ri IBMi=3!=111!IIME star leao. Wesilissesdays•AuptlisT 7, MT. lb, j'aidijs of the Swale bottrt, nom' MIENRY W. WILLIAMS, OF ALLtoxiv.Ny COUNTY REPUBLICAN COUNTY COMMITTEE. I'here will be a meeting of the Repub lican County Committee, at the Eagle MAP]; Gettysburg, on Monday, August 19, at !). o'clock, P. M. A full attendeucC of members is de - aired. EDWARD McPHERSON, HIL , STEVENS' SPEECH. We give, on the outside, the remarks of Nr. STEVENS, in closingthe debate on the Supplemental Reconstruction bill, Plow' ut,the late seb - bion of CoKress. They are very clear ,in the pre4entation of the relations of the conquered rebels to the Government. Upon this question, hinge all others ; and we have not seen it more satisfactorily and comprehen mively stated. The Democracy denounce the speech, as from long liabit they de nounce everything which falls from this most formidable of their foes. The Phil adelphia Aye, with a sympathy for the cause of the Rebels as active as that it formerly had 'for the rebellion itself, vi tuperatively attacks it. We print it, that the people fluty understand the grounds upon . "-the legislation of •(.2mgress nation. When ever any the. Opposition may answer g, we will give it the baefit,of Our elibulation. The truth is, his positions are impreg7 _noble. No right can be dearer than the right of the law-making power to indi cate the terms an which political power shall be restored to the rebel .States.— The Congress Ipts prescribed the terms ; and in due time• there will be .a loyal ' restoration of the Union. The demo : (trade leadeis nefer restoration ur& the PRtSLDENT'S ie of disloycqty ; and, to effect it, assert the power of the PJtsst DENT, and deny that of the Congreis, to legislate upon the subject ! To . state this proposition, is to answer it.. The PEEI3. IpEar.r.has no power to make a law. His duties are to execute existing law. With Congress alone, rests this great ,preroga- Live,. They have acted, and the work is substantially done, and in such way as to prevent etrectually the recurrence pf - such a calamity as rebellion. . GREENVILLE, Tenn., President John son's home, gave a Republican majority of 90 ; the county, of 739. In the noun'- tan counties of. East Tennessee, where there are hardly any colored votes or dis franchised whites, the Republican major ity is about the same as the majority: for' the Union in 1881, and the vote is cast by substantially, the same men who- thtn "stood by the Union." In Nashville, many freedmen have been discharged by their employers for voting the Repub lican ticket and others have been threa tened. Gesi'l Carlin, in command there, has ordered one of his staff to use every effort to find employment for them, and tb compel the employers to make an im mediate settlement with them. Persons unprincipled enough thus to discharge ( might reasonably be suspected of a pur pose, k cheat, those accidentally their power. AT a Dethocratic meeting in Woodford county, Kentucky, on the 23rd of July last, speeches' were made by W. C. P. Breckinridgq, D. Howard Smith, and Basil Duke. All these men belonged to "Morgan's men" daring the war, and Duke succeeded to the command, after Morgan's death. Two.of the candidates on the Democratic State ticket were colo nels in. the Rebel army. Their names are D. Howard Smith and John Rodman. Kentucky furnished about 2.5,000 men to the Rebel Army. These men have gen erally returned to the State, are voters, and. helped make the huge Democratic majority polled at the late Congressional election. In Kentucky, the Democratic party is in absolute control of men who were openly in - the rebellion. In most of the States, it is controlled by men who were In secret-sympathy with the rebel lion.•l• Ix hficabaszt, they, intend to have a session of the Legislature every second year. This is now the rule in many of the Western. States. The general ten dency appears to be to have bi-ennial ses sions, and sessions limited in duration by legal and constitutional provision.— The origin of this tersdency is the prevail ing distrust of State Legislatures, in which, for years, corrupt practices have been extemling. There is, undoubtedly, reason for the' anxiety ;_ and some effici ency may be in the remedies proposed. But public attention should not be with drawn, by them,ifrom the only thorough remedy—the election to 'places of trust'of men who Will hold themselves above and beyond all corrupt influenCes, indirect or otherwise. NM Soitz Democratic papers think that as greenbacks are not "legal tender" for ,paying. Interest on Government bonds, .they might as well not be "legal tender" kir any debte. They would haire been a "legal tender" for interest, but the cre dit of the Government, during the war, was so much undermißed by Democrats croaking, "you can't wiper the South,' "this enormous debt 411 i never be paid," "the taaesalto° grievous to be borne," 41cc., that he Government waacom palled, IM order to get any sale for their bonds, to agreito pay the interest in gold. Rut for the unpatriotic conduct alluded to, the people would be able to save every yiar the amount of the premium on the gold they are required to use in the trans action of buainess. THE friends of a free railroad law are bestirring themselves. We observe that in Republican nominations for the Leg-? telature in the . Nrern as well as the Western part of th State,referenoe is had to the °pillions and votes of candidates on this question. The secret enemies of this great measure—on which, by the way, the Democratic State Convention preserved a simpieloos silence—must pre parenext winter to reverse their record of last session, or make a square issue with the people. Bamsare rapidly fallingin New York. Stores near Broadway which bad year brought WOO, cannot now command SOO a year. "ONDEE reitms mTennimme" Democria *oft ,Bleheoritegth. ~.