Gettysburg compiler. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1866-1961, December 27, 1867, Image 2
"burg npifrL .FRIDAY, MEICIUMB , 27, 1887 aux. 1111ANCOCIL The President's message in commen dation of Oen.• Hancock '8 sensible order it Nett Orleans, has proven a ra king shot among the Radical_ ducks. They are Ailed with alarm lest the Pres ident may to someiray "head them off" by It—lest it may serve to bring Hance* prominently, forward for the Presidency, and - resait in smiting him in the Execu tive chair. These and other fears beset them. altogether frightening them to a very desperate degree. Hence, Radical editors--especially Radical odice-holding edit:Or-tall to abusing Hancock without stint, even going Into his faintly circle and abusing his wife. But Hancock Will be able to stand it, with the white people of the country at his back, as they are. He proved himself one of the beet soldiers in the war, and Is now ma king a noises brilliant record as a states man. He may rely upon being sustain ' ed by the country in every act for which Radical fanatics and demagogues may denounce him. SICK OS' THE NEGRO. • We we permitted tomylee the follow ing extract from a let written by an Intelligent gentlemap of Virginia to a friend in this place. The writer, a Re publi4an, was raised in the North, bat whilst an officer in the Federal army be came acquainted with a Virginia lady, whom he subsequently married. His Present opinion of coldred - ..manhood,” derived from patient, practical experi ence, is very squarely expressed. We hope those flepublica,ns who read the (203thmEn will ponder It well. It comes from one of their own "earnest" men. Here is the extract : -My Dear D—: —1 am Just about 'thoroughly disgusted with the negroes in every way, and am in great danger of soon becoming a good Democrat. Every attempt to elevate or Improve th,cni, either mentally or morally, Is atteuted with the same result—disgraceful defeat; and I feel like doing everything in any power to destroy the fabric, which, for years, I have been wasting my time in faille endeavors to rear. Whether lam a friend to the negro or not, you should know; and yet all my strolls for their advancement have met with, first, indo lence, then, ingratitude, then,. contempt. Not that I ever forget .my position and lower myself to their level; that I could never do; but, that thehave not the ~.,yi rtale common sense to distin h L kindness and common politeness from lal fa miliarity. Let them work for the old masters, and they are as obedient us the hound under the lash ; but they seem to think that e man who has the least de sire to see them raised above the level of the brute creation, must neceesartly place himself - upon a level with them; and their insolence toward such is Increasing at such a rate that, If something is not done to learn them their proper status, it will soon be entirely Impossible for the , whites add them to live together In the same community. Not satisfied to work for a living like white men, un less they ate allowed all the privileges of the faintly, their impudence knows no - - bounds. I am going to get rid Of those I now have, and will never again, if I can koesibly help it, have a negro on my farm as a hand again. THE OLD CLdifIED AQUA The Springfield Republican says that "Mrs. Lincoln luta not yet done her most disgraceful act. She has notiunder con sideration a propbsition from a party of showmen, to put up her told cloy' in a gift enterpriseovitile she goes through the country td deliver lectures and sell tickets for It. The story seams to be-too absurd to beliesiVeVen concerning Mrs. Lincoln, but we .have it from such a source that we cannot doubt its truth." We are indebted to the Lancaster Ecam- Nor for this interesting item of news. How dare such a loyal sheet talk in this manner about "Mrs. Government ?" We hope that Brigadier General (?) Jo seph Holt will instantiy suppress that publication, and transport the editors to the genial and delectable soli of Africa. It would be serving them po worse than hundreds of Democrats ei re terced du ring the war. ' GENERAL Pore 'll. BE lima Evrm.—lt is currently reportef. at Washington that ,the President has Tided to relieve Gen eral Pope of the command of the 'i'hirti Military District, embracing the States of Georgia, Alabama, and Florida. Gen eral Meade, who is named as his succes sor, was at the White House on Tuesday morning, and had a long interview with the Executive. ft is said that grays charges have been made against Pope, and his recent letter, showing the extreme partisan character of his administration of affaini, is sufficient of itself to call for some interposition on. the - pail of the President, and It is to be hoped that it will be no longer delayed. THE DISAUREEMENT OF THE //ZACK Cones,—The negro party is splitting Into pieces. Greeley says the negro must be made in all respects the equal of the white man. 8o sayi Forney and about half of the party. Judge Agnew and another pari of the party think different ly. Herne hug the darkey and some curse him. Some think he is the "corn ing man" and some think he has come and gone again, carrying off the Repub lican party with him—about the way be "carried off the palm" in the army.— Forney Is puffing up Grant and Greeley is puffing him down. lien. Butler Is preaching repudiathin, and the 75 Oxen, is preaching death to the repudiators. Altogether, the Republican party is get ing badly mixed. Having been routed In the late elections, they seeem to be scattering and retreating in great disor der. J. G. PARROTT, of Boston, la the pres ident of the Georgia black and tan con vention. Is his address he saki that "above all" things the convention must `do-nothing to throw obstacles in the path -4 Ate Republican party, or put • weapon in the hands of its enemies." Is that not an Infamous objurgation for the pre siding officer to make to a convention that la to form a Constitution for the people of a State? Nothing further is needed to show that the intention is to "gerrymander" everything for the ad vantage of the Radical party. To uphold such outrageous bodies of scoundrels a standing army le maintained in the South by the Government, and the tax payers of the North are burdened with an *meal expense of two hundred mil lion dollam. Down with such imposters, Plunderers and tyrants. So says the Car lisle Vollintecr, and sb say we. RP Frederick Citizen eome4 to tis In a bran DEN snit of type, very much im• proving its looks. We congratulate Mena Baughman upon the memmre of iptosperny whieh this improvement In en/Wes: Re prints a good paper, and de anurrekp be gets. So Remanr. — lteeongrele, on Wednee derlreek, the 4..kimmittee on Claim re ported athensely on the petition of the ditineas of Chatnbereborg, for payment fir damages sustained by the burning of lisittailrn. Cowen hue "militate for" the negro—"not one cent for" the white. THRIIIIADSTAL PLATFORM A secret assesiil4llFelfiledpe al Council of tie ITitlion League of A r lea (a high-souagigatitleMet at Wish- ington the old*. NOne.but thaidu ly Initiated, adadtted. J. was, as Was propel?