§ettpsburg CI IrTtavty. Jnikusivr 14.1146%. GENV.16146747 Ai1114111E11111471 Vit. ICON. „ DieDfie'ltntiteal pip Ito el ti that Gen's. Viahi: Stitt Sherman' titlVlgeti fatun— ten' id'ree l fge, ft W341)1111100 esrtireiktn. dolt 'Of. the Baltimore Mot telegraphs that paper, ratter (late' et aferalay Nat, fedVatrot.: 't to said Mr. Rtatiton MIA rotthortr.ed the statement in the papas that he Into 114 been.adviaed by ftenerals Grout and PlitOnan turesign. Your correpPontient'. , tos.erlion thut di-tingtikhed' offi cer; Iltatt'luiVisett Mr. t9tantott terreslgn was tamed upon what they tbromelvem have solitlmpon the subject, and whether they did In fact go to .Mr. ittAtittotl wt.( my to film that he should give Itp the office or `not. tour corromondsitt now stalha unqualifiedly that boll' flenerals 4:rant rind Shernnin told thin l'resident that /pc} , Avulde go to Mr. clta o ton and give him their opinion that he ought to refelgn thS office or , 4eretttry of Was. Ilmtit had an Interview milli the Presideak yirtteraJoill, ,unil left with the avowed perixeie 01 ;suing immediate ly to Mr. Stanton end Wing him the :dint's advice. "'flame art- fads about witlelft•theee , tv 11 41e lin dispittu s hat omen t h e pet w itieitt, and utuerai. t;~eat stud Sher/II:III, Title eillphatle -tateinent entirely re fultw the liadiral fakelsood on lid. sub- Jflct, ,anti places Slunton, in his &demi tualoß to hold ou to a Pharr in which he el not wanted, iu a more wien-Ylititle. po sition than lie has yet occupied.. Was there ever a more ravened , 4411,e-holder than FAN iu "Al. :4taidal ItECONSTRIVTION ETU The new reeoustruction bill passed 'the iloutir at Washington on Tuesday, by ill btrict party vote--Lll to CI.. Butler's substitute for Use first sectiuu of the hill, giving the so-called reconstruction cons ventione, now In session in the tioutheru,, Rates, 'power to remove civil officers -therein, and appoint others in their latices, was voted down by 1.1'2 to 53. The 141, therefore, stands substantially as reported by the committee. Alter it had pamed s Mr. Fernando Wood proposed to amend the title, but Mr. Bingham, who had the floor, declined to allow the amendment to be read. The folliming, however, is a correct copy thereof : A bill to absorb the entire author/0' of the trove' nate Lit into the Im.utds of Con- WIITC•i/ the pott Vl' of the ExOeu- Com tim ilen. I 'hie( of the Army sod Nnvy shall Ile altolish ed--the power 01 I lie Supreme Court to puss epee the validity olarts ui eatalrene tali/ailed l 'itin mit cresstil iNurp.mon over ton z-4ntt. , 4 *,,a4blimned by fore). 01 :mos. and a new form Of government created in pt•tce of ;hat whinh iormerly existed under the 1./institution of the United State.% hereby declared to ho tunnelled and made yea. 'l'Le bill now goer to the Semite, and there iscoualiterable speculation as to how that:hoily will treat it. There are these whit believe that it cannot pans In Its preaent odious shape, We shall see. A 40OD 1,14\ TLr ShimTtne Court, cal Wednerelay. 'decided in •favor of advancing the Mis telaitippi teat. nano if 'Mt:Mille on the docket, netting it down for hearing on the 'trot Monday in March next. This eteie involveirthe coantitetiertelity of the Itadleall-liquenstructlon acts, and i' of overnhadowing importance on that ae coun.t. It ix said that flee out of the eight judgi44 favored an early healring. This Ia a . hopeful LKIONT 'WC rroorm WILL NOT Do. The New York 'l',•tuac, than which nu higher Radical authority exists, iu un advocating 'the Congressional visa for reducing the South to the con trol of the octavos, says; "This question is oversliadowilig. No other of coniparable iturirtailee nom: di vides out countrymen. Beside it, ell questions of preference for A, B or IC as next Nresident went frivolous—puerile. Audit lb dear that the great inaJority so h Ink and feel." Tittles it, exactly ! The question 4'.ersii.atloning one, and because It is co. the peop/e, who art thihking, will elect Ito nitui to the Presidency who is not squarely and unequivocally oppoaed to - the - infamous and ruinous plans Of the preet•nt Radical Congress. Ail ideas of self7preaervation and pride of country follArleny other result. ViNERAL GIiANT has nut yet at tempted an explanation of his "singular conduct" in the Stanton affair. Ifis "chagrin" still exists, hat lie has not yet' given his excuse. In reference to thid "singular conduct" of the Getter - al, thetalrimore Sun thus' speaks: GkINSUAL all A N'T A THE DENT. Itralional Intellietneer made a statement on Weiineeday hulk ginfilar to that made by our correspondent 'Data," In relation to^ the engagement Nvhtdhileutral Grant iii alleged to have made with the President as to the course he would pursue In the event that the &mate should seek to force Mr. Stanton back Into the Cabinet. • This statement having been drawn in question by phrticm of the Radical press, the acer of Yesterday reiterates% it in full, and adds : "Tho above statement of (nets '.vatsi made by us deliberately, cal efii4 Mitt ttitvbirelly. We repeat awl reiterate it in the most emphatic manner. " We .hisaio it to Lie ,iiriec in all 414 t kntglk and breoalli, and ,ar (iliolltnge Ventral Gr:tut to (Iry it in a .inglc parlicidar, Ou this Iwilative refer to a dispatch of the Wash ington correspondent of the New York Fontirui I ng our statainent." •" ' N,7 6 / 1 4;1 1 :C/ FOR recent, orders, thMaceit that t , ls ~ , /ptfts rurpitx, fla t% cif Citita,,ao 4'he Fret , tiala nL the wt ,Le treepepted. otrova in COlyfrea, feW,AVAlsluee, tendering him a vote of thilu4for thi"%expres!.on pf his Imyalty 1.6 the ooitStifutioit and t l / 4 be law of his eouutry. it , The UrftlaFfletiLW:eqtagr i ss refttbeti to pass the resolution ; aittltiirrAsty, eiColorril th, writ of /4«gwair ooktijitis. airfl 044' the freedom of press, pht:sl4 ittit,here f tyleetftt , by them. . . Wax a feiw negroes were discharged I,rprmeryiee i u the 'south, the w4o)c. /3.9, 1047 was , vocal; with the indignation ff tte , AlVzil : prom Aver ihe outrage. 4 , 4.9%;1 1 11 , Ife hear urthe discharge of .livitif i t .1, .o,rerl all, o;t:er the ' *it II , hi l t xpirlyillin 4 sotto over pleaeaitaimitice ritenla comp., *na - fAe ',i)oikolus of the ..istticiaLpieli, Tile s,Tr . upattlies of Ji at .. gr . t ro t a:kt.ion are 111 ,w4h the ue r oa. as no kind 'word for' its Owu I'll W l R'viar‘i.4; Ha does its duty', 2 11;rverew4lriol worcl tor the Itaiii• Vupfteettml 'Om tiPorlawi —A cozies poudent, nOt6h ,* 01110, states that an elettio betel hetet* ttemileow i•Weettiehn a 141044mA #mozitloeiy, loh /*suited In time *Wealthier the,Deameeratie momuirlee by a majority ortwii Went. ietme hli the townehipiseeemegieemieeek majority of fasfyilMW hftsitialiti of the til- MaliditelaidAtenection bitsthilt going.** tiThellpilitoitcatstoh, 7 ~ t .1 AN English contractor has been gem :=4l4 fi t/ I:vr - i - L eZg , 1 7 1 n e, %l::r . arnment in Bogie' teete' Abyelniart WM. Tilt lilUillik. MI In the New York Itin le, uf u rdaji t he ft t Ilnwing art tclit *earld, Which vilt nit-ent to nor')VierViv lilt suityi R rotnt nen ve In, Wier °dip* divakls..z While column% ittight be .written upon the subject, it would seareely to itiNqihio tipwussilte,grenk , jaesOnnr tint,' trent ed in a intillkeUndamkie ;Ind eloquent 111.41111er, ittni -anrssirtre . tt a mita vital earefunitedaritt • ' -••.• tl , . =2 • - 'NUE Reli 4 .llllo•N., The , ItevolutionitA4 of the 'temp Con grove aro uerraneinic rapidly to the dual eon:noiolution of their treason. Thither all Melt . etepahare tended Mace the put ting down of the reltelllon.. removed eve ry 111 ml nowt but, tiwinslvc•n to a restor e,/ I . lzion. They have aken rto steps bat• k ward. They began by denying to the people of ten States their right to be represent ed lu the governmeht. Next they eject ed from their beats in Congress Northern repnestmtatives enem' to give them two-thirds majority Tor overriding every veto )vliltdi might Week their path to power. Having ' made themselves "ft Itutnp, they prooeeded to wake the Rump Ammonia They passed a bill ettipping the Ex ecutive of his power to remove civil sub ordniatee whose faithless discharge of their- tnieta 'might Ineapacitate him, !through them. to execute the lavie.