounded hv grey haired s'a'esmen whose duty an 1 plvei' was. ) " strangling the giant in hi cradle. Wi'.h his great sagacity he foresaw the terrible consequences of permitting this question of "popular Sovreignty" to slumber yet a fw vears, and regardless of the const?qunnces to himself or his ambition, moved solely .by love tor the public good, wi:h nn unwavering confidence in the inherent truth ot the principle and the intelligence and honesty of the people, he stood forth and told them that now was the time to settle this question, and forever put at rest thi ceaseless cause of strife. .Xow was the time to know whether wo were , to remain united and govern ourselves, or whether we were to cast aside the boads of union our fathers thrw around us to make us as one, and centralize power, and benefit tho few at the expense of the man)'. It was like a sleeping volcano, that would burst and overwhelm us with ruin sooner or later, if left until the light of the Revolution's fire only gleamed like a dim star in the distance; but now, while some faint glow frcm its embers yet warned us, he knew the people would bs true to themselves and their liberties, and the result has proved him right, and testified to his greatness and his patriotism. Modern Republicanism, by a slight change of phraseology, might now exclaim, partly in the words of Cardinal Wolsey: " Farewell! a long farewell to al my " hoped for " greatness. Boware, unholy ambition! By it fell the angels! How can we, then, hope to win by it?' Had we but served our country with half the zeal we tried to 6rve the niggers, she would not now have ltft us in litter and and deserved contempt. So ends tho R--paoiwan pa-ny s nice. 00 mo;e u oe. cso will end the party itself. Hequiescat in ri! ..- e o . - pace. titri Ab, P. S. It is stated that the President will submit Gov. Walker's Kansas policy to Congress, without note or comment. So far so good, if he cannot agree wi.h him; but wo may have more to say on the sub jtot by and by. V. FALSE. 4,lou," the Washii.g on correspondent of the Bil.imoit Sun, his usu ally lie-iii regarded as vnry goo 1 a 1 ho i.y as to mat UTS in thai riiy . In his lis. ter he presided to speak the fceuiin': ? of the people Nonh ail WVst. aiul groly misivpiv,med them. Whoever tol l him, in Waahiiig'oii. that th . m dei ate in mi of the Noi lli ami Wst are in favor of the re ep;ion 01 Kansas, wi hout thv submission of the. .whole Cns itu ion to the people, told an unmi.tiga ed fiUfh(od. We know the f ntiinents of the North an ! West, and declare them to bo diametii. -ally opposite to what he writes. When the Congressional delegations from the North and West reach Washington. "Ion'' will have a very excellent opportunity to gather from them the sentiments of their constituents. The people of the North "and West are- fir the principle of populir sovereignty, full submission to lhe people, and they mean to have it. Ohio Statesman. Precaution' of Louis Napoleon against Insurrection. The Paris correspondent of the "Boston Daily Traveler," writes as follows relative lo the immense military camp recently formed at Chalons, by the Emperor Louis Napoleon: In my opinion, Lewis Napoleon is now engaged in building a scheme by which he hopes to secure his throne against accidents, even so great a casualty as his assassination. The pla' he has adopted is, like everything he does, marked by a great reach ot foresight and a good deal of astuteness. . I dare say you have seen by tho papers, that a great camp has been formed at Chalons. It occupies a space which covers about 30.000 acres. There will be ome sixty or one hundred thousand men of the best regiments in the army. The camp will be an entrenched camp that is, it will be a forta stronghold of 3ü,OÜO acres. Marshal Canrobert, that devoted personal adherent of the ' Empror, will command if. The prefect of the depart raent is to be a picked man, of approved fidelity. ; The Troops are to be constantly employed in strengthening the camp and all its approaches, so as to render it, äs far as possible, impregnable. It is well provided with water. . The camp kitchens co er nearly four miles in length. The imperial quartet? form village alone, so numerous are the kitchens, stables, coachhousesand offices. About eighty or a hundred wagons have been daily employed in carrying objects from the Great Meuble de "la Couronne lo furnish the Emperor's quarters. "Never has Garde Meublo seen so many objects taken at any one time out of its stores." It appears to ma that Louis Napoleon designs this camp as
a place of safety for the Empress and Im- j perial Prince, If insurrection should occur j
