Terms. The Conn.“ is publiahed every Monday naming. by HIVIY J. Ruuu. at. $1 76 per lnnum if paid strictly 12¢ Annex—B2 ‘OO per unnuxn if not. paid in advance. No lubscription discontinued. unless It. the option of the pgbli-her, until all arrange: are paid. #4 y M . Anvnnsuuu inserted“ the usual rate- Jol '_..l’lm'nxa dqno with negtneu md dilpagch, A , Orncl in South Baltimore ntreet. nearly oppoaite Wamplera' Tinning Establishment —-“‘Oolrn.n Pun-"Nu ,Orrlcu" on thenign. nggsgmm c 4223. _ H. A. Picking- ’ 71'}?an m ‘svkvrzvmh Writing at A DEEDS and WILLS, GLERKISJ; 0F rA ES, Bc. Rnidencefin Scrub-n tuwnlhip. on the road lending from Gettysburg to Run ‘enlown, lwo min {mm the farmer pluco. Charm-u monk-mu- and Infilfnction guru-awed. Feb 1.1804. 6m Wm. A Duncan, TTonxx-zv AT LAW.——offire in the North- A wencorucrofCeutrc quJre, (lan; shurg, n. ‘ [061.3, 12552:. If Edward 13., Buehler, :ATTORNPIY AT LAW, will {nithmlly and promptly attend to all lmnim-su wrruulvd In hlm. Ho apeuh the German hogan)".— Uflice at the Mme plnce, In South Bullimure ”net, nenr Forncy's drug albrr, and nénrl, oppofile Dunner‘a Ziegler'a “are. (lunysburg. Murgh 20. J. C. Neely, TTOPIXHY .\T L\\V.-—l'xu:§ruvllr num- A non p-id Lo Cullecliun or Peunons, uuncy, Ind BA'rk-pny. Ulhva in ‘lhe S. E. banner of flu: D'mnmud. Ocuyuburg, April‘u‘, 1863. if D. McConaughy, TTURV HY AT 1..\ WJUHir? um- dnor wrn A o! Hu'hler'q drug: and book Itorv.‘ Imm bcrd-u'g strut.) A7l mun unh‘nunmu mu I'A'n'lnn A\l7 Paul |\\]. Btmmy Land Wur nnu, Huck-Imy unphnrh‘d ('lmmp, And all other chin” .Lgaivwl the Unvvrnmn-n! n! \Vth. iny'on. I). Cl. nl-u xun~riq.un(.‘luivm In England. inntl errnnu luv-nu"! ~lnul wI-imr ImuglzLHnd high“! pr]: or giwn'. \gmrrt Ingnpul in‘ IQ eating wurrnnu in i-um.‘slinuiq rm} ulhlr westernSmu-n ”And; It: hum prrnoudl; or M lutcr. , - ' (Augsburg. .N'nr. 2!, 'l'fl. A l 3, Cover, TTORVEY NP lIA‘VJVH‘ nruuml‘v «Hand Al to lhfilnMl-‘nu .\lhl 1” 41".»ri-qv'r-u4q un trad-e! In 1|? n ”5“: YlfllNr-v-u l‘nhm-ilmk=' 31th mar k Imefler'u SiIIfLK‘. I 4 mmmrn ur-fel. tienflbur-g. I'3. [rm-pt. 5. 185:. , Dr. Wm. Tavlor' informlthe inhnlmmvw of “with! ur: nn-l \i- K in"; Hm]. he “ll Cuplmul- llu- prm ti. 0 of hi! wofensian M Liw old Mun-1; nrxv mn-r lo the \‘mnpiivr Qlfivr. Helga-hum. Pu. 'llmukm! Mr In"! hvorq. hr lwxu lu rm rue n share of .txuur- imjrouup. . {Sr-pt. 2': Idhifi. H _ Dr. James Cress, 1 “‘j.fi"TIC I'UY.‘l_('l \V, thankful for pub. 1“ 4" lvnll'lunqn- lulu-wrun-~lPrrnr!"-l'tll mm. i' mum hi! :nr-x-m (I M 4m hill A'an'unur- vin pmclirrul hm pru’v‘mi‘ n in (Inky-Mun: and vh-mur: "1"“ hour "..‘-‘nu (u chmncur ~qu «‘l. HI-m-e. we nth-1' [fu- I‘m-L ‘4'} \L ru-l Inn-4 r-- lxnjak rpm-div: {mm nll Ullh" qvalwrlnumml - u-l Irhuulufanuh hum ‘uuu rnum-Inu .L-d Imm mauxpenoure and s {wimmi h) 111.» p? il'x fl‘u.‘ It: fliv o‘4t l‘l-‘lw 'l‘ I‘Lu [llium-n. mu! Align-n 1 [hm-b mnru Hjuriuun, ua‘vh As an limunv. nrunicx mnfiur), Mu» 1i“, hluml‘m hlg'kr. J . ' (”Th-13in ”ll‘ and v'nl (3." York firm”. in the awe-21:1”: uwun! i:_\ ”run Willy. Honystmrg, find ..m 1“}.1 Hm Dr. J. W. C. OQVeal’s "‘l 'l5 3th D‘n-‘Huz \ H. vururrnf Bul () vimnr» nudli'gh‘lFl‘F’SJH‘Hfl'l’4sll}l¢ria“ (Imp-h. Hruyqu, t'u. N•‘4, 31., ‘ J. Lawrence Hill, M. D. AS hi! u."., w «me K‘ II dgu-r nut u' ('r o :gW Lmhenm -I\nn E» H ’ ("m-nimrsY urg 4m M, ~n-l uppn‘iu- I'nkinq‘l I“ ..' \ur p‘ Elmer WNW”; 5" "1“". ""f“ l"“”"‘ Dyer-vim: p>-n.rnl:'l nr- roupevtmiiy mrixmi 10 |{ls—4ll~:' 4_ 'n". H :r-wr. NH. |‘. P. ‘ .x. 1.. Imm". 0. n., m}. ru’. ‘l, L. .\flmn-r. 0H Kr. ul‘y Prof. \l J.L‘I \,|h_u'mx ,'. \.~.'.\ ’ '.. .1 > L Adams County { i'l‘l‘aln man“: 5: k‘w‘llt‘l'l\H’.\§\’.——§ Int-uruv-ued- ‘l-th m, 13.31. ‘ : . r 0 High. I'rrm'(ltnl——lluz-I'gv .\.\ -,u~ . _ ~ I)" I'ldh7/v-nl—F. u, Hun-0”. N’vrvl-J/‘llw-l’. \. [Lu-uh r. . Trnmu‘trv-Dnyi'l ‘ll‘l'rl‘lr'r. ~ ”recalls! ("l u luly‘r-allulprrl \h-(lurl‘ly, lon Kinz. An lruwjlviumlvn-m. Hump/m1 - h-urgl- .\‘wupmll A. ‘B-lehlnr. IR. H'Uurlg. Jucon Kin-,5. A. llvinuv-lm-In. l). “v- Frau]. 3'. :1, ll l~"'ll. J. R. rlerdu. Sunuel Illrbnxw, E L h‘L-l-munvk. Wm. 11. Wilm‘n, l_l.‘\. l’uu’xuz. “"11. ll: “\Ulfll‘ln, Jnhu ‘.an hhl, R. “v. \lcllr-wrv. lohu I‘v‘kinz. .\ln-IT. \Vruhz, Julxu Cunningham, .\b'litl l“. Gilt, Jun" 11. ‘llnhlll, “. lilcllrlhorgl-r. wring Cuxuguuy IS limitml in it: opera tions ) lhc county at .\dmuk. ll lms barn in unwell-ll opuntinu (or more len «ix }e:ll'.‘, I'nd in tlm perio-l hus paid all loss" and u pcufles,mthaul um] uxuu mvu‘, having .zlio a large urpluq capital in» (hie I‘m-usury. The f‘om‘ ynny employs nu Amnu—ull buxinv-w hem-z done by the .\l-mmrers, wlnu are annually elm-9- ’oul hy Llle'Stock‘mlll‘t-ru. Any pc-rwn desiring pn Insu‘rince can ylplv to any nl‘ the nbo've unified \‘luumgpn {m- l'urvlu-rinfurmnfinn. 2‘ [firlie Pin-qua??? I‘ommill'ee rue-"s at the 0154: of the Umubany on the last Wedneidny in évcry month. 'l'” 2,»P. M. giffng‘?’ hm. , :1 The Great Discovery ‘F 'RHE Alia—inflnnunuunry and Chronic 0 lih’emnntiim dun iDQ' curl-d by uainz H L. MILLER}?I L‘l'llJ-IBl'lAT‘l-Il) RHECMATK' MIX TI'RE. )lnny nrniniluvni citizen! nl this, And w: Adjoining roumih. have («Mined m in great utility. it: suvuess in Rheumatic alfre uuna, hm been hitherto unparalleled by uny apecitii'. introduced to the public. Price 50 «em: per bottlr. For'sule by all drnggiets and Morekecpers. Prepared only by H. L. HELPER. \“holeanle and lleluil Druggist, East Berlin, glam: county, Pm, dealer in Drugs, Chemicnlsf “ill, Vurnidu, Spirits, l’uinu. Dye-stuffs. bot fled Ulla, Emma: and Tinctures, Window Glnn, Perfumery, Patent Medicines, lei, Are. “‘A. D. Burhlpr is the Agent in Gettys bny {or “ H. L. Mllker'l Celebrated Rheumatic ”WWW" _ [June 3, 1861‘: if . The Grocery Store ’ N THE HILL—The undersigned would respectfully inform the cliizenh ol Gettys burg and vicinity, that he hat tnken the on "Mad “ on the Hill.” in Baltimore street, G‘et .qtbnrg, where he intends to keep ronaunlly on hand all kinds of .GROCERIES—Sugnrs, lCol‘eeu, Syrups of all kinds, Tobacco. Fish, 185 k, km, Barthrnware of All kin-la, Fruits, 'Oiln, sad in fac‘ everything usually lound in n iOmery. Also, FLOUR a: FEED obnll kinds; .1! of which he intends to all low as the low , t. Connlry produce znknn in exchange for goods und the highest price given. He flamers ’hiuuélf than, by six-lei uiemion and 2m honest idufle to please, to merit a share oi public pl ch TRY 1"“. J. .\l. ROWE. , 3h. 23, 1863. :r 5 - Removals. agrflz‘nedmciuglhe nuttbflnd person : I go make remomls into Eva: Green Ceme "l he {that such as ceJemplnte the removal zr‘fig‘figfixfinl of decensed relatives or friends wiflinfl themaelvea oi gain season oftheyear Lo hrdivdflflh Removnl! made with promptneu .‘_ 10'“ ad no efl'on spared to please. W” ~ ’ '- PETER mom, Keeper of the Cemetery. ‘ memswa _ . AMI-28' moth for Clo-king. s new Inppfi L {nu mgmd u ”331937001: 3303-. sf ‘ A"@EM©©RATD© AND FAMULV J©URNAL Br H. J. STABLE. .*(3tll. Year. _ a h , - NTERSAXLONAL CHAN 0A ‘ COMMERCIAL COLLEGES. Hunblished in the following cities: PHILADELPHIA, S. E. Corner of Seventh and Chennut Stu, New York, BruoHyu, Albnny, Troy, Provi dence, Por'lnnd. Hartford, Burlington, Xvi-ark, Rochester, B/ufl‘alo, Toronto,- Clurélnnd, Detroit. Cuicagn, Mil waukee nnd St.'Louis. Thorough tllcnrcticnl and practicnl instruc tion in all brunt-kc: pertaining to: finished Eminent Education. The l’lnlndolphin College stands-first in the Flu”. bull: in point. of rrputatitm and local mlvnulapes. The point. aimed m. in In plnée f'mumeninl Ednrmion where it belongs—in the from rank of useful instrficllon. Tu this end. mnost thorough calm-o of bugineu train ing is mlnmml and rnrclully enfotrced, under tha- pnrwnnl ‘snpcrunmn of competent Plo ruunrg in lhr various drpnrlments. The most pn-rtH-l [um-m o! \prnmicnl (raining ever. ‘de null lms bran put in operation, and H 5121-- ceqmlly nwivd out. affording to sfullenu ud vantages -uch us have bilhenu beer? consider rd pussible only in qouneruop’wilh lb» Fouux. inu-lmuhr. Alter becoming prulimontiu {he Surna- of Accounts. l'eumamlnp. Commer cml C-llvnlllinnw and (Tummcrcinl Law, the filmlvul In nth-mun! tn the Prncliml Depart nmul, Mme he hm ram-s an nctnml lhmk.kepp. er and .\lcnlmul; [Muses through lhr «lull'grvnt. 11-.u~rs: am in turn a: Teller, Cashier. scm; 11-nrn~ the duties um] run-nusnbilnies or web ofiico, and lm-umoq thoruughly inform-d, not on'} m tin 10?qu whwh are in nniwrsnE-uu, but in "Hanging llw' ulfuiru of bunim-ss Will: a} .u- m )"11l {'ccp fish. n hulnr~lnps inurd nt one point. are gnarl, fur nu unliuliwd perioll, in Lluq >cighteen Col lbgm (mug-rim”; z'lc 7'cth.’l —' [hp'zumna Y 9 mnmled to thosemnly who fulfil] the pn- «~rihcd c urse 0! study, and pass Luv rrqniuitq ”won. Fur fummrjn ornmlion send. for a circular. Adm-2:4: ' - , BRY.\§\'Tr STRATTON' E CO.. Feb. 8, 1864. 1y l‘lnlndrlphin Notice. {F.O. J. FFITTI-IRHOFFS ESl‘lTE.—Lelv ([ lers of mimir'miatrzumnnn lhe-estpte office. J‘ i‘l-tu-rhufl', inu- ot'maynju_vlp..Adzuns cann h. d: mused. Inn In): been granted '0 lhcundcr right-Ll‘l‘ndinuiu lhe ‘Xllhl: township. he hum-by KHH‘ nulme to all pfik‘us indrhu-d In said emur [u m the numrdin‘tr pnunont, nnd those having nlximn ng viusgifllv «mm to prawn! Ihrm prop-fly nurhmtitmr-I lur scnh-ment. 3 L" L“: LIGHTNER, Adm'r. February 1.: 181;]. St Assignee’s N once. HE unnl-flaigm-xl lmrin : hvon nppninlvd T Aniglwe. under n'nlcud of trus‘Y’h‘u lec ln-m-fit n! cry-Inert of Lrvl Sun-n and “'xn:. m Hcrmunv township, Adm": ruunly. notice ifi Int-filmy uixen to all persons Lnowmg them .whes indeh'od to said Assiznors to make im medimlepngmvnt l 6 Ille‘dndarsigncd. raiding in Mnnnljny township, And those buying claims u,-nius:lht§:xnu- Ln prawn: them properly nu lhentic-ut-d lor e-rlhcmenl. . mun'nft. B. .\HILER, Assignee. Jamar) 13, IM4. 6t { , Sheads 8: Buehler, EALlillm IS ('H \L..\\'h LUMBER, ,ST()VI.'S. TIN-“Hum. IIULLUW-WARE, QC. "“ ALSO SHI‘TTEHF, "Luvs. siasn, m-v.‘ ('on.cr (Irl‘Xu’Fh' and lLlilrnml Shawn, oppo m» Runnmd Imm, G ETTYSni‘mu’l’A. My]. 2‘, \563. u' ' Somethmg for Everybody r u N'Y .\T mt. IL-‘HORSER'S F ' )mm: AND \‘ARJETY STORE.— Juet op-‘nl‘d n fine assortment of ; Drug“ and fledi’fines, I‘uleutflucuwinu, ‘ ..‘Lmfinuery. A, Fuucy Dry Goods, A. Confections, ‘ Groceriel, \ q _ g TOBACCO, SEGARS, to J". 192. 2:!»4. f S. R. Tipton " ‘VOI'LD most [especu’ully inforfin the pub l'u: th .1 he lml commenced mnkipg RHODSIS. He 'wjill m.LJ(e them on the than: or us will best. suit his custamers. Pcrsuns having Broom Corn willplenucnfl. Shop in llcUounughy'l Hall, on corner of first. floor. [Not 9, 1863. Come, One and All! z’ ‘1'”) subscriber. lnu'ing r'opened his Sn -1 loon in the Smut-east corner of the Dm mond. invi'tu the attention of his friends and the public generally to his excellent ALE. 'l’Uß'l‘l-JR.‘BRUWN bTuITT. WINE, CHAM- I'A UNI-l. TUBA (K‘U, SEGARS, Inc. He hopes l.) uric: attention to huaineu um! I desire to please, Lo r..