-e- They stripped hint even of the power to liouee his owe confidential efleisere, ittel they hove metered Gilds seatin the Cabinet fund their tool obeys the 11)M1- date) a 11.111iliter who had pronounced the law unconstitutional by which he holds his place; and, today, having erected a military government in ten States, they ere -stripping the Commas der-in-Chief of all control of hiwsubordi mitee in the army of the ( - tilted Settee Titus not merely do the i, leave patted of all hie tighten author ty end power Andrew Johnson, the transient choice of the people .01 the United States as the e.ettitor of their hews, but they ate le stroyi fig one equal and co.ordinitte branch of the governMellt as it WUA ea tindistimi and to the people themselves remains, out of the whole body of executive power then assigned and distributed to their 'servants, noth ing bet the privilege to participate „in a parked election, from w bleb Leo out of thirty-seven Shari are excluded, for a Chiel Magistrate reduced to impotence, and a Commander-hi-Chief whom they are inetructing his army to disobey. Cottgrese is toklay the Executive. The chair, the duty, the authority which ouee were Wftshiugtou'sandJetTerifort's. Mitchetni's and Jackson's Adams', Har rteon's and Taylor's, thisltunip usurps. For the spotless ermine which Jay, Marshall, and Taney have worn, though now resting chiefly upon the shoulders of men of their own choice, they reserve no better fate. Thejudicial power vested by the people in win Su preme Court, like the executive power vested in the President, stands equally in their way, and blocks their path to mibalanced, uncontrolled supreduley. 'roc judgment, of that high tribunal in the Milligan CHUM; their intanituoue jutlgineet that where the authority , of the United States was unoppoeftl and its , courts were open, a military cote iniesion ! had -no jurisdiction to try a citizen who ! was neither a prisoner of war our in the military service ; the judgutentof a um , jority that Congress could not have els , - : en a unfdary cominiseinn jurisdiction, lett the neurpers of the Rump without hope that the judges would betionie their tools. If clear-eyed justice did not hesi tate to plouounce lawless the deeds which had estate of war for their exeuee, they eoeld not hope it would spare their. etturpattoue ventured in time of peace. Wherefore to secure themselves in their esurputious of executive power, and to entrench themeelves against the bolt which Hamer or Inter was to he deliver ed flout the sovereign twatofjtettice, and to shouter ;he right arm of their strength cud the military goverutuent of the South; which were their citadels, the Rump, taking no steps backward, ad vances to the audacious usurpation of the authority of the Supreme Court of the United States. Congreav Is to-day the Judiciary. The Vonstitution which gave 4congresses the right to he, the laws heretofore enacted iu,pursuance therewith, the authorita tive debisions of a noble llue of justices unimpeaeluni for their probity anti who have judged the people righteously— these and all these the Rump makes less of than the vote of a majority of its can dle ; these and their authority the Rump usurps. Thee the legislative power of the peo ple of ten tittles, and the executive pow er and judiciary power of the people of thirty-keven States, is usurped by a Rump calling itself a National Leghda tu re and making Itself supreme, 'Phase men arc traitors, and this ii The men of the Romp are. traitors— not with arms Seeking to *seeds from one tree government in order to estab lish kinotiwr like the first—they are trai tor. to repreSentative government itself, to the Institutions which alone In mod ern' times have enshrined civil4lherty. They are traitors to the freedom la free. men. What next? Theßun:p Revolutionists leave tot in no doubt. No step backward. They ' tread straight forwardly the path down which other nations