Shelby Volunteer, Volume 20, Number 11, Shelbville, Shelby County, 19 November 1863 — Page 2

IllfcSiihLU VULUKTEER.

DEIIOCBATS!

OHELBYVILLE, THUKSDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1883

R.SriCF.R RDITOR.

FOR PRESIDENT IX 18C4, Gen. Cm KO. ITU irCLlLA, Betyett to the decision of tht Derooerattc Noal ConrenCn

Ttie Msetlng noxt Saturday. It is hoped the Democracy will bear in mind the Democratic MftaS Corrvcntion at the Court House on Saturday next It is not only desirable, but essential that there should

be a pood representation from the different

Townships. The object of the meeting is to appoint Delegates to represent the County in State Convention, express our preferences, if deemed advisable, for the men'we prefer lor standard bearers in the Campaign of 1864, StaCc nnl National, the adoption of resolutions expiessire of our views on the various political issues and topics of the day, and for the trnrrejtctk'n of such other business as may be considered forth general good and well fare.

Thcv State Convention.' There is an attempt being Made to get if Jf a controversy about the place for holding the next Democratic State Convention sore favoring Indianapolis and others Lafayotee. In our opinion the matter rests entirely with the State'Ccntral Committee if they say Indianapolis, let it be Indianapolis, although we are free to admit that the place is covered over with political darkness, and a por

tion of the people, and especially' the

Courts and authoitfes, "seized with judi

cial blindness," and abounds with thieves and ruSian, but nevertheless, it is a cen-

tfAl'p'otnt, and the fact that the Demo

crats wcro once rather scurvely treated

there 6hould not be set down to the permanent discredit of the city. It should aTso be borne in mind that the contempt-

able and pusilanimous Hascal was in

command of the department at that time

. There are some apprehensions that the outrages perpetrated in May last may be

repeated. - We have no apprehensions of

anything of the kind oocurinEr. Wlieil

a the time comes that the Democracy can

not meet and express their determination

to stand by the Union, the Constitution

lnd the Laws, and against the usurpa

tions and destructive policy of an admin

istration, without fear or intimidation,

it is quite time measures for a restoration of freedom of speech and person were adopted. The Democracy must not permit themselves to'be overawed or "intimidated by the abolitionist f. -

-Tht .Mestino ox tue 9t,3. Therc'was but little business- of general importance transacted at the" Volunteer nicctir.g on the 9th. if on: it' M. Kifwaa expected t6 be present and address it, but illness prevented. Gei. Carrington was present and spoke at length, shewing the progress the Federal fovces'had made towards a' suppress ion of the rebellion, and predicting that tbs job will be completed

within the coining year. The meeting

adjourned to niect again on Monday! the

23d, when it is expected the Confmlttees

for the diffeient Township's', appointed to

solicit oluntceriug; vnll be present and

report progress.

Congress. This body assehiblcs on

the nr6t ot jJcccmber. mere is some

doubt which party is in the ascendency,

the radicals or conservatives, and a spir

ited contest for the Speakership is expected. If the "infernals" shall prove to be in the ascendancy, the country may prepare itself f..r a severe affliction in the vfay of cant, hypocracy, bogus patriotism, negro philanthropy, high protection to New England monopolies, high taxation, enormous appropriations, shoddy exoneration, National demoralization, confiscation, negro emancipation, peculation and devastation.

The "Union" DiannionisU. It is obvious to every man at all familiar with oar political history for the last thirty yean, that it was the original plan of the leaders of the radical Abolitionists to destroy the Union a plan that the old leaders of that faction have never abandoned a plan that the leaders of the same faction now enlarged into gigantic dimensions and falsely styling itself a 'Union party' are laboring to con

summate with the untiring zeal and ardor that Phillips and Garrison wrought with

in the same Disunion cause twenty and

twenty-fire years ago.

The leading organs of the pretended

"Union," but real Disunion party, dare

not take a decided position in favoi of the Union. They will blab about the "Union" and the 'Union party, because

these are terms that serve their turn to

catch the popular ear and mislead the pop

ular judgment. But the Abolition edi

tors know that with them such terms are

but a hollow pretense, and tint the. real

object, or at all events, that the actual result of their party policy will be, after long years of fighting and an immense loss of blood and treasure, a dismemberment of the Union. For, if we are able to accomplish only what the leaders of that party now avow as the object of the war, namely to retain the territory included within the seceded States, but not the States themselves as organized and exiting under the Constitution then

will the Union be as effectually disraem-

bered as though the 6ccedcd States had

acheived their independence.