-wile : liberal Ilmre on curmm. ’ B. W. CHRISMER. (hllyrhurz, Aug. 24, 1863. u Clothing. EORGE A P-NOLD bu now got up his Fan G and Winter stockot Glowing, the largest neck in town, consiuiug of « User Gout», Um] Coats, ’ ‘ Bunnen Coats. Military Blouses and Pant: ‘Plgtaloom, Vest: Under and OvehShirtl, Drnwen, Hosiery Gloves, km, in grant variety, in of which wil} be sold cheup for cub. Can and are them. Sept. 28,1863. UCUBIBEB PICKLES, a large kahjuu re. C tcived from tho city, in prime order, at; . KALBFLBISCLI'S. F YOU WANT 1 GOOD ALE, PORTER rown Sunk, Scotch Ale, and Winn, csll u. CHRISSER'S, North-cut corner of the Diamond. Doc. 7, 1863.- - A ‘ KW FALL 1 WINTER GOODSI—A good assortment of Fall und Wins" Good: In cheap 1.: the cheapeu at ASCOTT & 30353 11‘. have just received I new “.oerth of Queenawue, to which we invite tye nttentiou at huge". 4. SCOTT l SUN. DST received M PICKING’S Swing And Jp‘nmmer Clothing. Come one And A“. R. TOBIAS’ celebntod Derby Condition D Powders, for Horses nnd Crime, for "J: M. Dr. HORNE-2WB. Drug Store. RY Dr. B. Hnßflfifl’S Tonic and Altera- T the Powders, for HORSES and CATTLE. Prepared and told only at his Drug St)?” January 25, 1§64. PRING and Summer Clothing 'jutt meind a: ‘ PICKING’B. V 0 to Dr. R'. HQBNEB'S szStom and get. (Jim lEDIOATBD (JUDGE 0310?. mm 15me Y: win my mama, fox medicinal purpom may; I: me New Drug ion a! K “80:8. BURNER. ' the use: DIFFERENCES. .The king an dripk the belt of wine-‘7': ’ ‘ ‘-So ctn I; ad has endugh the a wpuld dinn— -2 So blve I;f \ ' nd cannot order rain. or shine— .\'or can I. ‘ Then where's the difl'erence—let me Inc—- Belwixt my lord the king and me? ‘ Do may friends lurronnd hi! throne ‘ Night and any? 01‘- mnke his intelut their‘ own 1‘ No, not they; Mine love me for mylelf sloga— _ _ Blessed be they! ~ ’And {hnt's one difi'erence which lies ’Betwixt my Lord the ”king and me. Do knives around ‘me lie in wait L ‘ To deceive, 'N , 0:: fawn and flutter when they hate, < -' sud would grin’e ? Qr cruel pompl oppress my.?ule, a By my lulu: 'l I I No! Henfen be thunkedl And here you see Mare dificreuce ‘twixt tlge king and me! lie hng tools, with jests snag-lip; When he’d play; . . He has his armies and hi] ships—- 3 . ’ Gust. are they; fiutnot a child to kiss his lips, 1 Well n-dny! : And that's n difi‘t-rcncgsnd to see uetwiLu my lord the lung and mo. ‘ I wear the cup and he the c-rown What: of that 7 I sleep on smut nnd he on down— ‘ ‘ What of that 7 And he’s the king and I'm the clown- AWL". of HIM? ‘ Il' happy 1, mild wretched he, Perhaps the king iould cbxmge with me ! m A Eggimflnnmnfi. CASE OF LIT‘I’LESTOWN BOROUGH. opinion of Court. IThe Trccholders of Liltlestown, in thin county. 'nsk to be incorporated into a Bnrnugh, and have set out in limir petition by mews and bowed: (he territnryvtln-y dv-siite to have included. acgompnnied; by a draft. Their petition has been laid before the Grand Jury. has met with their appm< ya], and is now before this. Court. for‘adjg dicsflinn. ’ ' ‘ ‘ William McSherry and James Renshaw, two of the owners of lands within the lim , in of the. proposed borough, as'k thatitheir l respective properties be exclyded froln‘the ‘ corporation. on the ground that “they are l exclusively aged To; the purposes of farm ing. and not >properly belonging to the ‘- town or village.” ‘ i This application is founded uponthe l‘p'rovisions of the Act of the 151, of April, 3 1863, which is as follows: ‘ * - i ‘ “That whenever an application has been or shall hereafter be made by the freehold ‘ ere of any town or village in the Common ].e . . l wealth, for an act of incorporation into a } borough, and the_boundnries fixed by‘ the ‘ petitioners shall embrace lands exclusively used for the purposes of farming, sud) not ‘ properly belonging to the town or village, } ’the Court of, Quaiter Sessions of the coun ty where such application is mnde, shall lieye power, It the request of the party ng-_ grieved, to change and modify such bounds. ries. so as to exclude thereform the land used for farming purposes.” I’. L. 200. The evidence taken inthjs case, upon depoaitions. proves that William MoSherry own's s large trsct of land which is exclu sively used for‘farming purpom'..snd that the portion takenfor the proposed borough i: m the form of n square, conteiningabout -n acres, and including [all his buildings , and his orchard. He protests against.“ ing annexed to the borough. And desire; his farm torelnsin in the township, as is it now is. A: it isletthe extremeend of the pm i posed borough. and does not belong to the ‘ town or village, and is exclusively used {or ‘ ‘ farming particles, we think it ought lobe ‘ excluded. And we are sustained in this View a: the subject by the opinion of the l Grand Jury when the‘ matter was befOre l theru. for to their epprovsl of'thelimitl u- l signed to the proposed borough. they add this recommendation: “The Grand Jury I would recommend thst the Court, if they ‘ pauses: thmpower. order such so situation 4 in the linoot‘ the proposed borough s: to ‘ exclude the residence of Mr. McShcrry.—- J. L. Nun Foreman." . 1 Nutions, A: regard: the property of Mr. Rensblw, the! rest: upon nomewhat difl'erent grounds. To firing hie lends within the provisions of the Act two things ere required First, it. must. embrace linds exclusively used for farming; purpmes. Secondly, it must not. properly be a part. of the town or village. The testimony proves that it contains about fifteen or twenty acres, on which no building: ere erected; that for a period, estimated between five and eight yam. it has not been ploughed, but used as pasture land. It is somewhat doubtful, but admit.