* ...a asiembly, Negroes from the South and white men from the North quietly sneaked in at the same door-way, and sat in friendly council.— The giouglon•before the mongrel crew was an important one—nothing less than the adoption, of a platform for the Repub lican party. 'One of the chief orators of the trocasion Was a negro from North Carolina. He spoke with authority, be. cause be represented the class from whom the party expects to derive Its chief support in the coming Presidential election. Finally a resolution was adop ted expressive of the views of that august body, the National Council of the Union League of America. it reads as follows: " Resolved, That the National Council of the Union League of America is utter ly opposed to any_ departure from the sacred principles of its organization, or from those of the Republican party, and that we do hereby respectfully but earnestly and firmly urge the National Republican Convention to place no man in nomination for President of the United States In 1868 who is not in himself an irreversible guarantee that he is a true friend of the cause of the Union and Liberty, the equal rights of all men before the law, and of unircreal manhood suf frage." That is the platform of the Republican party, and the substance of it is embraced in the single phrase, " the equal rights of all men before the Iaw"—I:NIVERSAL NE GRO SUFFRAGE. , The Convention to meet in Chicago may change , the phraseorogy otthe reso lution, but they will not alter its mean ing. it is an advantage to know thus early the ground which our opponents intend to take. If Grant should be fooiienough to ac cept their nomination on such a platform he will not get thirty electoral votes in the North. Since this action of the National Coun cil we notice that, the weak-kneed news papers are stiffening up. The platform of the party h‘s been laid down and they feel that it must be accepted and defended. They feel that to retreat would be as fatal as to advance. .t HIT AT GSM GRANT The New York Tribune, without oppo sing General Grant openly, betrays its hostility to him, and to the movement in the Republican patty looking to his nomination for the Presidency, by such side-thruata as the following : We must remember the lessons of our Baltimore Convention experience, and be sure we have for our next candidates representative men. Mr. Johnson was nominated by the "hurrah-boy," melo dramatic, blood-and-thunder feeling of 110182/ loyally Just as we are requested now to nominate negative and uncertain men by the roll of the drum. •We pro tested against the "hurrah" business in. 1864—jest as we protest against the drum tap business now. We can best avoid impeachment scandals by electing men whose records cannot be impeached. "Blood-and-thunder feeling of noisy loyalty" is good. That was just the kind of stuff the "narrow-minded blockheads" ofthe RePublican party—as they were called by Greeley some time ago—were fed r upon by the Tribune and other "loy arjournale for the last five or six years. The loud boast of loyalty and the sense less clamor about "disloyalty," were ail the answers the Radicals had for every argument, brought against them by the Democratic press. It no longer serves their purposes, and the Tribune can now afford to sneer at it, although Its sneers cannot be particularly edifying to ,the weak-minded dupes ,who were influ enced by such unmeaning denunciations of noisy demagogues, whose sole object was to plunder the Government and grow rich on the miseries of their eoun try. TILE COIIII4I ■IVOLCTION. The New York Herald says: We pre dict the culmination in November next of the political revolution of which we have already felt the first shock. Prom all the symptoms that- ;surround us it is easy to foresee that the violence and folly of Congress, in forcing upon the country policy entirely foreign, to our institu tions, and in conflict with all our ideas of freedom, justice and generosity, will unite the people upon the Democratic and Conservative nominee for the next Presidency, and that he will be elected by a large majority. The Radicals may hope to save themselves by calling to their aid the great name of General Grant; but if that distinguished military leader should accept a nomination uppn the African Supremacy platform of the present Congress he will be defeated at the polls as easily as Chase or any other candidate would be. The principles that agitate the country at the present time are stronger than men, and no personal popularity can for an instant bilud the eyes of the people to the importance of the issue. The reconstruction policy to widish the Radical party promises to ad here is an atrocious outrage upon civil ized society. It degraties . the white race, and, by giving political power into the uncontrolled possession of hundreds of thousands of ignorant and debased ne gro°, breaks down all the safeguards of society, obliterates the progress of half a century, reduces ten States of the Union to a condition of African barbarism, and demoralizes the National Government. It is against their policy that the people vi t ill _record their votes, and it is to save the )isauntay front these evils that they will defeat theilladical Presidential can didate next fall, whoiver ne may be Tax Pittsburgh Chronicle, -professing to be an independent journal, but lean ing ewes" on the side of Republicanism, gives the! following explanation of the recent deifeat of the Radical candidate for Mayor in that city : Anothe!' word on this subject. It is now pretty generally accepted as a fact, that the private bargaining In the Re. publican Convention caused the defeat of the candidates for the Mayoralty and Treasuryahip. We shall hear, therefore, much pleasant talk about the virtue of the. people, the indignation of the vir tuous people about political chicane*, and all that. But it is proper to remem ber by what small maforitiee the candi dates for Controller and City Attorney were elected, who were not parties to the bargaining. It shows that there is a greater loosening of party ties than is now admitted, and that the great political change which was developed by recent State elections, has gone into every large city of the land. New combinations are formed which influence the result of elec tions. In nearly every city of the coun try the R4publicans have lost ground during the last twelve months. it is not necessary now to inquire the reason. We call attention to the fact, to show that the election held here yesterday Is not to be measured solely as a rebuke in parties who were supposed to have done a little too offensive political dickering, but is to bejudged also in the light of pa lftb al change all over the country. A Mo!►aum paper says "the rooster has suddenly beoome the emblem of Democracy." . Yee, sir—the regular game cock, while a sick turkey buzzard has pat as suddenly Leeman the emblem of Mongrelism. WSW' sells for fifty cents a bushel in Marlon county, Indiana.