Not one of the leading organs of the

radical 'Uuion League' party the New

York Tribune, the New York Evening

Post, the Cincinnati Gazette, or any other

can be pe;sutded to say, in explicit

term's, thct they want the 'old Union' re

instated, cr'that the war is now, or should

be prosecuted for the restoration of the

tTuion aS it existed three years ago when Mr. Lincoln was elected President. On

the contrary, many of them are bold and

outspoken in their hatred to, and con

tempt for such a Union. More than this,

they assert, with the same positiveness

defiant tone toward true Union men, as

the Richmond Enquirer, the Mobile Reg ister and other rebel sheets, that the res

toration of the old Union is a thing

improbable achievement, and that such an

extravagant idea ought not to be entertained. If the restoration of the Union has become, an Abolition Disunion leaders allege, an impossibility, their policy, in conjunction with that of the Southern rebel leaders, has made it so, and upon their heads jointly will fall, and that not lightly, the curses of a betrayed and ruined

people.

TAX HOTICE. TREASUBEil'S OFFICE, Shelby CocstY, IscIasa, October, 1863. Notice is hereby given that the Tax Duplicate for 1863 it now in my hands for

eollectioxr?-

The rate of assessment per 0100, and on each Toll, is as follows viz :

TftAISS raJUCZZLBT TILLS.

C?kteega :prM,..VpV-M. I Mad.

Mall. w.H Meat Xxirea. 8-2! t-.au

notNui. ... KM . m

I 12

Bsproee,

,3r SJ.

REMEMBER THE

townships:

c I A . 'aw

Uaoo Convention

Al the Court Ilouat in ShclbTlllt,

ou each Poll, i on each Poll, i i

on each Poll, j

SATTJEDAY, NOVEMBER 21

For the appointment of Delegates to re

present Shelby Connty in the Democratic State Convention, and the transaction of such other business as may be deemed necessary. X3T The Convention will meet at 1

o'clock.

Jackson Township . v. ........ . do .on each Poll, Washington Township,.. ; . '. do on each Poll,

Noble Township, . . do Liberty Township, do Addison Township do

Hendricks Township, do . on each Poll, Sugar Creek Township do on each Poll,

Biandywine Township, do on each Poll.

Marion Township,. do Union Township,., do Hanover Township do

Van Buren Township

do on each Poll,

Moral Township do on each Poll, Shelbyville, do on each Poll,

an each Poll, on each Poll,

on each Poll,

cts. J CtS. i 20; 25 75 50 20 s 25 75! 50 20. 25 75 50 20 25 75 50 20 25 75 50 201 25 75 50 20 25 75 50 20 25 75 50 201 25 75! 50 20 25 75' 50 20 25 75; 50 20j 25 75! 50 20 25 75 50 20 25 75 50

U. 1 cts. I 10; 1H

cts.

50 ....

m ret 50L...1.

10, 10

cts

lo;

Cts. 05

K! 05

05

. . ., 10i

1

10! ! 10' ! 1 10

10l 1 10l 10

10

' 05 "io1 1 t

I .....

06; 10.

i

03 ...I 02

50. 501. 10! 50 10, 50, 10 50 10 50 10 50 10j 50 10 50 10,

50!....!.... 10; 10' ... . ' 5oL. .J.... 10;....!.... 50 ;

10; 20 10 52 10

50

.10!

lOj 15 io: ...i

10

i

cts. 85! 1 I

00 . . . 1 0i) 91!

. . 2 oif ;i 85' 93r ...Jl 77l

75 75

00 75

25

to

Eye and Ear Unfircary.

Jt -Wr PARRISH, M. D.r

Ocnliot and Auriot

A GENERAL SUJtGEON Inflrni7 on liirnmi Strr(. Unm" baiMtoc, Sottt I . Oorga's llAruurc. ptt&ir, nuitiut, L.

TRKAT9 all dimM nf the X nJ Ear. Tl vill ale on 1'alaract, Artificial fnpil, fxcryxnm. Struts (m ' (croM Krea), and vill tra.t caan of Scr. Imju'lii

Ornaltil Lida, rum teat Opt'jalana, Opau i ,...

kc. Ail lorma or

CHRONIC DISEASES' Treated on Scientific rrindplca. f Tcetli JSxt I'ictofl

With bio re akill asd LESS TAIN than it umal in tkia U-

pnrtaentor Snrferj.