- ling that it is exclusively used tor fanning pnrpooes, then i; it. properly 0. park of the town or village? ‘ Mr. Rensliaw, some years ago—the pre gine time in not. in proof—procured n lur vay to be nude of hinground. and hid it. out, into lots, with “rub and filling-and marked on the dun, the whole under' the uyle of-“Renahiw’n’plx'm of lotsfhiif'gfi 111111 "731713 I! no!" AND filial; PIIYAIL.” GETTYSBURG, PA.-, MOND‘AY, .MAR. 7, 1864." addition to the plsn o? Littlestowrr. Adams county, Pa.” He subsequently procur this plat to be iithographed, snd" sold seve ral lots for building purposes, one of which shuttled on Gettysburg street nudNorthern and Rebeccn sliies, snother on ssme street and Msrylsnd and Rebeca allies, severe! fronting on Gettysburg street and running back to Rebecca alley. and one in the rear of these lots. containing shout an acre, on Centre street. On most of these lots twig; ings have been erected. Here the questi arises, what was the eflect 'of these acts of ‘ Mr. Renshaw? Did he dedicate these streets and allies to public use‘t_or did lie give the purchasers only the. right ”to the use of the streets snd fillies, which these lots respectively eb'utted .’ Neither, we conceive thst. the land cannot be trest ed as exclmivcly used for‘farming [impo ses, and not forming a part of the town or ‘ village Y ‘ It hss been repeatedly held in New York and other States, the? where the owner of property in a cirylay out his ground into streets and allies. and selis l‘ots fronting on the streets, it is a dedication of those streets to the public use, although they miiy not be opened, or in use, at the time of the side and canveyence.—Case of 2fl7th~Street. 1 Wendell 262; csse of Lewis Street. 2 Wen dell 472 ; Livingston vs. Mayer at N. York,‘ 8 WendeilBs; Wymnn via. same, 11 Wen dell 489; City of Cincinnati vs. White, 6 Peters C.‘ C. E. 437 ; case of 29th and 39th Streets;l Hills Rap. 189, ml. _ , In the cnse of Bedan vs. Mead 3: Holmes, l 4 Bdrbour 328, the Supreme Court'of New York thought the gases above cited not strictly smiucable to “rural Frope'rty.” but only to city prop'orty, and held that Mend, hy laying out his ground adjoining the ‘vil lage of New Rochelle. did not dedicate the streets laid down on his plat. to the public generally, but only the right to. the owners of the lots and other? necessarily going to and from the same, to use such Streets or silie-I m mljoinod the bropertv. , h . , In Ohio, Mississippi and Wi-Icnnsin it has been decided that. where ,n. plat of a town is drafted upmna given scale, and streets marked and widths designetedby figures, it is a dedication of streets of that width in the designated grounll.—-Williams vs. Presbyterian Churchpl Ohio Rep. 478 ; Hzintiilml vs. J)rnper, 15 Miss. Rep. 634; Ely vs. Kites. 5 “'ist‘nnsin Rep. 407. 7 We can find no map in Pumiaylvnnin in whirl: it. is diroclly decided lliac laying out lots on’ a ruyul'téwn plut. with streets marl:- ed upon it,. is n dédicntion of them to the public generally: but the doctrine laid down in the elder New York citseu seems 10 be recognized as good in law,~as fan.” lkongz. an rupectq the city of Pillsbury;— Shenly vs. Commonwealth, 12 Casey 29; same vs. same, l 2 Cuey 62.’ It is hnneqeesnry, for the purposes ofthil case. to rocnncil'e‘ the conflicting decisions in New York and other States, or to decide which portion is in accordance with the Jaw of this State; for whether the htreets and allies marked on the plat, of Little» tmrn extended are thereby dedicated t'o public use, or are only “the considered in: ways of ingress, egress and regrbs‘s, several of theft) must be kept open. for the accom modation of the owners at the lot: already sold. ‘ ‘ Our conclusion 3:, that Mr. Renshur, by his own'act, has dedicated so many of _the streets ‘and ellies laid o:ut to the pee of the lot-holders; if not to the public gen erally. and has so identified.tbe whole tract with the town that he cemiot claim to have it exempted ,u‘ farm; lend end u not properly belonging to the town. And now, to wit, February 23, 1864. the Court decree that all 'the lands roentioned in the proceedings to incorporate the bor ough of Littlestown, except the land. of ‘ ‘William McShen-y,deeigmtedon plat mark~ ed A accompanying depositions, which are hereby excluded, is hereby and forever after ahall be incorporated into o’borough. known by the name and style of "The Borough of Littlestown." in accordance with and .subject to the provisions of the Act ‘of the General Anemblyof this Com- ‘ monwealth, entitled ”An Act regulating Borough,” and approved “I‘3B day of ‘ April, A. D, 1851. ‘ And the Con}: do further order that» the first election fcr borough officers be held on the third Friday of Much next, at thomou wesldrly School Home within uid borough limiu, hemeen the honn of 9 o’clock. A. M., and 7 o’clock, P. 11., of mid ally. And the Com-9 do hereby Appoint Joseph Ban ker to give notice of the time and place of holding said diction, by planing up twen ty mitten or printed notices in the moat public place. in aid borough, six dnyn pre vious to aid election. "And the Court up point Dr. E. F. Shorb. Judge. and Henry _Dyaert tad Williun Yount to be Inspector at mid election ; and flu Com fix the third Friday of Much in catch find every year for the annual borough election, sad the School House aforesaid u tho place, _ _Tranendnus Result: nf' “Free" Laban—A correspondent of the New York Tribune of a recent date, writing from Hilton Head, South Carolina, Itates that 300,000 pounds of unginned cotton have just been semi/to New York, and that this is the major pan of the crop raised on “government" lands and entirely the product of “free” labor, the slaves being paid for their work accor ding tq. rate: established by the “govern ment.” This immenqe triumph of Abolition geni us and agricultural enerfifs precisely 175 bale. of cotton, being a at the amount that tn n roe! under the care of their mater 001175 hive produced. It, iq the lint.