which menaces to assume the form of rev olution. It will serve a3 a military roser voir with which he may dejnge Pain l.l; , I" ill with soldiers, or as a military stionghohl . wherohe may wait till he conquers an ad-! verse tide of fortune. It is incr.diMe what precautions arc taken against an insurieolion. Only this week lh whole exteri i of the Hotel de Vüle has been tunneled, so ihat now horsemen mounted may pass under ground from anv part ot the Ho el to the new barracks of rSapolon. lhe broad Boulevard loading from Vircennes ( whirh is I ho great arsenal) to the Ilohd de Ville and the Tuileries. is rapidly being completed. The army isc ur'.e i every way and nwi ori .us ntli-ersaie sought out and well rewarded. I do not, however, believe tl :r ill heg. resources and expdi -Mits will be f.Hi'i l of avail if 'he onlv serious dango i whieh thratenst c h 'one, th den h of L ois X ipoleon, siiould ensvie; then the impel i ii f ihi in would fill as it rose in a singl" nijir. W:V mighty detiuies hang upon h3 ' cf thimau! A DnEADFfL Spectacle. It will b- remembered that the UuSM.'Ul liüe f-b.ltlle ship L"fo: t lately aps:z d a:, noon !.;y in the B iv of Finland, c:ti rving down lvejT hundred persons, of whom nearly four hundred vre females. A diver lately descended to the wreck, and refenin to Iiis, a writer in the London Times, from Öt. Petersburg!!, sas: Such persons as were on deck at the time wereol course washed away, but the divers found no less than 1,100 corpses in the cabins, between decks and in the hold of the vessel, all clinging to some portion of the limbers of the 6hip, or to each other. The horror of this fearful sight appears to have been aggravated by the circumstance that the bodies were already far gone in decomposition, and, witr. a few exceptions, the eyes wer wide open and glaring. Tho effect of this dreadful spectacle upon the divers was such that one was totally unable for many days to recount the ghastly scenes he had witnessed down in that hive of putrifying corpses, and cn his persistent refusal to repeat his visit there was sent home. The Pork Trade The Chicago Times of the 4th inst., says the mnket is somewhat firmer, and large lots of good conditioned hogs would rea lily command 5 ents net, for pac king, or cents on time. We hear of a sale of 4 J.UUU green hams, packed, at 6 1-8 cents; the hams are to be cut at Shawneetown. They were purchased by Atkinson, Thomas, k Co,, who will hare them "fancy cured" here by Lewis Stn;rg. This iura will pack 15.UÜÜ hogs at Crar fordsville, I"d., this season, where thev arc paying 4 cents net, for hogs. All the packers were shiu uhterin' hos yesterday, except una house, as ihn w,i Ii er was favorable. At the hous of Atkinson, Thomas & Co., over 6.UUU hos have been packed, including 2.3 rt) yesterday. They now have 3.UUÜ hogs in pens, including 1,4JU received from Gospo-t, Ind., by railroad. A" the packing house of II.-tmi -ton, HickvS & Co., over the liver. Some ö.ß üJ hogs have been slaughtered up to las: evening. A: Ciwdnna i yesterdav. as we learn by our dispatcher last evHiiinir, irood ho-js were selling at 4 75ij5 K- nei. and mess pork f'rSou h"ru "rdcg uns S'dlhig nt S13 u i 1 4 . an to ijutliiy. , A ! a ! ucha, at tin ls n counf. prices r i - i f i. m i U to -5 ' iv i h sates in Kile at H . i it 1 nn y , .Suit l.l ir 1 nt 04 at 84 ß ner. ;n 1 coiiai h-rahl- . ii B !ur.:i counv at 64 00 to 61 15 for c;t!i, or short, c-c lit. Bad 1 u tlcts fck Scjar. The 1..1o i i- uiip i t-!i w. 8 icn-il this morning j by M.-?si s. llv a ii lLA:u -. f u is city. fioni oncot the most exiensl Vo biu-ar plantess i:i the ouih: B iton Iloue. Nov. 25, Cane is killed in L uisi ma by ice. Suar must go up to tigdil cents. A. A. Williams. This is certainly rather bad news for those who had indulged in eho hope, that we should have a return in old rates in the article of sugar aud molasses. Duyton Journal . jJSTA gentleman once asked a young lady of his acquaintance, 'What are you making, Miss Knapp?' 4Kuapp sacks,' was the "reply. jtSrWhen a certain bankrupt crossed the English channel to avoid his creditors, George Selwyn remarked that it was a pass over which the Jewrs would not relish. jtT'Times are improving, and men are getting on their legs again said a gentleman to his friend. How so?' 'Why those who used to ride down in their carriages, now walk.' jCSTLittle acts of kindness are stowed away in the heart, like bags of lavender in a drawer, to sweeten every object around them." jtST-Nothing casts a denser cloud over the mind than discontent, rendering it more occupied about the evil that disquiets than the means of removing it. TO DANDIES. Yemincinjr, squinting, emok-faced, pretty, things, With corset kcod as tight as fiJdle-stringa; Chocked as a toad and supple as a cat, About the waist D sharp, the pate B flat; Yecrin:nn, super-servicable slares, Ye self-complainant, brainless, heartless knaves. Ye lizard lookinc ape?, with cat-fish eilll, ' Ye !PAY YOUR PRINTER'S BILLS! Come hither, ye that prees your beds of down, An'l sleep uot: see h!m sweating o'er his hrcud Before he eats it. 'Tis the primal curse But softened into mercy: m.ute the pledge Of cheerful days, and nights without a prom ,.-' Cvvpir. Governor Wright, of Indiana, our minister to Prussia, lias been elected a member of the Berlin ' Geographical Society.
The National Debt. The U. States on the 3d of March last owed 30,043,000.