03:

10 . 10 I I 10 io

10!

03 811

to

75 75

1 to

l 75

OS! 83'

I

15 50' is; 50

oo;

80;

2 25

J01IX HEXDRICKS, Jr.,

DRUG STORE.

RECENT oitetiftiTe archaara&t Cah, ) to' aajr to the fUicihnl

My Stock is Complete,-

And will be sold Low for Cash, CONSISTING IX FAKT OF

2 25

On which, if not paid by the third Monday in March, 1864, ten per cent penalty

will be mlded.

Nov.5-3w

WM. M. PHILLIPS.

Treasurer of Shelby County.

Fhacdb ik tde N. Y. Custom House.

For the thiid time under the present "honest" and "patriotic" administration

a series of astounding frauds have been

discovered in the New York Custom

Murder no Longer a Crime. Last week

Beware of the Poison ! the triai of a ninn named Sutherland for the

The disciples of the old Oarrisonian-Aboli- mur(jcr cf one Small, came off in Marion

tion school of Union-haters are insidious pre- C0Untv, and he was acquitted. The facts paring the public mind for the rcTolution they are ri?fly the8e. sutbcland and Small

are secretly and industriously laboringto con wcre employed in the blacksmith department

summaie. i-ne poison oi weir raaicai aoc 0f the 1 & C R K Machine shop atlndo'lis

trines, whims and notions, they seek to diffuse Small as foreman and Sutherland as a corn-

in all manner of ways tw make it pervade monhand. Sutherlnd was ambitious tosup-

the theology and literature of the day, just as plant Small as foreman, and resorted to nu

the poison of infidelity and aggragrianism was I merous unfair, slanderous and underhanded

infused into the theolopy and literature of means to procure the discharge of Small and

France prior to th bloody Revolution. supplant himself in his place. This natural

The radical revolutionists and Jacobins in W led to hard fec!inirs between them. Suth-

this country are working night and day to erland was an abolitionist and Small a Dem

place it out of the power of an American, theJ ocrat Sutherland, with that meanness and inheritor of Amctiean ideas on society and cowardice so characteristic of abolitionism

government, to hear or read a semen, open reported Small to the Royal League and the

a new novel, or look into a professedly liter- authorities as "disloyal," in the hopes ofpro-

ary magazine, without having his patriotism curing his arrest and then usurping his posi-

outraged, and the memory of lus immediate tion. Small learning this, voluntarily went

ancestors insulted, by sly insinuations,, if not and took the oath of allegiance. Sutherland, by direct assertions, that the Union of these th cowardly and black hearted miscreant,

States is forever at an end, and that the work finding himself foiled in this attempt to get

ui u. pinu uuu .iiemen oi noi is to DG j rid 0f Small, that he might install himself in

..uj.rufcu uu .uuc uj me i.mcome, tne h;s position, determined to murder him. On

nases. tneuen. sutlers ana Johnny Uroughs the 6th of Aueust last he met him on one o

of the present day. At the bare suggestion the public streets of Indianapolis, in brood r u it.: t. .i :il i I . y r '

i "S. "n, Amcrjcan daylight, and after a few words had passed blood in his veins and an American heart in between them, and as Small turned to walk

nis Dooy, aoes not Diusn ana redden with Uwav. Sutherland, the fiand. Ar v r-rnlr

and shot him, inflicting a wound from tie effects of which he died in a few moments. Small was unarmed, no weapon ol any description being found upon him. A more deliberate nor premeditated murder was

neier committed it was witnessed by nu

merous persons, who all swore to the facts

Off Fon Brows County. On Tues

lay morning an expedition left this city

for Brown county , where they purpose entrapping, shooting and otherwise cap

turing inumeiable quails, rabits, pheas

ants, squirls, deer, bear, and other game

of greater or lesser magnitude. They

went provided for a week's campaign,

and purpose boarding and lodging them selves. The Commissary department we

should judge, from a di&tant and elevated position, was well supplied, both with

the substantials and asscntials tlw for

mer to nourish the physical system to en

dure the fatigue of the campaign and the

latter to keep out the cold and drive dull care away. The expedition consisted of

Col. Colcscott, Burt. Gorgas, Chailoy Morrison, Dr. Stockton and Elias Maynard. .We have spoken for a couple of deer, a bear, and innumerable birds.