- ul yield of 115 hare! ofland, find its "In. before me In: wu‘fl,ooo. Will some on. enlighten thé “loyal"musea upon the fol lowing points: ' First. The number of negroes employed in raising than 175 bales of cotton 1' Second. The number of 10163 in culti union 2 l « Third. The amount paid each negro per day. or 1' month, or per pound. and what. the 175 files 'cosk—not the “government." but the tax pnyerl of_l.he Northern Staten? GENERAL GEORGE B.‘ M’GLELLAN. ' A PAGE 0? HISTORY. . —— C [From the Journnl of Commerce] There is no pnunge in history which is more deeply interesting. none on which the pen of the historian "gill dwell with more eloquence, than that which relates to the condition of the United States, its army and its capital. on the last day of August. 1862. The report of General M’Clellan now for the first time collects and makes clear the various incident: which nrefo fill this im portant puge in our nations rlacord. We regret that the Congressional edition. the Rebellion Recon! edition. and other cheap editions of the report are incomplete and mac-curate, omitting entirely some portions which present the moat. interesting and important View of the relations of General M'Clellnn to the cabinet, the army and the mung-y. The edition plhlished under Goneml M'Clcllan’s nuth ity is accurate. The oi'nisuion was doubtless unintentional, some pages of copy having fallen from, a compoiitor’s desk, or been mislaitl. in the government printing office. and the re printerg who have followed that edition" have produced imperfect copies. l ‘Geneml M’Clnllnn was not at that time 1 removed from the command of the army, l but the army was removed from his mm lmand by an ingenious device of the War Department. lie was treated with con i temntuous indifference by General Halleck. : When ordered to abandon the Peninsula ho was so anxiom for an interview with lGeneral Halleck, and a free consultation, ‘ that he proceeded from Harrison’s Bar to l the nearest. t’clegmpli station, and there lfinding that the wires were broken under , water, he crossed Chesapr eke Bay, arriving at Cherry. Stone lnlet, on the out shore, about mi lnight. He immediately tele graphed to, Wnshington, informing General llnller-k that he had come tilt this dixtnnce to consult with him. and-requested him to come to the War Department. end of the wire. General. lhlleck came, and sent a hridf and somewhat ill-humored reply. I While General M'Clellan Was deciphrrmg ;. this reply (it .was their private cipher), tne' , lopemtor informed him that General [lul ' leak had left the Washington office without do much 'it: saying good night, and [hill t'm-ther lelt‘gl‘nphing wan useiehs.’ General . ' M‘L‘lr-llnn returned to his nrmv, brought it . away from the scene of its ble‘ exploitfi. ‘ . etnod lllmht‘lf, last. man of algoon the deser . ted ground. and left the Peninsulrwith the ; conviction that a great error was in‘progrexs lat Washington. At Fort. Monroe he wrote ‘ a «ii-‘patch to General Hulleck. mournfully :eloqut-nt, speaking of the services of his . hinve army and begging'Hnlleck to recog nize their]. He said : l t‘Piense any it kind word to my army, that 3 Icon report to them in general orders in . regard to their conduct at Yorktown, Wil-' b liiirmburgh. West Point. Hanover Court "flu”. and on the Chickehominy..ei well . us in regard to the seven days and the re , cent retreat. No one huevorsnid anything . to cheer them but myself. Say nothing " about me. Merely give my men and ofi'iners lcredit for what they have (lone. It will do. i you ‘uch good and will strengthen you I M with them ifyou issue a handsome l order for them in regard towhnt they huve ' accomplished. They deserve it.” ; Verily they did deserve it. They were 'nn army ol'hei'oea. brought home lrom field; of its gallant fightingns the world ever new. But there was no reply to the request. of their general. They received no kind ward, no cheer. no th’anka. They were lh‘urried home. to be hurled into thejnws rot death under a commander selected to displace a general who had hitherto shared their fortunes. M’Clellin came to Alexan drie. What was his position and relation to the army? He himself did not know. The liprocess of depriving him” of his command we: going forward. Pope’s Army of Vir‘ ginia abeorb‘dd the Army of the Potomac. For seven days that, noble army diaeppoarl from history. It had “9. existence. M’Clel lan Wu left at Alexandria, still the com inmdinggcneral oftho Army of the Poto muc. but there is on eloquence which every heart must teel in his limplo nnrntive of What remained to him of his once magnifi cent Egmmandn Len than one hundred l men, any of these invalid: and wounded lmen, were the sole representatives of the ‘Army of the Potomac. 