-litrehange. We don't believe it. ♦ NAPPY FAMILY Arilynemiry says that the eonfu , tolitiee Amok dose ski Bill nars `bo ndelgtook to blind ijee toiler of Bp *el, the lip of arkfeh Wie expected ..10 istach far to the clouds, was al . small at qtr wheircompared with the Jargon at present existing in the Radical camp. Fifty-seven members of Congress under the lead of Boutwell and Stevens, were determined to impeach the President at all hazards; but the rest of the loyal tribe, some extrerfrAl fa number, backed squarely down, and emulated the discre tion—of a somewhat celebrated monarch who, with an army of forty thousand men, "Matchnd up the hill, and then...marched down again; The financial schemes, too, of Butler, and Stevens, and Morrill,' and Greeley, and ever co many- more, are as variant and discordant as can bq imagined. And ,their whole machinery of recon struction has, by recent events, been thrown so much out orgear, as that their grand experiment irr, that line of busi ness may be set down as a miserable failure and fizzle. The distinction be tween universal and impartial suffrage is also causing them a world of trouble ; and, if left to pursue the bent of their own inclinations, they will soon be en gaged in a general _Kilkenny cat fight. In the meantime, the Democrats can en joy a hearty laugh over the troubles that are thickening in the demoralized ranks of the enemy, and when the proper time comes they will step In and put the Gov ernment machine 'on the right track again. WHAT THE 'PEOPLE WANT AND WHAT THEY DON'T WANT. In a late speech by Judge Thurman, he has made a spirited summary of the popular desire as expressed by the elec tions of this year. He says: "The people were never more in earnest than they are now. Demagogues' abuse and emp ty declamation go for nothing. The people-demand the truth, rand they will have it; they demand relief from un necessary taxation, and they will have it; they demand a fair apportionment of the public burdens, and they will have it; they demand just and intelligible revenue laws,-and they-will have them ; they demand, retrenchment and econo my, and they will have them . ; and, to give effect to their will, they demand honest rulers , and they are determined to have them. "On the other hand, there are some things tbey are determined not to have. They won't have negroes put • above white ruen ; they won't have one third the country given up to destruction; they won't hade the prosperity of the whole country sacrificed for the sake of politicians; they won't support tens of thousands ' f i x officers in idleness who ought to be to ed. out to hone 4 work; they won't be t ed to support negroes who are able to support . themselves, While poor white riten and women have to earn their daily read by their daily toil ; they won't have gold currency for •the bondholders and paper currency for the people; and the won't have the social customs to which ley have been habituated arbitrarily ante ered with by vexatious and oppressive egislation.— So I read the elections of this yeur." THANKA TO HANCOCK It has• been no unusual thing for Con gress to pass a vote of thanks to the Gen erals who have been appointed to super intend reconstruction in the South. It was done in the cases, of Sickles and others. But It is doubtful whether a similar courtesy will he extended to Gen eral Hancock. Had he followed in the footsteps of Sickles and ,Sheridan, and boldly and recklessly trampled civil law under foot, he would have been raptur ously applauded. His devotion to the Constitution of the United States and his siucers regard for the rights and liberties of all men in the South, as guaranteed by the laws of the land, have made him an especial objectof aversion to the Radi cals. They expect the Generale who are ap pointed to govern the Southern districts to be the subservient tools of Congress, prepared to register its decree; and to bend all their energies to establish and preserve the domination of the riegroes over the whites. General llaneock's manly order on assuming command made every Radical his enemy. Fickcan not expect the thank* of the fanatical revolutionists in Congress, hut a vast majority of the white men both of the North and South approve hie course most heartily and are prepared to sustain him in it. Let him - maintain his posi tion, and he will deserve arid receive the thanks of this nation, and the approval of history.—Lane. Brief. From a single copy of one of our daily exchanges we make up the following chapter of negro doings: A German and his child\ were killed, and the wife and another child badly wounded, by a negro, near Venice, 111. The details of the tragedy are shocking. The perpetrator was caught and lynch ed. In Mobile, on the Bth, a burly negro, named Boston Crawford, attempted to commit a fiendish outrage on n little girl 12 years of age. cller screams brought assistance. The negro ran, but was arrested. A white man was killed, and a negro terribly beaten, near Bigbyville, Tenn., a few days ago, by men in disgui.e. At Montgomery, Ala., on the sth, two negroes were discovered in a poultry yard stealing chickens. The lady to whom the chickens belonged, ordered the negroes away, when one of them raised a gun and shot her. On the 15th inst., Walker Edmunds, a young merchant, while riding out near Memphis, Tenn., was met by twe negroes with Muskets. Without a word one of them raised his musket and shot Edmunds In the forehead. The Memphis Bulletin of Dec. 8, de tails the particulars of a negro outrage upon a lady, and the robbery of a store, and escape of the perpetrators. A man named Moore, in the employ of the Ordnance department; at Fortress Monroe, went...home drunk t 2on the night of the 20th, and kicked his wife to death. The murderer was found in bed with his infant child. A FRlcarrrtm railroad accident occur red near Angola, N. Y., on the Erie Lake Shore Railroad, on Wednesday week. Two ears were thrown down ,an embankment fifty feet, and one of them (aright fire. Forty-eight persons out of fifty occupying the latter were burned to death, and their remains were so black ened and charred that It was impossible to identify them. A large number were also wounded. PRaiIDENT JOHNSON has purchased a farm in Greenville, Tenn., and intends to reside there after the close of his term of office. . IF Grant's administration of the War Mee has been so great a success as the Radicals say it has, why do they want to reinstate the spendthrift Stanton? £1 p t The Fredericksbuft (Vs.) .syslit,- of Dee. 12, deserves etipecial eredltiorshow ing up the tniaoreant Ilunnicut, not/if : the most intense usAngrel iu the conv6tlta at Richmond. "We have not Mtberto.,/ , says the News, "thought It necessary to put our editorial heel in the face of this misereatit--this 8n„ .la 411 fellow of the basc.t sort, of radical , . and rascal.. Our readers must excuse us, liut in these ti Ines, villains and vermin come to the surface. Down to the bottom of his black hart he knows and trembles that he is know ii in Fredericksburg. He --- the ne groes here detest him. war he denied them the right house in which to worship God, 'need the most pious of them who would support their chuleh by stealing from their masters. ,Before the war Hunnicutt was a bb/tent srou , sionio.