COAL Oil. PlFEtt HOTIOXN ECAIKS LAnrs LSEED Oil. WHITE LEAD Dill IS SEED LARD OIL

SCHOOL BOOKS E.1VCLOFES TOBACCO BBCSIIES FISir OIL TfJRPKMTIXB WI!0r CLASS SPICES CASTOH OIL

Patent UXodiciiiee AND A VARIETY OF OTUEK GOODS.

"Prescriptions rt'T V WITH ORBA CAR

..0

Remaintr the place Sortb -id Public Jqoart. twa 4f Wrat of the aid atatkl. May, IMS. -

CLOCK, WATCH,

JEWELRY

STORE

Ax Important Decision. Provost Marel. al General Fry has given another and important decision on the conscription law a

decision just the reverse of a former decision

Mr. Fry now announces that the pay aent o

at the SiGJI'ortheHMG JJ1TCZI SOVTU SIDE PULLIC

SHELBYVILLE, ITTD. c j. sionnisour

shame and indignation.

Gen. Ben. Butler left Lowel, Mass., on

the 4th inst., to ssume the command, in place

of Gen. Foster, of the 18th army Corps, at

Fortress Monroe, and have control of the mil

itary department of Eastern Virginia and

North Carolina. The World aavi

House, theMeca of thieving politicians.! Fortunately for the reputation of the coun- substantially, as to the killing, as above stat

In this instance but little loss falls upon

the Government, the system having been for a few of the head clerks to levy extra fees upon merchants and ship masters. It is believed that hundreds of thousands have been extorted. We presume the Clerks thought as they were "loyal" it would be no harm to put themselves in a financial condition that would enable them to live in style with the shoddies who infest every branch of the Government.

,The folkwing has been published ex

tensively, and as it has not been denied by say of the orpens of the War Department, it il prim Wed to be correct : JJast'Wcdnesday" Mr. Covode of Peannvltama, introduing on of the successful candidates at the recent citation ii Pennsylvania, to Secretary Stanton, in the War Office, made one cngratula.tory remarks on tho success of the Republicans in thatState. "I elected Governor Ccrftio." Mr.'Stanton replied, "for I tent him 15,000 tiiore voters than he had majority." This was aid vauntinply, aloud, in the presence of a crowd, o of whom repeated it to us. It was the absence ofthese fifteen thousand TOting soldiers thatenabled Lee to drive back General Meade's army to the defences of

Washington, and destroy the railroad from!

Mannaseaa to the'Kspidao.

A CoxrKssios as is a Confession. The abolition papers have found another sensation. A short time' since a man named

Stout was shot on J6hnVon's Island for desertion and shooting an officer while attempting to arrest him. The aforesaid abolition papers ar; publishing a pretended confession said to have been left by Stout, wherein he alleges to 1 are been circumvented and led astray by those rascally af8 treasonable Knights tr the Golden Circle. The document is in the whang doodle style of a dozeo similar exposes that has preceded it, and bears the impress of forgery upon its face it statesnothing definite, r.br does it give the names of any person as engaged in circumventing and lending hiui astray and to desert. There is yet stronger evidence of its epuriousness Stout could -neither read nor write.

The Fedthai: Prisoners ix Hicttmoxd. It is reported that the Federal prisoners in Kichmond are in a most pitifal condition for food and clothing the rebel government being unable to protide them with either". Ar

rangements have been made whereby botes

and packages for the sufferers can be sent them by their friends here, therebels receiving them under a flag of truce and faithfully delivering them to their destination. W understand that a box of clothing an&proritioBS were sent Capt, Jack Firm a while ago, ad that a letter has been received from nhs by his friends here announcing -itstafs and welcome arrival. - . . .-..

try there is but little of a military nature to e,1t hut in the face of such positive evidence

do in that department, and the people with- of premeditated murder, an abolition Judge in our lines have nothing Butler can con6s- charges an abolition jury to acquit the pris nnra Iav his rn its I ha aa hnwitA

few women left upon whom he can exercise oner Rnd lhe sa,d Volition jury obeys the his bullving propensities. Big Bethel, the instructions of the said abolition Judge, an!