have been led by other traitors to the rights, the liberties, and the governments of other people. I The key to all these arsenals of govern-I mental powee, from which they are glee , ting the lowl t. iffl euetodisuse, they propose to surrender General Gran He is named by his ce in the latest recon strection bill. Him they load with their plunder and their stolen badges of ,'authority. ' What should now hinder the House of Represontsrtivee from dissolving the Senate; or what hereafter should him ' der General Grant from dispersing both. Not the supreme law, for they may as well abdicate the poWers they possess, as usurp those with which they were never endowed ; find he may as well profit' by his own usurpations as chosen to prorit by theirs. It is note more liiig(lll3 vio lation of the supreme law to abolisha brunch of the .I..egislatuic than to take into the custody of both branches powers elecwhere deprecated to be the check and Leila tee upon theirs Aud'when Goner al Giant accepts ut the hands of the rev olutionists of the Rump these powers usurped front the Executive and usurp ed' from the Judiciary, he will have de prived the country and Congress itself of tile ouly guarantee which it is possi ble for him to give, that he will not re flare to Thy them down, that he Will net attempt theirs also. What mkt? The people next Novents tier will answer that. They will neither have a Rump Congress supreme over theM, nor ti Military Dictatorship in the person of General Grant. Tea times more than the founders of our gtteerlar ! went dreaded from the open or secret monarchists of 1789, these Revolution , 'itch have actually accomplished by der motive legiskttrw towards breaking idewt the safeguards of Republican government. But the attemps which were frustrated then have less prospect of final success nom. Generation after generation has enjoyed the %timing, of liberty, /earned to use and prise them, uud transmittted them to their children. The people of 1869 Lave come into that groat inheritance, and Will not long be !dispossessed of it. Nor volt thaw' who have loft their native lands to chase it with us, whom sharing does not impov ' erish, consent to see the sacrifice of their right and our birthright. The people of the Drifted States, be It known to these revolutionists of the Rtunp, regard the form of their govern ment and the natural theee r fold division I of Its gianted powers, ak the'cbleiseenri , ty of their laws and liberties, next to 'their own determined will. They con ceive that that engagement and solemn eompaet of the people, the,‘lonotttaitaen, obliges, the vonitituent 'parts of the 1 / 1 1- 11iiti to hold their public faith with each ether, the Legislative with the the Judiciary, obliges earth Ut maintaLti the rothens anti:idly ill an Int diminished function and authority.. 'The people of the' tufted States, be it knovin to these usurpers of the Rump, 'be it knows -to all would-be military Protaident Jottiation, .wtt his a to and, whatever his er ' link, if tiro ere an, rasa lawful siladclibstei C' lief I opti nrithejustiees ofehe /Supreme Coultas the highest expounders of their laWe and soyereign upon the Owe* iodged with theitr' and lihit ' the pledge and not We period of their liber ties. Him and them in all their right- Peace had . f end grulatell asthmiky then will up- - urrrEst FROM sgasifilirea. 0 • 1 1 11 , . E 4 t Ittlebtaid. P‘iiret..o”%er • teral - glepartment.. 4 b es re rri Mind, 4vlrolkshevidO 1 4. 11A RR Isuctt(l, Jail. 4); Mi. ;.', ••'., ' '' ' WT COUNTY AND SURNOUNDINVOU ES. ' • very disagreeablikrevqrylhing'lli E ,' . ._ _ • k, n s e s eteh .If ti 3 - Etiitnr Compettir;—tlie Nrestlmir bac% THE INIS rr I 4.. Nu e:: 1 around our eit.yoegais to bed elk . ; l 4f, ' s; 4 2rfr. Heltzel, of tIAH a., 1 te are mfirlu tp, tmt the time ha's I hail a fill' .YkaalaWay i licatiiiallitWAl° IP 'flatirlidiatrg, tas our thanks for Legis a come when the people must lie am li used i ren.YaSh i ti l kouge, PerOMl , Ireet, mt. the f avors. , it was extinguished before making nut . .., . to the events which are throwing their P.loll(l.