— The files of I/I , 4aper, his reported speeches, his un / wavering advocacy of ex-Governor timith, the concurrent testi mony and recollection of this whole com munity and / all the neigh boring counties, his treacherous proposition to seize For tress Mi4ror, his own vote for secession, given "Or his own free %Will and accord,' his sermon at Brook's Station on the day of the first battle of Manassas, in which as well us in his prayer, he called down such fearful Imprecations upon the T'- n ion army. individually and collectively, that a secessionist told us it almost made his hair stand on end, overwhelmingly convict him of bete it, with ail his heart and soul, n secessionist from choice." I= General Grant cannot consent to be come the candidate of the Radical , with out losing the respect of his best friends. The fact that he is being claimed a 4 in i sympathy with them his already lessen- Property Nules.—Ex-Sheriff Wolf dues ed the regard of many for him. Multi- I purchased a lot of five acres, on the Hall- Ludes still refuse-to believe that he will road, from Judge Ziegler, at ;125 I per permit himself to he made a tool of the I acre. • fanatics in ('ongress, and the prevailing I Edward Menchy has purchased a lot sentiment is, that he maid not po*.illily of ill acres, in - Cumberland township, be elected on a Radical platform, A near the boroimh line, !root Ex-:sheritt Washington cortecPondent relates a Wolf, at 8125 per acre. nificaut little Incident which occurred al , Mr. Menchy has also purchased 41 day or two sineo. lip says : arras of woodland in Highland township, As an illuOm 'on of the shins' of set,- from Benjamin Johnson, at •• 4 :10 per acre timent, I hav only to record it recent 1 incident. was the Occasion ot an 111- 1 terview between a Conservative rzenator and Gen. Sherman, when the tinier re-' marked : "General Grant is OTing to be can didate of the Radicals, and in that ca-c he will be beaten." To which the General responded : "And in that ease I shall not weep." We are, of _course, to infer that this re mark Wile not made in any -ping of en vy or unitindness towards General Grant, but only to convey the idea that Li. de feat as the Radical champion would not be a eau-e for very pmfound emotion. = The town of Jack..on, A tiglaize comity, Ohio, at the recent eliwtiom polled four humire, and nine vote , , all for the Dem ocratic ticket. The fact ha- called forth considerable critiii;-iu to the diameter and intelligence of the citizen , of that town, and the give. , this account of it- people : not one voter in J..ek-on Nho C3111I10( Rani and write There not a person in that township, look or fetnafe, above the age of fourteen, \VIM ralillOt do the erne. There i= not anotloir rand town-hip in Ohio, or at* where , with the .. A m e age or settlement, that ha, more indu-- try, stealth and general intelligence. Beside', the bed of -ehool-, the town has a flie Academic lit-tltute, kept in suc cessful operation ten months in the year, that t accommodat4, two hundred stu denb+. Among the church buildings one stands there that cost furty-five tlion , and dollars. In that township arc model farmers, mechanics and thrifty and ac complished merchants. Why ,hould snail people vote any other than the Democratic ticket ?" 11=1 NAq II VI LLF., December 21.—The Radi cal Judicial Convention held bore to day was one of -the most stormy politi cal meetings ever held in Tennessee. Nearly 2,000 negroes were present. and the Convention, after adjourning from the Court House to the Capitol,. there broke up in confusion, without making a nomination for Attorney General. H. H. Harrison was nominated for Chancel lor, John H. Smith for Judge of the Criminal Court. and Eugene Corry for the Circuit Court Judge. While Curry was speaking he was knocked down by Judge M. M. Mien, an opposing candi date in the Convention, and the pre , ent Circuit Judge. Both were arrested Corry is a Northern man. What a beautiful "Institution" had icaliQm has become in Browniew's King dom! Ord of the NeCro Folic... Tocpa cr, of the North. Bead! For Registering the negroe, and con ducting State elections........t'-'0,o00,(sto The army in the 50uth...........50,000,u00 Negro Bureau.. t 0,000,000 Sl3o,Onrooo Who pays this one hundred and thirty millions of dollar,? Whitt labor in the N'm th. \Vhat advautage d e rived from t . ivntent ? orioo • SONIE of the Rudieril members of 00v Hwann's "Maryland Guard" (which For ney and other _Radicals swore Ny're or ganized to aster President. Jolue.on in putting down Congress) have come to grief. At the l_rand review in October last a few of them undertook to 'insult Goy. Swann, the commander-In-chief:— TheY have recently been tried by a court martial and the findings have been made public, as follows:—For gro-s vio lation of military discipline and :ingot dierllke conduct, the 6th and iith regi ments, second brigade, first division Maryland National Guard, are, hereby publicly reprimanded. The officers of companies D, T and 0, !nth regiment Maryland National Guard, are hereby dishonorably disthissed the service. The enlisted men of-said campantes are here by dishonorably discharged the service. —Crtirebrrireitd A Yousn man, Regan, died in Alba ny. Ga., recently . , from having a mole or wart on hi. feet oat by a razor while beingsbareih. The wart *as 011 the left cheek, and, while the whole right aide wee paralyzed, the lett leg and arm be came rigid, and the face turned over the left shoulder. THE California Lgl4lnture,un the2Oth, elected Eugene Casserly, Democrat, as United States Senator, to take the place of Commas, Radical. Anothersubstan tial evidence of the turning of the tide. ORMAT alarm exist., In England in re gard to the Fenians. Troops hove been ordered to Portsmouth, and It is said the Cabinet has decided to ask Parliament' to suspend the writ of habeas eorpus. STARVATION again prevails among the thrißiess and 'indolent negroes of the Fliatith. How otm it be otherwise m long intim Radical* bolster them op as mere "Voting. machines?" 0: oral 'Otpartmoit TOWN,COUNTY AND SURROUNDING CODNTIES. preasi—There will bU pniNebitig litthe A 11. wbyterian CitureiN.,at FlUailini towlAAn Sabbath next, at 10! A. 31., by Prof. Ehrehart. Fir lb' Poor.—The (*nlfaxleeture, last 'spring, left a surpl IN of :4.1 over espett e., has been handed to Burgess liteeleatT, for the miler of the poor. r Codt.—lt is rumored that coal - ha.a been discovered on the land of a gentleman named Miller, in the Pigeon Hills, near the Abhottstown turnpike, about three miles float Hanover. We shall see. )wir's Carrier re quests us to say that he will he around early on New Year's morning, with his annual greeting to the friends and.pat rons of the enwPrr.glt, and lopes. they will keep hltu in remembrance and have a iiiitfor , iie , rtir in readinte'. lizir a! 2 C rr Oxford.