soene of Butler's first military exploit, ought the murderer of an innocent man is set at

to be his headquarters. liberty. If this is law and justiee, where, in

Miss Kate Chase, dauehter of Salmon the nam o(humnntj, is the citizen to find

P. Chase. Secretarv of the U. & Treasurv. MCUritJ for ,ife or property. There is evi-

was married to Gov. Spragae, of Rhode Island, dent.IJr a fadical changa . nnd purification of

now a United States Senator, on the 12th Juciary neeaea-u may come more inst The weddinir is aaid to hav. been ar. 8PeedllJ nd be more rrtdic1 than these tri-

eherche affair. The President and his Cab' flc" with ju,tice wiU relieh'

inet, and most of the foreign Embassadors in

Washington, including the negro Embassa-I Discharged. Jackson and John Baker,

dor from Hayti we presume, were present Henry Hill and Win. J. Trees, of this county,

to say nothing of innumerable Army and who were dragged from their beds at the hour Naval officers. All the airs of Royalty, so of midnight last Spring by a gang of minions

far as it was possible, were aped. I in the employ of the present execrable ad-

. T" ministration compelled to walk through

ton. Governor of all the Hoosiers. has neariy eight miles, and from here taken to' issued a kind of proclamation, address, Indianapolis and released on bail, were arappeal, pronuncimento, or whatever else raigned before the United States Supreme

you may term it, calling upon the people Court at Indianapolis last week on the eharge to provide for the families of the absent ot "disloyal practices," Ac, and there being soldiers. An appeal of this kind may be no idmce against them thty weredischargrrtcessary to stir up the partizan friends ed bt payment ofcotts. This is a little . , e rw .i i . i a ahead of Austria or any other despotism of and followers of Oliver the 1st, but the ... , , . , . ' which we have any knowledge. Four law Democracy need no official notification of abiding and peaceful citirens, on the infortheir duties in the line of duty, humanity mation of some contemptible hired informer,

rand christian philanthropy: I a member of the abominable and treason

concoctinz Union League no doubt, are drae-

PntstAoa. The attention of the reader I fPnm Kir hnmM at h h rmu.

f j JT ESrZCTrUI.LT announcr to the ritizena af Skalar'

J, Cuuutjr tliat b ha opcnl a Jewelry Ftoreattbaabe'

three hundred dollars by an.:nwhha wifhe i-urpoaea keeiinK cotu..uy on h.ndafmii J aaaortment of Rouda in hit line, ouoiprmtig errrj atyle aa4been drafted, exempts him for tl lee Ttp, graeraiche. ciockiand jeweirr, an of which will aw .. aold aaclieapas tlie aanic article ran I Attained in Ciocin--

the same as It he liatl lurni6liea an SVCCap D,u or ludianapolia, and every article auldbj ncWarraat--ble substitute. This is an important decis- 10 "roYe M "wto.

rmrr tm mw w tit a mriTTTin sa. TnTSTTST "wa

ion. and probably will be adhered to uttil vvvo, waaoxxj ol -x.wx.inn

Mr. Fry makes another decision.

tjy An exchange paper thinks that Ben. Butler has loat his-' character. It will cer

tahriy vain the man that finds- it

is invited to a narrative of the trials, suffer- night, conveyed to Indianapolis and thrust ings and hardships of Mr. Smith, who was into prison finallv released on exorbitant

arrested in this county in August last as a bail and when the time set for their trial

deserter, on the first page of to-day's AolcjjTxxa. The story we are asenred is not overdrawn or exaggerated nor indeed is one half told. It may- strike soase as a violation of law under ir Democratic admin istration itwooM hvreteen, but rndet aor abolition

monSrehy "the laws are silent,'

A Washingtovt' dispatch ' announces

that a bHl will he- invrodaeed iMtr'Congresa, at afc early' dayafter'its organ it at ion, to' have the bounty' to Volunteers paid in monthly installments, additional to their monthly pay. This will make their pay in the neigh' borhood of $30 instead of $13 -per month.

arrives they have committed no crime, but

are assessed the costs that has been made by the exercise of arbitrary power to gratify the mean and cowardly malignants of abolitionism.All this transpires-in free America under an Abolition 'admmistratroru "aT Jostf.' Girfrtx'Bs-A'MtaTXD. A dispatch from MbSleral, (Canada) sUtes that old Josh Giddibgs, Mr. Lincolns Attorney General for that Province, has been arrested for kidnapping What h kidnapped it not stated, but we hope they will keep him safer for a term of years.'. - . ;

Mr. Ejbitor. I have been in most of the

Townships in the County during th past six

weeks, mr invariably notice that where there

is a "lion Uaard the members thereof

oeem to take a pride in wearing their uni

forms every dav, of which they seem to be

quite proud, probably for the purpose of

palming themselves off as genuine soldiers.