80 grand in the contract which this narrative aflorda between the days which preceded and those which {allowed the hit of August, that it mny be i stingected an intentional that the nnrrative 1 imomitted from the incomplete edition! of the Report. But. we prefer to regard itu accidental. etpecinlly in view of other and numerous ei'ron which occur in the some editions. . ' The secrethirtory ofpoliticsl manoeuvring at Washington at thin time would, it' made public, explain the whole responlibility for the din-trons campaign ofPope. The blood ofour thousands lost on those fetal plains of Monastic in chargeable directly on the intrigues of Washington politicians of the radical party. who only desired to remove M’Clelinn from the public view. because they feared that the splendor of his genius, the devotion of his army. the nohleness of his character. miizht bring him before the people no a fit man to lend the whole nation through war to eace and union under the Constitution. lilor this they intrigued, and for this they have wasted thousands of young liven. poured out. on fruitless battle~ fields. And some of this history may be i recovered from o close’exeminntion of the dispatches and orders issued at Washington, between the mm August find the 2d Sep tember, 1862. Fire days, brief time, but l filled with great events. The politicians .had succeeded. M'Clellan was debaaed ‘ and disgrued. Be’asks Halleck for specific ’ orders as to what he is to do at Alexandria. l Helical; replies, giving general orders and finding fault. “Ammunition. and particu l larly tor nrtillery,mdst be immediately sent i forward to Centreviile for General Pope.— ‘ It mult be done with {all poasible dispatch,” , telegrnphs Helleck, at 1.45 o’clock. on. the {3oth. M'Clellen replies at 210. “I know nothing‘af the calibre of Pope's artiller . All I can do is to direct my ordnimce ogcer Ito load up all wngons sent to him.” Hal ,lech Ind: unit that Franklin we: not sooner rent forward. K’Ciellln repliu tint F klin had no tnneportntion‘nnd finally numbed without wagons. and of course without ammunition or subsistence. ‘ Then M’Clellan sends a dispatch. which will be memorable in all future times: ' “I cannotexpress to you the pain and mortification I have experienced to-day in listening to the distant sound of the firing ‘ ‘ of my men. As 1 can be hf no'furthe’r use 1 here, I respectfully ask that. ifthere is a i probability of the conflict being renewed i tomorrow, I may bexpermitted to go to the j scene of battle with my staff. merely to he ‘ ‘ with my own men, it nothing more; they i will fight none the worse for my being with them. lfit is not deemed best to entrust 1 me with the command even‘ of my own ar ‘ my, I simplv ask to be permitted to‘share ‘ their fate on thefield of battle. Please rap! ‘ . tothi: tonight.“ ' / No sleep that long night in the little camp at Alexandria. Egery moment they expected the answer permitting them to share the fsté of the ame—a fate which the wisest soldiers were looking to with the. most solemn apprehensions. But no an swer came. Not even the common courte sy ot a raplv was given, till the next day came Halleek’s cold dispatch: , “I cannot answer without seeing the President. as General Pope is in com. mnnd, by his Orders, of the depart meat." It Was too much trouble for any one in Gen. linilerk’s office to send to the Presi dent the night before. or even that morn ing. and say. “The fate of the nation hangs in the Zlalance; McClellan asks leiwe tog? to 3 field as avolunteer; may he go 2' But theinsults were not yet ended. This same day, the Met August, Gen. llalleck telegraplis McClellan :~ “As many as possible of the new regi im'ents should be prepared ‘to take the field. Perhaps some more should besent to the vicinity of Chain‘ Fridge.” ‘ McClellan replies that it is General Ca sey’s province to attend -tn the new regi ments, and General Bernard‘s to order oth-' ers to Chain Br'dger’ “By “a!” Depart.- ment order I haveLnoj'ight give them orders.” ’Here was one of those éery com mon Washington complications under the present management. “2 have not~men the order," replies llalleck. It was the last insult othe War Department. that-or der. devised' the mine spirit which afew. weeks later dictated the order sending the victor of South Mountain and Antietam to Irepnrt at Trenton. Theorder was decisive. |"Gen. McClellan commiint‘s that. portinn'of 'the Army of the Potomac that. has been [sent forward to Gen. Pope’s command."f-' How they must have chuckled at the War Department over the keen wit ofthis order. It was issued on the afternoon of August ‘l3oth. and after the receipt from Gen. iMcClellan of his dispatch of 2,10 13: m., rsaying: j I "I have no ‘sharp-shoéters except the ,<gunrd around .my camp. I have sent off every man but those, and will send them (with the train as you direct. Iwill also .‘send my only remaining squadron of caval iry with General Sumner. I can do no Lmoro. You have every man oft/u Annytgf (Its ' Potomac who is within my reach." . Certainlygit. was sharp satire. very keen and biting ivit. which dictated, after that . last sentence. the words ofthe order: “Gen. ‘McClellan commands that portion ofythe Army ofthg’ Potomac that has not beensent forwardlf’ ' But the morning of the 31st brought to Washington some “startling intelligence.