—An har Ring, found, the °tit shadov. s upon every limue in the land. i Pr i a , V.:Ta i r litia s- . iiiit , ,i - •- ‘4 ,, t , . 1144 .- i , - 44 , , , , , „. . 4 ~,,k fl a k A l t WC:ants National Cone- The'llatlical party is led and mastered 1 .. , ' ) I. a • - *VI 11 •• • , tery, has been left at this offlee. .. . . .. . . . . , eminent. Theia,pip, tteitettis, to all its fundamental prinelpies, and would hold the .' relns• of power, • thougli liippety with' the bleed of their felloW-ultitens shed in defense of alto/moment founded by Washhigton,liadiaor., Jeffersou4mral Their illustriaos compeers. The drift. of the propOsed legislation at Washington is unmistakably towards a amp &renal, by which military power will be substi tuted for the civil law in nIL parts of the Union. This danger the mamas must flute. Oongresatiin go no further without confronting the people without amask. If they can- virtually depowe the •Prwii dent, and enact that the bowels* Cotirt shall not prOnotrrres•their sets unconstl tutkmal, then•thene is - no Manacle In cresting frith toy desPotittn JO the North, abolishing the etlectieed, an. de claring' Congress Nl•perlt/VIIIIIICe. This Itt the danger now anon , the country. The President must meet it, nod the• people protect their rights by all • the "Means which God and nature have put Into their hands."—Age. Tire Prorlin will.not quietly permit the Radical leaders, unless we are grave. ly Mistaken, to uproot the tkinetitution, abrogate the Supreme Court, strip -the Presidtmt of hienutisority, and erect a mil itary despotism for our girivertuuent, bat witl idernly tetichrthom that to thusmed tile with their liberties merits* speedy translation to another world. The peo ple are quiet now, but they - read and they think, and at the proper time it will need bdta spark to kiudie them to action. President Johnson holds the watch-tower and handielthe signal flags; if he is a n Ise man ba„will know the time to throw them out, and the answering signals will flesh from a thousand hill-tope; the pc°• pie will riim.—LemertWer Ittetleigencer. I= We hope that all the Republicans In Adams county will rend the extracts from prominent Journal% of their party, printed on our first page. They wilLsee ftotu them that there are still a few Re publican editors not sufficiently blinded _by party zeal or ambition for of to follow the lend of the madmen who are now "ruling the country to its ruin," at Washington. The following paragraphs have since fallen wider our notice. The butrale ClomnerTicil Adverti.er, a leading Repub lican journal, says: Mr. Stanton is clearly at fault, in seek ing to force himself upon the President as a member of his Oabinet. It is an in delicate piece of business, to say the least of it. Toe "potent, grave and reverend" Senators are equally at fault in our opin ion, for insisting that Mr. Stanton shall remain. We hope that the whole sub ject will be speedily dispelled of by the resignation of ?.he Secretary. Here's whatthe Albany ErValtillY ✓o , u • gal, the Republican organ at, the capital of the great State of New York, Las to say Those Republicans who have thought that fidelity to party required them to defend the Congreasienal scheme of re s construction as a whole and in all its -parts, find it "hard sledding" about this time. They hardly know where they are er what they shall be called to swear by next.. To make everything sure and cover all possibilities, they might AI , ell modify their roufeseion of political faith, and- put it iu a comprehensive form something like this: "We are for the Congressional plan of reconstruction as it ass, as it is, and as it 'shall be, world withlitt end." The sew York .Post,a very able and decided Republican paper, in alluding to the bill before-Geogreee•tosialte all power from the President in Bouthern eniiirs and give it to General Grant, says Zealous, unhesitating, reckless parti sanssupport the new bill as they would support anything that their party might proclaim, but we have