—The ladles of New Oxford and vicinity Intend holding Fair for the benefit of the Brass 13611 d kjust started in that place, and ask the getieronq patronage of the public. '.171e Fair will be held in the College building commence Tuesday, the 31st instant, and continue open three day.. Now ix the 7'ime— the commencement of a new 3 our—to subscribe for the COM PILER. We haVe lately added a lahWo number of ne w subscribers to our already extensive list, but wish to add more. "evet y one of our ine,ent , tin , wribers 4111 Iced a helpinw hand, touch wood may he done—good Cutt will tell at the elections next year, and fur year, and yeas to cow. Push on the column! Locomotive Ex/dos/mt.—By the explo sion of a 'locomotive on tjie Petersburz Railroad, I t \ l'ir.inia. on Wednesday week, the engineer, Mr. Richard Norris, was instantly killed. llis remains were taken to Harrishiirg - , and biffied from the residence of his 'father-in-law, Mr. John Sanders, formerly of this place. The deceased was about thirty-tive years of aye and highly respected. Ills sad and sudden death is deeply lainented by a large circle of relatives and fricilds. Cunrhf•rhind )"oor hospital for the insane at the Cumberland county Poor Houae was deqtroyed by lire yesterday evening a-M,,k, and three of the intnnteq—a St II it,. man and Ni,oman and Mored matt —perished in the flame-. The valise of the sad catastrophe ti attributed to a large stove near a wooden partition. 1/,•Cift/ 'd Prop , rl illiam Mc- Lellan, Esq., as Agent, IN ill offer at pub lic sale, on the 17th orate coming mouth, the valuable real estate of Col. A. K. :klOl 'lure, near Chambersburg, consist ing of the beautiful mansion ISl'operty, -thme farms and a grapery. Col, Me- Clore has been, with his family, in Mon. Linn Territory since last spring. 7wistuta.4.—\\edne:day last, Christ ina-4, was spent here in the usual way— good dinner, in almost every housOold, with numberless presents for the young folks. The liett3.lm:g Colonet Band sgrena (led the town in the forenoon, discours ing excellthit music. The compliment to the COMPILER Oniee is highly aPPre elated, fly the way—we hear that the Band will give a grand Ball in Agricul tural Ilan on New Year's night. A gay time will no doubt he had. .f. , rince./.—The eloquent David Paul Brown, of Philadelphia, will deliver, on the 21st of January, the first Lecture of the course promised under the nuapices of the Literary Societies of Pennsylva nia vollege. .Irhe committee having the arrangements in hand are in correspon dence with such distinguished lecturers as Rev. Drs. Fins and Talmage, of Philadelphia, Rey. Drs. Morris and Mc. ('ron, 4.Baltimire, Dr. J. D. Holland, ' ' Ti mnt hy Titcomb,") President L s ree, of Lehigh University, and Prof. itid, the noted elocutionist, of Cincinnati,— The course is to con -:st of eight lectures, delivered at intervals of about ten days. This effort to provide literary entertain. went for our citizen. 411,101 be generally, encouraged. We ho peak full houses during the entire course. "Gr Itypthr , r9 , _Is210:d • " Seheine.-14r, Van Wyck, of New York, in some recent r. :narks is tongres , on the "Gift t.inter prise" for an "A.yium" at liettyebu6 , ,, "denounced the scheme o one bf the inf”.t infamous frauds and swindles ever -ought to be perpetrated under the golue of charity. The first prize advertised %in. 'a faun 'aid to he worth ! , ji:11,11i111. That farm happenca to be in 14 own Congressional District, and alit. not worth : • 4 ;,000. The other prizi consisted of diamond.. lie understood them to belong to a New York tobacconist who, some yeats ago, had been cheated into advancing 4 .200,001,1 on them, and they were afterwards found to be worth...A stones. And yet the Commis...loner of Internal Revenue had relieved this swindling concern from the payment of duty, and the Postmaster General had written a letter requesting all No:dr/tas ters to aid It." "No Paper."—Many of our country cotenipmaries issue no paper In Christ mas week—and the number is growing every year. It Is'no doubt very pleasant for all concerned to have the week's rec reation—but here In Gettysburg the prin ters deny themselves the benefit a It, In order the better to serve their patrons. Public Roads.—The subject at present most agitating the minds df the people of the several counties of Maryland is the improvement of their public roads. In nearly all our State exchanges the subject is treated at length, both, by the editors and numerous correspondents. The movement in Baltimore county in favor of having better roads attrapts con siderable attention, and public meetings, with the same view, have already been suggested i n other counties.— Weßintin.ter lkinoeraf. A commendable movement—one that qbould be Imitated almost everywhere. Dcath of a 3finister.—We notice In the Lewisburg Chronic* that Rev. John Guyer, of the Methodiet church, diet! at Tyrone, on Friday morning week. Mr. G. was at the time of Prisi ding Elder of the Northumberland Dis trict. Yankee Notions and Toys may be very nice things for the children to play with, but Coe , s Cough Balsam Will cure theruof Croup, Coughs and Colds, and shOtddriltilivi- be• dn—hand ready for immediate use, 44 hrtuae dy and very popular. . . IMM=7=l3 Governtr Fentoo, of Ic NV York, a Re publlean, ham wrllllen a letter in reply to certain Radleas mho Object LO bury , lor the litalisapf pie Lkinfederate dead in Antletane Crinetary, fur arhielt - ,a large portion ol the pious Radicals hereabouts will wareely thank hint. tlov. Fenton saes : A strong local and individual feeling in the neighborhood of Antietam awl other parts of Maryland, naturall3 en gendered by the luvasiun, nl&y have created 40010 / 1 / 1 1itrerCIILT hi regard to the Confederate dead. and an indisposi tion to see them buried side by side with those who died in defense of our na tionality. But it is confidently believed that uu such feeling pervades the breasts of the American people, or the surviving -officers and soldiers of the Union ar mies. When we recall the generosity and moderation that marked the cotitiet of the people, the government and the ar my during the war, and the magnanimi ty that presided at the close; when we remember that our countrymen are now engaged in the work of reconstructing the Union on the basis of universal free dom, and with an earnest cleAre to re store to the Southern Statts a prosperity infinitely greater than that whieit sla very and rebellion conspired to destroy it is impossible to believe that they would desire to make an in‘ithous.di , Unction against the moulding rem aina of the Confederate dead, or that they would disapprove of their being. carefully gath ered from the spots where they fell, and laid to rest in the National Cemetery mi the battle-field of Antietam. Conquerors as we were in that great struggle, our stern disapproval of the cause In which they fought need not tor biti our admiration of the bravery with which they died. They were Ameri cans, misguided indeed, and misled, tri still our countrymen, and w e cannot re member them now eh her with enmity or unkindness. The hostility of the generous and heroic ends with death, and brief ns oar 10-tory is, it has (111111411 rd an early and striking example. The British, anti Americans who fell at Plattsbnrg sleep side by side; and a common monument on the plains of Abraham atte.ds the he roism of Wolfe and Montt:aim. To day nothing perhap•- could