— i Halleck had been For four days busy retin lcing McClellau’s position. finding fault, ne iplecting and even insulting him. The » President and Secretary of War had yield ied to the radical. politicians 'who were thounding the young general, and on the, evening of the 30th, when the War Depart.- iment issued its order. Washington radicali ,ism was jubilant, and all believed that {there was truth in Pope's dispiitches‘anrl .that he was sweeping the rebel army with ithe beaom of destruction. McClellan W“. idown, and a great victory won by Pope.- sMen who were in Washington that night will remember the triumph of the red: icsl faction. But. the next‘day s_ change came over the spirit of the radical dream. llalieck telegraphs McClellan that he had not seen the order. and he evidently begins ito think that possibly they. have been a lit ltle too fast in Washingt‘on. The news from Pope is not rose-colored today. McClellan begins toloom up again in the minds of the managers. “You will retain command nfeveryfln'ng in this vicinity not'temoorarily belonging to Pope’s army in the field. Ibeg ofyou to assist me in this crisis with your ability and lexperience. lam entirely tired out.” ‘ i Sosays Gen. Halleck st 10 p.'m. on the lam. Well he might be tired. The offer imem. failed. The whole plan of aban on ! ing the peninsula campaign and disgracing McClellan was proving a disastrous failure. ‘ The “ability and experience” of McClellan ‘wss now wortb‘thiaking oi once more. At 4 half past. eleven that night McClellan,tele grzshs halleck thug. Pope is defeated. the ro filled with struggle” coming towards i Alexandria, that Pope‘s right is entirely ex iposed. and that he fears the gravest conse quenceu. He adds: "To speak frankly—— { and the occasion demands it-there appears to be a totaliabsence of,brains, and I fear the ‘ total destruction ofthe army. "1 shall be up all night,” says McClellan it‘rom Alexandria. "I shall be up all night,” [says Balleck from Washington. It was a [fearful night. 'i‘he morning brought truth it'rom Pope's army and wisdom to the. heads in Washington. McClellan is sent~ gfor. All day disastrous intelligence comes . in. McClellan is ordered to take command ‘of the defences of Washington. but his or ders are limited. They do not yet dare to iface the indignation of the radical poli ticians. who would have seen Washington destroyed rather than McClellan reswre 1. But the morning of theZd leaves them in doubt no longer. The hope of the nation hangs on the man they bed disgraced and iridiculed on the 30th. The President and i General Bullock seekoClellsn at‘his house, and "commit everything” to his hands, di- Irecting him to go out and meet the retur'n ] mil army. he crossing of the Potomac that day by i McClellan is a scene forlong remembran . xThe shouts that went rolling ovér‘the mid. the exuitation of men who had regarded ithemselves all doomed. but who now we}- 'comed order. wisdom, genius, “ability and iexperience," all which they had proved { and known—this has been described and is recorded. How the General took the slut 'tered army, restored its morals, led it into :Maryland, and in fourteen days won the victories ot'South Mountain and Antietam; Thaw Helleck complsined of his slow. march to South anathema; ead radicals every where growled sullenly overjtse salvation of the capital by MoCieihn-thii ”already history; ‘ " - 41:Zirk:* _“V‘ ~ a" n 9.“ 0 El TWO DOLLARS A-Y EAR. NO. 03. _w , mm -'r iMiiA m Whey: thi‘: hr was first tinged. any: the Johnny": Democrat. we predicted mm the remit Igould be diroct taxation. Thla ido wu wanted by our wouldbointolliml citium. The fact. in now bacorning "rifled. We do mt now reiterate this pro-diction tfiydpgh any {notions opposition to the Ad~ mmiflrltion. but only to prove that. we were correct. in tha premilea. We now wort that one-tenth of the taxation hu I 19! yet been thumped. That there must be: u: on real mute is as clear as day a and that this tax will nmount to M least 61‘! cent. pungent, ovary your. tor "or, non Ihnt I far or (mm, is on lens uppmnt. In the entire United States more ure one hundred find thirty millxom of Icmmf im proi‘ed laud. Nearly (mp-hull 0! thin lie! in the "ceded Staten. leavmg only lixtp five millions in the Northern Baum.” for instance. qizhtj millions. Fifty (:an mi acre on eighty mill' ‘of * ' ~ wll nnlv amount to forty I which in 0:11! the anti- on the wax fiebt. Win fifths will come from is figure out. The longer more it will-coat. and th ad race in made (.110 ch larger it. will Ind. so out. Mr tar—tax on all aell—‘tnx on our lands tax to raise troops—gm: tax to pay than. H is now. This tnx "must b' Pea” Convention met I in 1861, this (Ix might When John Browf mm might. .lqufieen obvi: honor a! the country \ must be paid. And this i- .. . _ _ _ taxation, but one that ‘wfii ranch usinngfi, yu’ll‘! alter the war is‘m’er. Bonds will be issued by the‘Govornmenc and by difi‘efent corporatiom for ten. twenty. thirty. and even filly _yours. nil bearing interest. 11. no high a rule u six per cent. When cage is once restoredL-nnd we pray that (gin mny be noon—taxation will only ’beqin; and, who can my ought against il ‘l The rebell ion thft was provoked must. be put down, coat in mt it. will. The mistake .wu at the beginning of the war-amt, now. The peo ple vimuld not then head the wurning voice. All they can do now. ii to close the war u soon as possible. and my the. taxes. Rich and poor, properly-llem' mid uan-prupor ty-hoidor, are equally protected and must suffer alike. ‘ ' P'AAGIARISM The AHnrnoy Hun-MT! nf' ”mpUnitfld Smmq 1.3 M” ' n H‘H‘U‘lvghfflrw from '.hn 30:, In the follmnmz letter Wm be hand (lune literal quolutwux from our £“hLOPiBI 001- umns: Arronsn G:xi:nu.'s Ornca. “Him-wron} '. .Seph'mL L r UL 15'“ 1.