yet to hear the approval of It by a single moderate per son, Republican or Democrat. They say the attempt to strip the President of powers "vested" in him by, the constitu tion, and confer them upon another ofß cer,is clearly revolutionary. Even If it were not, it is novel and dangerous, and should only be done with the greatest caution and deliberation: No emergency exists to compel or Justify it. Mr. John son has done nothing objectionable since Congress met, except the dismissal of General Pope, whom he has replaced by General Meade, who is just as decided and energetic as General Pope; and the conventions era held, without molesta tion. It Is useless for General Garfield to ar gue that the Preeident is "the anhorti• nate of Congress." He le not; he is the; co-ordinate of Congress; the integrity of his function is just as necessary us that' of Congress, and to destroy this relation of equilibrium is to destroy the peculiar, featurcof our policy which has given it strength and success. The vast majority of the - people have been Wight for half a century to look upon this division of powers as we state them, and it would take theme long while to unlearn a doc trine which they identify with the sta bility of the nation. It is older than the' Republican supremacy, and will outlast it if the opposite doctrine be insisted on. THE Harrisburg Patriot& Vaion.aound ly argues that the first and beet liu racial measure must be a complete, magnani mous and constitutional rettonstitin of the Union—such a restoration at Will' bring prosperity and content to all the people, and tyranny or outlawry to none except such as have been or may be con victed, after fair trial, of inftmouscritne. This done, the public debt would prcrre: but a feathar'a o iyh gut,Lthe burdens of titxatioa—heavy se they Are—would not oPPresN , Ateoltuae they would 4 .5 4 , a skroepepose people. Six, millio4s of white penple audfOur millions of Mocks set•to work. with Sall zuarantees of pro tection to person anti property, wi t li soon' hard timee.whielt..,,aze..way dragging the country down to coin. ot only would they lift a share of the direct tia es from the Northern people, but YrOm the surplus produetious, sold abroad , hundreds of raillions ,of dollars wadi: (lad their way Into the • cutters. Besides this, bundiecs of trilificuisol dot lore' worth of the prod ucts,ef I,4'o:gawk handicraft would be bought, end paid .for by their, thereby giving' esiployxnetat to thousands of laborers audartistute who are now upon U borders of vagranty throughout the,Aierth• • No ilhaaciel ,mseeores eau prove sue:, ce•wful unless based _upon this,. hroad ground-w0r.k....-.1. the ques tiou frank thisAgazatioPiut. the 149 0 P1e hauttot QO cb#Sed, la,mty, gpeciouk, rep: coniag•bmed eptireJy upon .the selfish theorios, 0( batgreetipd..o44htlprid ,qt 44- talk*, 1-10 N. rtrrA +.,HA*Tfto:t'lwis tin Saturday asauvi antes Anaibi Ary Alopilo,94oloT tiagon, 91 efiA4atilf*Alii l -tWAeIieRA9 4 9 pu4i to, arairs t lAngi noAreh At- MEW reprawrl {a'AtforrthaSki.A l 4444l 44 1 14 %Wiwi 11 0 00041 ,rr . • Viela restauraktahept ley the experiment orintioduchig • hOree flesh as one of the delicacies. ,of the business 0f,w1441,th , g were sent , For Scar, exlelleut , Parlor I here. On arriving ter° the Republicans Stove, at 'Of/4104 f •an ..11esatInuore professed a groat' desire to. retrench and street, near High. reform; but it was of Short thiratlini, For instance, the cleetlott of Speaker PO rpnnt.l.-11 rjollts S. (lntwfort'l has I took Ulu }Louse fuurilays, at atst , ,t to the , po,tponeti his sale or Iteal and Personal Property Trona Tuesday the llth; to Wed tax-payers of one thematic' dollars per hour. This four days' v.ork ought ne'daY the of February next. have been, and heretofore was, perform- to said that a oalaabla horse, ed in about fifteen tritnufe.s. Next in ` th, pr o p er ty of Me. Eli mingle, of Near turn came a , resolution from a ilepubli- oxford, went mad recently, and Mr. S. can endorsing the action of the l;nited sea s (dinged to kill him. States Senate in the utall, laol.n I,} nay - X. II aoht.lg. ht.i, to all l,.lrtu al the Worql, Lt. Wll.ll 1a1SW 1 •1 , 11,1' 11,11 r, Itll 4,11,111 will , 11 1.C.1 , nolthng Ilk,, the ,1111,e 1111VV 111 01 ILIU/V1 : 11 111. , 1, 11 Y 01 )franethe dananao..l ay."n th, 1111, 2,, -.