sooner reawaken a national spirit In the hearts of the South than the thought that rep resentatives of the Northern States were gathering the remains 01 its fallen sons tor interment in our National Cemetery ; and in tutme V,11,11 our countr One, not alone to its boundaries, but in -pira and a treetion, and the recent remembeted av a \kite ...VI • t itni; than of ,y-gtenp., the Cemetery it Alitletilln With it. solo--a' ,tatue of a Union soldier keeping guard oter the ahle, or all who tell in the rippo.in2 ranks ot McClellan and I.ee, have a ffimmon intere-t tor the dc-e , 'Mints of rho-e who died on either in that -ad and memorable civil , Aar. I think, therefore, that the trustees of the Antietam Cemetery, especially in view of the fact that the Southern St des have not thus far been in a laiAtion to contribute to the general funds ' should either set apart a sufficient plat of ground within the Cemetery Witli.4 for the buri al of the Confederate dead, or make it • able arrangements for nil enlargement of the present enclosure ii'' Attainment of the end propo,d. tv; onhl ah•o recommend that the attention of the , \Var Department 'be called to the •mlijiNt, and I entertain no doubt - that the Secretary will cheerfully ate in an olgieet of -.0 much Intel Store R!—.,..-cirt-x!—at S. Cook's, York , l'articul.o attention is called to Small J::`Stn) set's hanla Cook, No. S. The ilke place of 11110 stove takes in a piece of v.Xsi two fert which makes it the cheapest stove in ho matkel; its baking and healing ytalittes have been thoroughly testei'..„lt.id never failed to give satisfaction. IN \ has the exclusive salein Gettysburg of thk, stove, antkalso of the Empire and Ortent.L.,elf. feeding Base Burners, LI% 0 cf the liest stoves ever invented. They can be sect' , in operation at the Keystone house and Globe ,Inn. tf RaProrof I.(' /ion.—lt 111 be %eon by a notice in another c“lutun that the next election for President and Director% of the Gettysburg Bat/road Compdny 1 .4 to be held "at the office of the Pre-nlcnt, in Columbia." Why not here, where un•-t itterest in the Ituilrowl neanrolly cen tre% ? Large Porker.—Our Hanover friend, Charles E. Kuhn, last week Qtaughtered a hog weighing 496 pouucii+ clean meat. Wistar's Bat am of Wad Cherry is "a combination and a form cr.deed, " for healing and curing diseases of the throat, lunge, and chest It cures a cough by loosening and cleansing the lungs, and allaying irritation; thus removing the cause, instead of drying up the cough and leaving the disease behind. A DE.QPATCH from Harrisburg announ ces the death of Rev. William Radclif Dewitt, at the age of 75. Dr. Dewitt has long been known as one of the most eloquent divines in Penr-ylvania. lie has , been the pastor of the Presbyterian church in Harrisburg nearly fifty years. Several times during his career he lms been subject,d. to •erere personal AM madversions by the ',Millet:ln, of thr state, formerly by •those of the Whig party, and latterly by the Republicans. His connection with Shook, and the rf-.ignation .•f t but brought upon Dr. Dewitt censures on ac count of the iMluence Well it Nl.n, posed he exereb•ed over the aovernor's last arts in oftice. Soon after Pr. Du witt's congregation provided him olth an le , sistaut, Ito was appointed by the Democrats State Librarian, a po , ition which he filled better, and the untie, of which he discharged more credit:o4Y than any of his predecessors or queees s4r,. The library was !level kept in as good condition as %% lieu he had charge of it. The Republicans, on obtaining pow er during the war, assailedlthim on ae count of his Democratic sympathies, re moved him from °nice, and appointed Radical to succeed hint. AN important order from heifilquarterQ at Vicksburg, Allaslesippi, :111111,111104 that negroes must go to work, for the best, or upon any tennis they e.in get— even if only for their support, or el4e be arrested and dealt with as vagr.intb.— No doubt Sumner will consider this somewhat severe on the ••ward," and %saviors" of the nation. SAID one Radical to another the other day: "You've heard of the fellow who died at his post, have you not?" "Yes;'-answered his friend. "And you've heard of the other one whOdled4n the harness?" "0, yes!" answered the Radical. "And we Republicans have died In the wool." His friend saw the point and looked sad: Tnn Boston Post philosophically In nounees that the new style of hoop shirt don't give the ladies as much rimy the old pattern, but this Is compens. d by its giving everybody else a good gal AT Quincy, IL., there i. a German with a curious blood mark. It i,a per feet deer about the.size of a dollar. and' ou 'right cheek. The form and out line of the dent are as perfect ns could be drawn ;it, an wiled, and shows a deer in the act of leaping. It of a bright red color, and looks ina if it had been painted, instead of a freak of nature. AT Richmond, Virginia, pa the 20th instant, 8,000 rations were tweed by the Negroßrinww—stew.tw:wltitre. TO COLLECTQRS. 711 E 00T.1118‘ 01 Stale allot County Taxis - Are r ille4lYl to make oil collection.% they Isot hi) eau, and pay theta' o er to the Count3"freas tmc, IMMEDIATLLI—ax luoncy 1416 very much MEM BS °Me!' of We Dotard of CofontWitmer+ J. M. Wm:mil, Clerk 1 , r. 39, 1.47. 31. HAY AND GRAIN TKLYTED THE Inaleratnned would nunounee to the eltl• r.t 11.. of Adaron comity that they still Carry utt the (IRAIN INn HAY . BUSIN 'ESS, “t ,lutti, I IRA 'CITE STATION, on the (wild &Jura Railroad. ore eaoparad I prie,a (or (,RAIN AN I) liAl. kiwi) oil kind); OK (ItOI'ERIES, SALT, (VAN IS, v.rat 11 rhet 8111 ..Ilnt profttol. ul. 1411 for Noomoht:A. PIIILIP IIANN it. SUNK. Ihr. to, 1..7, Is n 170.4" P.ICMC RAILROAD BONDS. Tit!: First National Bank of Gettysburg t 'at' of Ihr I'IRST SIORT- LiiE UNION' PACIMP• RAILROAD SIX PER ME= tnt prouLde , nein . ..mm.llh *1 =I I M=! Got ty.thurc Nov. 3). Icor .NOTICE TO CAPITALISTS ! Tel nong,lnal coos ,4 It, V,' InR ng nearly NINE PER CENT., roww , ted to call to the Gettysburg National Bank, elrettl, r.. l'elon Pacific. arpl ;t 3o t'Pniral Patine Railroad Companies Thar-inrastmentu bre OHM' tTnn'inft In in,nr and vdcl 11111111 A In • rid - 1.1 ail 1,1,1,, at IWS Baal wl\ nll inforriutti On concerning , tl.l .n‘ct4 1111.111. will clievi ' J. 1::.14141 . BAIR, C.ltaer ECIEII22EI 5251U117_,ES MEE ITN 10N PACIFIC RAILROAD. Running We.. t from Omaha • WEU;ss Trui c()STINENT, Iff= hrlng4 the lino to the rant ern have of the Rocky 3,lnunLalno, owl it egi a•ete•l that the tea k will be Intl thirty mil,. rut moo', P 0, ,, the h!ghe , t peter on the n. 1, by Jannare. The tun:chat= grade from the fur. , of the Hioull -111.11,. mit I'l,nt I 1,41.1 N. It elle the little, N. Nile that of many enstoru rnn d „ iti over too6hun ar&.. Work ht th'• rot 1,-, o it the g,•+tern ,loin• 4411 mattuuu through tho Uintel, and tie re e• llto reuunn to donht that if e entire grand IDu• open for bu.iner+ in The mean. Sir It .e 10 nstrurtlon of thlo ;tont Nat lotittl Work nre ample. The rat ted t-tates grant , PR :-Vn.x Per . ent. Hon& nt the rat. , f frt,m . .. , 160)110 to'f,isynati pat m 1 , r. for mitten It