- Hon. J. G. Knapp, Judge. .20., Megillp, New Mexico; Sir: Your leneruf the 4st August“ complaining ofimihtnry nrresh. was slow in reaching m 9: nnd then, firth wns the urgent and continued occupation ofth? Prettident iu the gran. affairs of the Government. [but 1 have not been Ibis nnhlnqw to fix his attention upon the pur “o|!le outrage upon you, as your letter makes me bolipvo it. to be. ‘ Them seems to be a general and growing (ligponiginn ol' the‘ military. wlwrovgr nan tioned, tolengrnss all powrr; unite treat." the civil gfivernmpnt wnh cantumalv, an if « the (whim-t. were to bring 1! into contampt. ‘ ] lmvmlelwerecl my npinion very plainly to the Presi‘llefit, and I have return: to hope . that he. in the main'concura will: me in be lieving that those arbitrary prchdinga ought to be suppressed. Ile_h:\s issupd an order ‘to lmvn Cuptnlennnen called to nepounc for his arbitrary conduct. in your ~ case. ~ . I remain, very mpectfullyfvourobodiont servant, Enw. Bum. Wu: Lincnln'a Am'nlslv ”mammalian Sup. prmcd in (In South f—-’l‘lxe Ri'chmond Enquirer thus-‘replies to the report. that lhl mili tnry authorities 0! the South hgd exerted ltemselvea to Rut-p President Lincoln's Amnesty Proclnmazion from the knowledgé 0f their soldier-1 : ‘ i As to the supprenninn pf “Prouident Lin } coln'o proclam'ition‘ nfnrnneytv,” itis nth}- ly false. ’l‘hn Eiquurer nnblished it in full sodid every vlmlv pawl; It mu exmlly thekiml of proclamation we Wanted _Mf. Lincoln to make. It. mu the full and complete’ confirmation ofull we had chnrgod upon Lincoln : ‘lt :lmnonulratml. by confec sion. that we were comet when in mm the , enple of the Cnnl‘edemte Staten thy. the E’ubJugncion of [hair liberties wan to be effiea ‘ ed by lheirdegmdmion (no lvvel with their 1 slaves. It shocker! lhe Mnsibililiaa ofeifely class‘of thP pmple, and was satisfactory 3 idencethut not, social ruin.,buL the on?» ' %of,mnthera, wives ‘nnd sisters. by'pru } tall (1 negro“. was the terms. mid the ‘ only terms, ofnmnosty affixed. ' To have suppreased this proclamation would have been an Ml ol'stu n-mlmas fully. The J’ribune undarstanzh political caniul ‘in party slang. Thih proclamation luppliod that capital; it could not. be'denied; it could n'ot be explained. Ila meaning Wu: pplpable: its ohjr-clerm plain to need 6:- planation or elucidation. 'Wa If)?!“ it before our readers; called their attention toil: weinviled them 14,) read. They did read it‘; the soldiers read. and while no fill nnt attribute to the proclamation the enlislmenls that have recrntly‘lnkcn lace ‘ we dwelieve that il. sensibly check! (any “ion. N' 2 ' Mr. Davis has' made 110 proclamation, and Ymkee desert!” come in large numberl so our hues. Tam-e may be many who“ go from our lines to the enemy. Such inci den'ts :rlwa a oz-mr in pron-clad wars. and are wort-Er nqblling whatever. Genenl Length-set ohjeclfid to General Fmtor‘cir culating the proclgunation among his soldier npt beams; it'wuuld work any m aerial in jury to his army, but béaause :2 WM Fulani.- Led ta induce a {9w to desert who, if :ppre bended. would be shot”. ~ It. in humanity. not fear, sh“ induced General Lnngslreet to write to Genan Foster 80 dons: from circulating the {9- olumatloq. 1f Linmln's hop» ofour satin. ggmml are ‘ fuunllml rm dam-Lion: And deserer—il‘he :3 fan] enough to suppose that an army can be Sal'mmly wmkenad by deserlion—hr will be cmwiuca'd of his arm: before very long. { -- ~9-o————-—-———- ‘ ’ “ 1' Ix: Spiny E.’ec!i»n.-—'l'ho Spring Electig‘n will takp place on he eighteen”: oz“ MM inst. We wouldllay lb 911: Damocmi; friendfihroughodl. xhe county—Unzip. Go to work to carry the ticket oveyylrhflp. This will be the 01r-ning of the c‘ampa‘ifin 0f1854. Lél us begin it by Carrying I 0‘ ticket in every township. It will be the first. step towards carrying‘thqsute for Prui- ‘ dent at the full elEction. .or. notwlzh. standing the bowling of the Abohtionku as to “mat. they Will do, they already 1n... their troubles in mejr own camp. and than: is a prolper‘t bfu' benmifiil fight bonnet. the? admweu ‘nl Cums. Lincoln and Fro. mom. Tm: whole radical wing of their party will 50 for Fremont‘; and if they don‘t succeed imnommnting him. we'mfly look for dimnsiona in the mnks M the one -1113!. The radicals of the Republican pan, . ui'e disorganmerl by~nomro. and they‘w'ilfg in this inflame, either make or break- 2'. ‘ Already the campaign ha. bee'n {mm}; opened at Lancaster city. The ,Dempcuu‘ ane :9 elo-cmd Hon. George Snndeflbfl Iy, 127 majority, ham; :4 gain 01113“; .thoi;h._ vo‘rfnince lam ml. The people‘can ugh”; go (be bamboozled by promgm; tm'tb’i wagmil end In o‘3 '13.”. when they‘qoajui L mu fora. arm or 509.0% mm men‘,%; know that they WI“ be “cauntea fl) ' 4 make up the number. Abolnion 1593;”. wen nigh ‘fplnyed out.” .und greenback. ml] share the mme fnte. Legus’ 'fiut 8601;. -men on my tickr‘UßN thea’leuvéuagnfi Ido his duty. Lei no‘,|{:f\n _tgrgat the hold; ! of‘tho Awmipuuts: 'u o comyw ‘ h 5 HUME," 49d nhqzv them no any {,5 fin election of the smalls-t «3M: gnaw)» ’mt now.—Bedfurd'Gmm. ‘ ' 4 =3 of
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