(rth.: /aux .1(1 , 111 , -41.,, In `...lare h. I, k I • halm. 1, qtn, 1 24:4 1 . 1 h . • • the "How I olor w 1L•,11 n ' 1111 1 1 h... 1, (h. 1110,1 11'11 , .114 pvr Box. Six I ot. lq \ ; 01:Ss 1.1, 1 , 21 , L!,./ , 1, .011 , 1,;. at 1.:U.)6411N. 111. I „Lahrs Uy hen.llll4 . through the riou 111 &h., MI In btu:, , oritt...loullt.llY./ 1,1 JI ul,to .1111 pal t tll Lllc {,{1111,5 J . ,5.w.1.1;;1.; , out 3. U. W. Nvir, Vu(//1; CNC/U{.l {l{ YIN S. 1). Sluuu,Pn , pllatlr, Nev. lurk. .112.,4 f, 1667. I y Errors of Youth. Win/ TllllOOOll lurk r.lrn rrlinl SPr• 11. Dewitt.), Premature , end alt ih „ ityek. 01 ylnati ul 111 , t 4eretlnn, Will, for the mike oi Nuth rtmt huh - ImM v. 'kilt tree in tin mho 11.441 It, the reel no ant dir,uom, inlikitin the fam ple routetly whkh he was t fiuff'• wishliat to Willi! 1.1 the .01Nuitirli.r'1. eXiilo,lolo4. C.lll I 111 pellet (0111 . 01C11 , •, )$M II 42 (leMa it.. New 1 ork, May 27, I•4L. ly To Colisnnlptivrii The ant 11,'114. on v. It/ wend rdv IJI vimrip•l tit nil Vl lio gestre It tin. rwnwripths, it!, dirt•rtiori, fiw ranking and 0.411141 the, 41ny.4 retuotly Uy w Lich be was mar , ' orn Irma wire tiou awl tilla ['road disease Consumption. HI. otijMoi Lit t.. iwnetlt the gtftl/enst and Ito bops. ri y sstrin ar still try this prescription, as It *lll4 04$1 t hent nothing, anti uuiy pruy.. makiress _ Rev. EDWAiLII WILMON, No. lei Smith *mud H met, fieptl'33, tim IViiittotkabundi. Nsw lark ==l In formotbm zunrenteed to protract , 4 bliunknt , growth of tour Ir.roo. bald head or beaT foe, alxnn recipetorYhe removal of .191ntia, ohhev, Kroptiona, rte., pt, the ekln, !mix t wane eon, (dear, and beautiful, cuu ba u,btaltaxt with. our Meer& addraolog THOM. F. 1 .11.1.P4.1.:7, C'hemlat, ltruecturay, New York, Sept. 10, I*7. Rrn QOARTERLY 'STATEMENT' O F GrITYSDURCi AT10NA,11....Nht.",.. i v,. .. • • . Lonna and plarounta. • •••• v. H. Honda to aamutre circulation . 140,4030 o. • • EIiMM me (nun other thanks (ash ((env ....... 11.41.1 Es' mule . , ItE2l =CO MUM= (Stpital .. .. , . .. . , .... 4145,1:) VI Ctr,ulat.l4.g. .... ...... .. ...... .. .. . 1311,:M IXI Ilepoal t 4 71,5> 10 . . ellap{Eo . l • . /6,000 00 . Yrtint and lads ... . . ...... 1,171 tr; Stale Clreszlatlon Illvidexuls unpaid .... .... ~ . ... ~ 0 1,1101 zi , Illsoconta.. ... , . ............. r.... 2,120 111 Dusts Haab, I certify that the ahoy*. statement It; rortact to the, best of my knoirlethea and belief. J. KMORY BAIL Caabtor. . . • • . Jim. 10, IRA. it _ QUARTERLY REPORT OF' thr oolulltlua of We FIRST NATIONAL BANIC.OI , Ot.'"ITTIn BMW, on tho morning urine first Monday ordinnuitrX, /AS: Loann and Dinetitinlx, reining over /Furniture and fixture., . MI no 761 09 Premiums .... ' .. lo lt U. 8up4 44 2.pp0 firsd /NAP Ob ' We COM gbfm, to r I pay! ..... -147,9284 PS , 610,50$ I . igAntwauxs. „ stock• - • --IV N'. 16 °6 C A D _ ... rs ' ll— iii . ;Z;il:4l44::::-....- 16 4 newy.af.-- +••••.• •••-•?"- 741,01 p.souyilita 4 110 i 4 XcW.A. S** 34 The abo , M statement le true . to the tent of fay know ledge and be/1r(. ORO. ARNOLD, enabler. Sworn nod subserlbed before rue this Rh day of ..larillirllff,K , f t • J VP I N E 'f I • 'I?. Seth 17, lam. It amr 1iV41./FTED, iITE undersigned will pay the highest market price. for kitty. ineuireac Spangler's Ware house, Gettysburg. ogo.ritlCKllol.7FiErt. Nov. 2fi, INGO. tt T • U. 8. BONUS. rrifi Fl o c „raw...a Bank Of Gettysburg will ouiltOMOutd /tete U. Bomb% oleo 5.40 aatl Compounds In 4NWL Nate,. GEORGE ARNOLD, Cashier. lOot. 8, 1886. tf MEI N ■V abiscas,.thers wlll aisayste • Thateugh ly eompeteat egaftlier taullmegeoeg lb* Eseet. or Clothealt sm u tk of ail kinds mid Muter ma amstanees give sallstsetlon before 4 am leave oar Mans. C. J. TYSON: MEE 11.1,1/1* 10,41Ri ra 44: Fo' 5,0011 LE= ECM MET 1