take , n co,,alitt .anent and reeels pn)ne Sit ton huge If not , \the fun extent of iln I.ctto to .en - b... Th.... , Ito' rds nro Issued as melt tivetPv-mtle , oetlen It firt .11t, it has been examined be rolled 5418 W$ Commis t.oner, nod pronounced to be Mull respet tired-elate. road, thorourrhly .1m Iller ,loprits, repair-shop., stattons, litul all t, 20 neeN,re roll ing sto , k and other equllintent, The Unit , d :dote , 0 mak esa donation of 12,900 uen., (gland to t h e nt , le, W,lll n Poll rt.e of large rI venue to the , tinny& ny. UuM of this land in the Platte Volt, w le among the most fertile in the world. and • r.hor large por tions ale co , resat a /11l ilPft,sitrt farrlittl U.SS abound In foal of the bend (plant) The Compact i. a 1..; anthori led to !sane Ito own I. Irst Mortdrig,lioud4 to an imoutst equal to the ! , sue of the tiovernment find no more. non. C. L. Morgan nr , l ft dt. it t.fcet Ames are Trnt•tees for the Flomlla dd.,, at Id denser the Bonds to the rota pa n v only no the s cork proaresq e, so thit* they elw.ty, represent r. tt a ct nal and productive value. 'I he authorized capitol of the Con teat ty Is One IlontirLd Million Dollar, of wit) . :11 of Cr five million, have been paid 11l upon t work al r,ely done.. 113:51N , , OF 1111; t•OMP.L.VI7 . t present, the profits oi the rompainv are de rii e‘i ours - from it, leen( inhale, but rida lll ri a.IN much more titan suinelent to pa v the interest on all the Bonds tb•• t Notnpany (Non Inane, If sat another mile were built. It is not dt lidd ed that when the rood Is completed the thrt mgt trattie of the nolo line t onneeting the Alla Otto and•Peet tic States will le. large beyond proeal, rat, and, as there will ha no competition, It can at ways be done at profitable rata& It will he notleed that the rnlon Patine Ra B road is , lu tact, a Gra.,,oocral Wo r , built and er thy• ~onori 1510110 f , inventnt ,- nt Om er rs, and to a large extent with (iovernment money, and the t its leinds nn , koniNt und, r GovertlinetiN direct • t ton. It la believed that no similar wttrrity IC Pt gum dot% mut ertalnlv .I.li her is hapetd . rpul a larger or more NlllllOllO properti . An the olop.inl•-• FIRST MORT( IA( I F. 131 IN DS ore off, red for the prtAtent at 90 (•ENT:4 ON T 11.17. I )I.IA, VR, they are Ole seeurlt. in tin , market, being mores th.nn 15 per event. Lower 1101 n ` 4 loeldq. They v I= or over NINE PEE CENT. upon th. .uvcduirnt. Subscriptions will he relsdN ad in GETTYs, in 11G, by GETTISBVII.t: NA nos AI, to.NK and }'ltL.r NATIONAL BANK, and in Now lark at the Qompany's odic,, N. dn Noon a:root and by = KM street. I 'LARK, DODGE CO., Ilank4 rv, No. 51 \Vali Nt., JOHN J. Claeo h SON, hanker, No. Al Wall at., and by the , Cornpan s uthertiged Agents throughout. the United Sigh,. netnitramew Flionld be made In dm (IR or otPer funds par In New York, and the bonds will Dr benl free of eharge by outerri exproge. aulawriblng through Weal agent,, will look to them for their tafe delivery. A NEW PAMPII LET AND ALIT?, allowing the 1 7.ro g ress of the Work. Resource' for Camaro, lion, and Value of Honda, mar ho obtained at the tbnlpany's Mara or of It 4 Moor Used Agents, or will be sent free on application. Joff s 1150 1 , Trtusativ, New York. Do% ffl, HOT. Ito Hanover Branch Railroad. OSnit after MONDAY, Dec. 9th, 1847, noose!, ger trains on the Hanover Branch Ratirouil will leave as follows: FTwi TRAIN will lave Hanover at 9.20 A. th rasiengers for Torlt bliltintore, Harris burg, and the North and Wein. Till, train ar rives at the .Ttnietlon at 10.10 A. Of connecting with the Fast Lute South, on the Northern Can • ral Railway, which aril. at }Sal tinier' , at 1130 T. 31., sail also with the Mail Tram North, which Ann% es at Harrisburg at 12 ii P. 31. 116Y - Thls train returns to Ha er at 11.10 P. 31., arrives at Gettysburg at 12 vi P. 31. FiECONT) TRAIN leaves Hanover at 2.111', 31., iand arrives iit the dunes Inn at 1.10 P. 3f., eon nee-- fog 511111 the 31a,1 T ra i n ...oath, wh lob arr . !, ev at Iteltlmnre at 6.20 r, 31. Paw...lnger:. be 111., tenth fo. York over at the hate.i.on until ii. 11 P. 31 aarThis Train returns to H0n...., ,o 1.4) P tt , Isnrh pnk.en W 4,1 for f f altos er, Lootp.btaeg 41.0 d to - 11. 1P 1.. , 0•117,1', lra In,: Ilniti more for HamOvi, Het- Lvvl,urit and Llttl..tollll, tlli lato• ofther t he tail Train at S.no A. 31— or She trfst . 14ne 2.10 EMMO= V t . Dec. t Bank Election. Grrrknen - no EnrroNni, BANK, Dec. 10, kV. • • XTOTICE is hereby (aver that the Annitol Elee tion for Directors of tlil Dank. he hal It the Banking_ Mose, on TI:IID3DAY. the 11th day of SANDARY, iikelloit t o'clock. P. M. I. EMORY BAIR, °ashler. Dee. 13, IT. to SPECIAL NOTICES Dr. Wirowee Inatome of Wild Clarrrs. Itt the n hilt lOstory of Itu.ll‘,ll discos . ..rt. NO n10.1 . 0r 1.14 perha no,! no 'tinny Or vOCII rl , lllsll 1.- Able cure, of the (111111.4. MS a if,,th j as of the Tuna ( . 111;H, a. thi, and Jtottly roleltuoNt /[alai,,. genetAll# no. lo the sop..rlor ev , lletor , or thi` , rcto,l) Clog but feu,ot the mall) 1, lot lION r• h %l ed Ito virtu. I* experletter fall to knit) Il at headsets PINV.IIy and rortoln runs for poteltlen - lark, of ( - b/d—folly belle liof that 11. rvott4l.lol powers or, eotllprehctisi\n vuotoill to ootlitwo every form of diglltle, frlon the stlubtest roll to the Meet tlonterons symptom of polmtomry COM lIIAIAI. =1 From Ilin.l.l:axeis /anon W., PoMur ni 4 , 011 tt•n, j.etioria? Chnrrh, Ih olorport, (11.•••• r t. eon:4,ler it a dui) N illett I OUP Iu •tifit'rf to (nor 1, , 11t0h, to tlie ft t Or, /trzhntin of Wild tin t : r 3 11,,, e tpo , Wit When I.llnNe had twenttion lot rout dv for ('oughs, Cold.. or SOM. 111r011f - fur IlutllN anti he, It Inn •Ingle 111%1am... 1 111K It tailed t.v I • e anti , are 11u, oln pont%) 14,11 ur% 110U1,` uu f4111111111.\ and tot.--d Tors, dolt en of tun Nuruann , on the Whon /ng do) with ...ad nitwit Ingo, but hy ft liberal um- ot ih f1.1,1U1 111 V liountenenn hnoi invarlattit l.eru i• ino, rat, and 1 have preached without thenn y. /commend it to icy brethren In the olio imt anti to nubile "penitent generall, an a • relllo,l Cr the bruin, id n/ Lroublea to 1l Men a e are neettliarly Pr. pared V.. SON, I. Tre. MOM r.tr, 01, 11. Stun, and for mule by Orklio, lAN gellVrlti 1). Fora II the•Proloon bliznm of Dlmltiwo orb:ln/Mug 5CR0F1...%, the'," IN nothing inn ritual the purlfylnit Plte I. nt lodlno w IL. n InlnOnintered In • ono• pito ti . I'll 11. %Vl} I. oDINE WATIIR I. a poo-o , lnllon of f.. 1111, •11.•,.h untev, Wlt .1,011 n tutlient, Anil 1.. lhr 101 l reined ; for P 1 hintlroll." ored. ( 'll , ll .NT, .1 l' I‘IN4MORP, Ns IN, .rrper, Nr.l% . 1 .1, I ro 4 lIPlw or rtorop o and corgi. onottoot 1. 15 •• a 1151115- ,d sup.- rim to rots 01/1.,. 4 e IV, Putt , for the cure , 111 II •o• moor, W4llll, 11,1q . 1•44,, 4 1... , 11,1, \I,I thou 1114tut1{ • , o• 1.5'11 , 5',.1•y oorteetts .at.• 015,1 11111.4'111; no nev,l 01 111 1 11I1'11i ••1 1••••• .011• Th..y “ r pf•llle. gl, • a 11110 0501, t•loattaa• tie. hi . ..MM. 11111141 uriattr stn., olro In, too, Ih.• 1•1111: of 1,1114. 11.