From (ha 3J(h of Marn to the 3Uth ot June she redeemed 983,000 f her stock. Fmm the 1st f July to the 15 h of Octob r, sh "redeemed about Sln'J.OOO of her debt. The Jircsejit d-bt may therefore, be J paid to be about $25. 1 S'J.COO. Of this sum about one half, or 12,402. 000 aie lud 1 bv foreigners. It is4ikely. moreover, tha? the foreigners .will continue to hold !thi s'oek, f-r t ! !. is none better. Hew Advertisements. .SEND F0II IT. The iJ.st superbly illiiS!r tcJ M ifrjiz'iie ever pi:bli&I;f-ik in .America, is t!ic December mnuocr of t!ic Cosmopolitan Art Journal, cont.iarng over sixty sj.Viiiiht Engravings ai:l giv;nfull pntic ilür oftlie bin fits of the Cosmopolitan Ai t Asoci ition. S3 a ye.ir; snjrle copies 50c nt. Specimen copies will be sent to all persons who wish to subscribe on receipt of five post.if e sUmps (15 a nt?.) See a lvcrtisemcut headed "Erilliint Troppcctus" in this paper. AMrtsä C.5.DERRV, ActuarrCA. A. 1-tG. Mb', Broadway, N. Y. LAST CALL Positively!! A LLtt.o-c inceljteil to the undersigned, are II notified to eall :;n l pavup before the 1st of J imury, 1-5?, as all debt due him at thit time will be collected according to l.-iw. He desires to collect peaeeubly if he can but forriblr if he must. J. BILOWSLEE. dec !9,3-t4. i WIT II THE SHERIFF. ALL persons indebted to me for surveying, w ill save the expense of a visit from tile abovc named gentleman, by paying up before the 15th day of December, lt57. dec 10, 3-tl J. M. KLING ER. A RARE CHANCE TO ma se money, or rather to save monev, which is the same, by giving heed to the following: N. II. Oglesbee V Co., have made an assignment to me of all their assetts, amounting to over $9,000, for the benefit of their creditors. All person knowing themselves indebted to the abore named firm, had better call immediatelt, end thereby save costs, and make money. There can ue no delay, for the accounts must be settled up bv the first of Januarv next. M. A. O. PACKA RD, Assignee. Office, Coi bin's block over the People-' Store, dec 10-3tf. R. M. BROWN & Co.'s NEW TIN AND llns been removed to AVestervell's O d stand. East side of Mu lligan street. Thev, having been among the losers by the late fire, :tk all who are about buying anything in the line of To . i vethem a call at their ne Store, nnd examine their articles and prices before purch is'ng elcwh'T'.. as thev are cnfii nt that their variety i aä ! GOOD a t!ie VEST, n l th c iliip prices are so LOW, that no one can help BUYING OF TU EM. COOK,lJOX&PRL R Ct CONSTANTLY ON HAND. Tiii'ir Tin Shop is lare and commodious, and under the supervision of workmen wh m i? always le found durinjr business hours, prepared to do all k:nds o work in the Iin of Timiin;. Alw on hand and for s.i'e ehe p, Tin Pails, Strainers, Wash Dishes, Tir Cups Dippers, Lard Cms, Stove Tipe VYntilators, Te-nles, Coffee Pots, Tea Pots, Stove Boiler , an everything commonly used in the line of rl -. tre. JAPANNED WARE1 A large ass -rt:: nt of japanned Ware on hand, which is poing off rapidl) at low figures. They respectfully ask u continuance of the liberal patronage heretofore bestowed on them, and will endeavor to give 100 cents in goods for every dollar received therefor. R. M. BROWN Co. decl0,3-vl Hats, Caps and Clothing Selling cheap at the Low Price Store. CTOne door south of the Post Office TB 50 RICE, SMITH L CO. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. Agreeaby to an order from the Marshall Common Pleas Court, I will offer at public sale at the court house in Pl-'mouth, on the 26th OF DECEMBER, 1857, between the hours of 10 o'clock a m and 3 o'clock p m, the south-east quarter of section nine, township thirty- three north, of range three east in said county, belonging to the estate of Daniel Andrews deceased except a strip off the north end, fiftythrc rods wide, (the widow's part,)on the following TERMS: One-fourth the purchase money cash in hand, the balance in three equal payments in six, twelve and eigteen months, with interest, the purchaser giving notes with ppproved security, waiving valuation and appraisement laws. dec3-2-ts. JAMES ELLIOTT, Adm'r. ' 33VXXlS.' Itf otlOO-EXTRA! ALL those who wish to gt SHAVED and at the same time "get their money back," will please call at the Barber's Shcp, up f tairs, over the post office, where hair cutting, shaving &c, will be done up to the eutire satisfaction of all who may favor me with theit custom. Thanns to patrons for past favors. - A. BILLOWS, nov 2G, 1 857. - 1-tf-Just IScceived. 53 pieces Delaines, 5J pieces Prints, v 1"Ü piecis Vwlvet TrirunVngs. A!so a large stock of G Over, Hosery, Children's Hoods, c., at the low i n. st-uv, one door south of the Post Olliee. R 1 C 1 i$ M 1 TU & Co. tjjv 2(5, '57 i 1-tf.
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