I understand that most of the members of

these organizations talk war and vote war.

Now would it not be quite as well for them, steing they ate so anxious 'and apparentlv take so much pride in donning the "blues,''

to enter the servive of Uncle Sam, pocket the four hundred dollars bounty make good

their professions by practice, and be genuine

soldiers instead of mere make believes. - ' Querist. The Reason Why. St.Pacl, Nov. 14th, 1863.

Editor of the Volunteer: Uaving seen

the following in your local column, last week,

I thought proper to offer a few words of ex planation. Mr. Editor: Will vou nermit me to en

quire why Capt McFarland was not present

at our meeting on luesday. I understand

he went down on the train that morning for

the purpose. Noblb.

He did come "down on the train" and dotcn to Wright's School House and doten on the ground and and hie hie was kindly eared for by some friends, who always

bury their dead, after a hard fought battle!

The last engagement of Mack's was, I believe,

at Fairland. where he was among the lucky

survivors. But the case was quite different

with the gallant Captain, on that unluckey Saturday ! lie fell early in the fight ! And

as soon as it was known that he was dcadt (drunk,) an ambulance was ordered to the spot, and the (dis) honored remain of the renowned chieftain; together with something less than sv gallon of spirits, supposed to be

intended far embalming his most rubiconed carcassjeonveyed to a convenint place, far away froni-danger, where the warrior s cry, nor'therroar of artillery, might disturb his peaceful' slumbers ! Kings may be blest, but Tom was glorious, "O'er a' the ills of life victorious!" Now that the Captain has ended his most useful (less) life, in which he made the enemy to feel that his gullet vat red hdt, and thalMueh'tceek enemies could be nealtoved vithmt greasing, it will remain for the future historiair to honestly recount his valient deeds, and award to the departed warrior such encomiums as are due to his Jllustrious name. . FLATROtK.

in a aatis(actor7 manner or do chrp10rKctnfuher the place, auiU aida Public Sqnara, aif of the Big Watch.

I AM ALSO AOEWT rMt TVS I.U OT

TAILOIl S PATENT BOOIt BELL,

a new and economical inTention. Call anJ ae it.

CHEAP FURNITURE ! COItfnEY&IIAIVD, (Saccaaaara to Jameaon h. Court-)

X

Again the GraaS Araay af tl Woaat ta rtpartHM atoal adrantlnr.hnt not ae witn ua ia tha vriceeef ear Xarr S

Incomparable Stock of Furniture & Chairs, Which will actually ha aM at a redaction of froai 10 U SS per cent. on formei prices, the truth of which will be raadlj apparent ta all who will take the troabletocall and exaaiia for themialTC. The etock la f aU 1 a aTery departael, ca- , listing of Plain and Upholstered Work, All manufactured fram the bart ot aaatcrial an4 ay esperi. enoM workmen. DINING AND CENTRE TABLED.

Office, Kitchen, Cane and Flag BoUotui and Upholstered CHAIRS, XtocUinsr Chairs, la. ob!M rariaQr, cf ths-varioas aiyiaa, aM al all prions.

Wchara fUk 'siren Burtal Uaae, wansntaS afrasrwvtoH

iirhu Alao. WoodCoC&aaalwaraoahaMor maMrer

to trtfj etyla aww in uaa. We hare a apliawlS HXAJLSJ '

in atteaS FaceraJa, an -I sjfin taw aaaaa only.

UaKeWSaat Im S.Soutiief rmhfisM

. BHXLBTTILLX, US. !Sor. S7, Kt'

IfCimr nOCSTf th well known e!4 KerMSer

ortharyoiugianoiooBaiiBi-

toy eomnty that he he aaaraaS . .

A DRICK YARD

at the Kaat ea4 of Shelayrillo. Weat mt f the Bin BJtot - - - "- . Will

baaS oawawtfly S So4 aeortmeBt of Brick at Who lata lav an retail at the lowest eaah pneaa. JS&m T. S. The old fellow aloe reeomotenSe a La whiaaw.

JtSlii, lt.SeruNing.WmtaW, Cieahtn Ilsir, s larfeaaS f aii n t Jaat roootrof r-j-

rrf .