•11, oral 3 lot 11111 1/1, 01 be. Sc Wm.? 111••1n. 11 - Irolo 11 .51. m 11 1 . 511 1, eolel•rat.d. train, of that lok hors..., 1111 uvenl them rwokumvadm 1114111 In 1•1••• friend , . Col. Philo. 1 1 , 151411, 1,1 the Jttrollot itnee roroltam. .•‘11.1'11. , 1 111,4 1110111 1111111 110 .0 , 1 1.1.1 41 0 hat (tut ere t •oot. p,41, Out o ..11141, he I. n , 55•• r 55•1111•••11 110 ho. t•r I went `r•toolltur 11Or , 1"• In 505.. '••••U• . autt lor the IRO three . I • ant hug to•eq , ne ••5 m•••41 ,1 / 5 •• uo• thou, 115•10, ht 1515115 'allot to ret• r If, 0111 IC1)11111. 11,4 1,14111 01110 r 0511 r. 01104 .4 411111, , 0011:.G a..rot. St.lllll. 111 uKKlrl+ , sit 1 . 1 it rker 1'51111141..11 Strut 1, sect ','Si,. 11, 1%17: ha -i -t New Marriage As; 4.: {1" 1111 C 101 \ll 11 N. tltt Pll, ....ltd., I. - nt Milli Kart, Nlorthttooth titt•it tt., jtolittit itt to NI %It'll {t.l:, 111th 'tut, ht. tO titlt.tl It•tteiq oist.lttitttt ID, lit clittme Utlrt,r, 1tr..1. sh 111.1.1 st 11 , t1 1.111 tt.N, Hnearl ton. 1 . 11111011111 , 1111 i, . 1.17. Is on rol \Vast. 'it.. .11141 11 , 1%1114 °lop. tmi to 114.1141: hp. long I, 1111:444 44111 --Ml' 1141 111 sin. 1(141 . 4 r mr umlntrm pr 4441.4444444 11. r T'lli -111 hair. MI 111 1. Ill'•Itp, . 1 11. 111 1/1 all 4, lIINT kl)11111 , S 11lit ini • topinlmi 4 .1 - (4 ,of 1.,111, , • 1111 ii 1411 11,1 ",) lil4. hoard" IL bi nil I uolunn In bc.44lt. lt. 11tut ut.0.!" by J. i..1:11`,1'11R 1 H0, 1 ;... 1 1. , )0 , 1,1% Snld I, 111 ail lint. Drt lut7. . 1. =I 1'3,11 , / rvllb I /b• I•p,raw 111 . A 11,\.!t ll,'Ull•U anti lit 141, Aoriiiet IN .11 1,, no,..tA el) ,tr ,, •l, 1 . 1151.,01.11 , 1tirt. 1r ,, 111 11,041, rv111,1,1,...ratri4. tit lil,• l II) nod t .811311,,utti In, . (.1) ikt Ills I.liti, 111.11.111 iii. Lilts its hoIINI tlle•Ir /N. JP , ...TO. Jr. 11, pi. - tit Ls. \ll ri ,, ) 01tlimit ' , Ail. NO clrloge ill Nall, I 1 ,, b;, II A Cord to the Lott Pit. lOTTONt VS GOLDEN • PLR' • iltli 1: 1 1 1. 1.1.$ :to:: I EMALES, luitallibts. its strt s. 1 • I issit.ol trtt I. ms.t Itssylitg Oltstros I lull. sti Eh. Is oath! rtirtis t irssitt witatssost t aloe, Ansi Ist witty-Mit I• 41111 11 , II Pr, Olt Re. 1 r l illl 1.t.Y.,.'', brated flits w. tells i discus e red by fir. Itt'l ,l - t 11, i.t U.) Lit...15...A) loot stNeelslull. used to most lit livoltuttun., us Weil ;LI, 11l [a I..ttFyu at ills, 01 Nall Ilethlsphei lu en er) loot II IS 01113 ut the "to gout 1. - quest ' UI ;he tlone..uuds ot ladles Nilo hut e them, that ho t. indueed lo make the 1.1111.• ior ”L I hear n1ar.1 . 11.14 LI,III all) I, regularlto,woute,r,us w t II u. li/Drel,llll .411111- freaNn in noisily where Ilt sill V. 11l uut permit ONE PILL In LtOSI... Femules peetifittrl.) theuotels I It to, ur. ..ottnonetl total/rat oshot Ito Pills a 'lll , ill llott onehtlon list this "sot It, nil/stun lug.," alit r u hlI 11 .I.lritotolloo, Pi..- pro tor 1L1,1311111,4 uotespoustUllity, 10‘1.• two Ch. ti lullthosul will prevent all) 114,111.11, Lar. l'lll.rans re. °Mint feted VI a Alo.l IN VALI:AMA.. tlF.,t LUY lOr all these ullllelltau ..umpluttil.sal/ pet all, CO lilt 501. ONE BOX l-1 . . lO,uoil Boxes have bi..en surd within l'wo Yvan. lea Thounand Busts moil bl Mall, both by in) - eel, ad Agents, to id I ports co tho Wur24l. whb h auvwe n nt hive be.n retort...ll,ln which la iell 1101111 mi Ilk. the ahoy.. rids nave lawn !tom, tr h... the ...ohm. of Medicine devined eon the Dori 1, In Removing Oh.tructions Restoring N attire lo its Prop.r Chanty el, (Yule Ging theNery ea un,l`hrluglog back the "Moly 00/or al ' Lb cboek of the Moat delleate. Prleolkt per Box. Si 4. Roses Enlo by, JOHN M. IAJIINEY, Druggist, Pole Agen.l,l;r Gettysburg, Pa. Lad/ea. hY'sievilsitt him 91 throuith the Post Of fke, hove the Pllle 54` , 1f {4 . 01/ by Mali, to any part of tho country ~.Ir.c of po•daige." sold also by J. Btautelrr , hhu tutr•r+bur;.G. W. Nell, York; Coleruan & Kagerli and Brown Broth ers, Whole sal. Agents, Bailin:or , , and 0. D. Howe, Proprietor. Now York. March I, 10.. 1y Errors of Icoath. A genii. incu whO culleretlyeers (nun tier your; Debility. Prefecture I . fty,. and ell ' , the Item 01 t OilllilPli Itul.Seretion, ill, fur the Pace oi cutfi ring humanint, NI 1111 (11 ., 1u all SiJlo It. the reelle• chit din Conan tor eialong the sim ple rein. tiV bt with It lie wits rend. Sillier. is WWI !lig tl, profit by the rujverthier's cult du.° by nahlremlnK, Jo/1N 11. INIIJI 4.21;e4.101 rf., NeW 4.21 122231111 TO t'onmumptlVPH The lt.r, VON% itrd k. Wii.gili Vk 111 wend ort, charge) to All N.11;11 desl^ —lt the yerserlmhm h the tlireci lonwtu mulclng und u. 1.4 the ,•Ito;,i. remedy by v.lde r li With I urea long ant - 11 tlon and that and dlw.a., 1 ofisilsallition 111. only object 1, to henetlt tht ant leted and It, hop , t • er o N i ll Ity an ,, et Int.on, a. It ala e‘...t them iv ellihut, and may prate n hh nen, :ehlre,t I'..tv EPW 11tIt A. WILSOV, t, Srpt. , ttot 1%.1-1; Informal lon. f,lll//tioll ',201,ri ItitclartAttt grmktlt 1 , .1 I ttlniin liw lor toe re1....0 r.l Frupt tone..: t , tin thie teat le • w,tl. , it. 1tp , 1 . 11 , alit In , .1 tt it , . <tut oh:trite Iri Atli ~ I; • rill in. 1... 11'11.1.`:, ClteinPi Be o,' Ni...tt ..,1 Sept. :20, 1•47. Jury List—January Court. Jteg I H. !toyer. • 71 Sootl tit t 1.. /I: rone--.1..110 I rare M. Nis er.. Alenallen— , Ooluel Meal, Nltouttlipletisuitt—John E. TaN • ritralsou—.J..l,llliftil Sliris John .:11. IPV. r. Lothuore-3.,bn Nlartlo, Jll9untjuy,-141laa M. !termer. Oxford —Henry WINK. Huntington—George A. Peter,, Joseph A Vilserman. Butler—George H. /lewltt. Franklin—Donde! K. !Snyder, John Cole. Gaon—}Award Robert. CoDowago—damuel tiehererte. =2 Geltrysburir—Ja.ooh Raley. Jaeubsiirlakerhoti. litraban—Usury A. Picking, John F. Fait). Franklin—. \lbert Vandyke, Dude& Miller,Dstn lel Kuhn, Sloe o Ratfeirsperger, Jacob F. Lower, Jeremiah Biene,ker. Berwick toffs—A.lAl Wolf, George D.tris. Tyrone—henry VotiOler. Berwick tp.-1,11,1ah KC parr, 'Levi Kepner. iteading—Jrurob M. Tamthinhatoali, Abraham Bushey. Cumberland—James Tbomtoion, Wm. Carron., P. Li W. thuriaey, tltarleo B. Poi/er_ lisford-1 teary L. G I tt, John Bushey. Libertr—Joho Mtbioselman. Freedom—David Rhodes, off. °fluidity—James wrsalcihm, Isaac N. Durtorraw. Lath otowu—Philip fiemler, Ephraim Myer., John F. :tioNliarrY. Suao,—John GM Inter, Henry aortae/. v !ilountplets-butt—,ffiliti h el sort>, John 'Reed, _Frans is M. Buddy, J. C. Itindirtah, Jooeph Kuhn. l'ulon-Enoet} I.o.tuvrr. II v. I t -TT , Ilry - Lax rewv , ,llettry Wolf. I NI. nnl ten-Itonrs Yypelman,Tolui burkhulder. O D. Worirv. lluuuttmon-Ihum.t. G. Neely, Jairol, Zug. flight° n 1-.l3nvid :tG wart. I ‘mown zo-Peter Setilerclr, Iletuy Gittellus. Dee. 13, 1,47. to C my absence, therewill almiVa ben thorough ly eompeten4 opetatorirtilowire of the I:xerl nom :Ina work oral' Ands and under all elrcumstanceo must Kis, satlatnotlon bcfnr, It ,an leave our romns. , t. J. TYS4IN. ARGI, V lEIN It of, the /Battles 11rld singly, or In arta, ierr low. Also. ffrEkt..EoßiratPlC lE\V of the Battle Field at the EXttitliOr Gal lery. Don't lel Ito we them. (7..1. TYSON. Tus rush Is for the EtreelelorGialtem All are waited en in entation and with d