~:a El The Temulesele t On Thursday hail Republicans' of ai li pessee carried that State by nearly WO majority ; re-elected iiirtr.T.TAlu G. BROWNBOW as Governor;• elected all their State officers ; carried all the Con gressmen, eight inliumber, being again of four; and swept the Legislature, which ensures a Republican tnited States Senator in the next CongreSs, in place of Demo T. PATTERsori, President JOHNSON'S ton-in-law; and generally have had a complete and glorious vic tory. • This election we consider as settling the next Presidential election. It shows how the Southern trupses intend to vote when they get a chatted. An overwhelm ing majority are iletermined not to trust the men and the party who made the Re bellion against the Government. Glitairnian These . results aptly confirm our remark of last week that the Democratic party, as a national organization, is dead. It may carry Maryland, Delaware, and Kentucky, and a few scattering counties elsewhere; but the probabilities are that all the remaining States will be Republi can. Henceforth, the governing power in the Nation is the Republican. The Democracy have, by their Treason, fully earned the disgrace and feebleness into which they have fallen. THE Harrisburg Telegraph has ex humed a valuable record, in further illus tration of the confirmed hostility of the Democratic Party to "Legal Tender" notes. We have already produced the record of. Judge SHARSWOOD'S opPositiOn to them .because, in his opinion, an un constitutional currency. - Our readers have probably forgotten how, in April, 1884, the Democrlitic mem bers of the Legislature opposed the pay ment of the Interest on the State debt in "Legal Tenders," and insisted that it should be paid in gold. The Republicans, on the other baud, held that the State having promised to pay interest 'in "lawful money," it was competent to pay it in "Legal Tender notes," and passed a bill for that purpose, through both Houses, and it became a law. From that day, the State interest has been paid in currency, with a saving to the State of over four and a half mil lion dollars, as will appear from the sub joined statement showing THE AMOUNT ON INTEREST DUE SEMI-ANNUALLY since the passage of the act ; THE PRICE OF GOLD each day the interest fell due, and the ADDITIONAL COST TO THE STATE if the interest had been required in specie : int aisle. Price of 248 Gold. Ad. Cbst. 1864 Aug. L... 4 988 ,000 $1,561,040 1665 Feb. 1 988.000 202 1,007,760 Aug. 1 ..... 960,000 1 4 4422,400 1868 Feb. 1 940,000 140 - 378,000 " Aug. 1 940,000 149 460,600 1867 Feb. 1....,,, 903,000 135 316,060 " Aug. 1..... ' 900,000 140 360,000 Had the Democratic membtrs of the Legislature succeeded in their policy, the State would have lost the enormous sum stated above—all to signalize their hostil ity to, the legally-constituted. currency cif the country ! There was but one exception among "the Democrats—Senator Kinsey ofl3ucks. He voted with the Republicans to pro tect the "Legal Tenders" from the at tacks of the leaders of his flirty. With this exception the Demo'cratic law makers -seconded Judge SHARSWOOD'S judicial assault upon a• currency whose issue was a necessity of the War, and without which the Rebellion would most likely have succeeded. THE Democrats claim that they repre sent the opinions of THOMAS JEFFER SON. We subjoin a letter of JEFFERSON LO BENJAMIN BANNEKER, a black man well known in the early history of the country, and who at the time of the cut ting off of the District of Columbia sat with the Maryland Commissioners and took part in their deliberations: PIILLADELPIIIA, AUgl#Be 80, 179 Stu : I thank you sincerely for your letter and the almanac it contained. Nobody wish es more than I do to see such proofs as you exhibit that Nature has given to our black brethren talents equal to those of the other colors of men, and that the appearance of the want of them is owing merely to the degraded condition of their existence in Africa and America. I can add with truth that no one wishes more ardently than I do to see a good system commencait for riosthk the condition of their mind tow t Night to be, so far as the hitbecility 41Ler'r present existence and other circumanwees which cannot be ne glected will admit. I have taken the liberty of sending your almanac to Mona de Condorpet, Secretary of the Academy of Science at Paris, and a mem ber of the Philanthropic Society, because I consider it a docuMent to which yOur whole color have a right for their justification against the doubts which have been enteitain t ed of them. I am, with great esteem, dear sir, your obe dient, To Mr. B. BANNEXER. We tremble for JEFFMO3ON / E1 reputa tion, when Democratic editors begin to understsmd the gross heterodoxy ofVth3 letter. FOREIGN EMIR. A meeting was held on Monday evening last,' in London, to protest against cutting down the franchise as flied in the Reform bill by the House of Coriunons. The bill gives a vote to every resident householder in a bo rough who personally ,pays rates, and it also renders personal payment of the rates compnl tory, so that, in fact, every householder of full age will have a vote.' In addition, there is the "lodger" franchise, which confers a vote on every male lodger who has occupied for a year the same lodging, If it is of the yearly value of XlO, ulstbrolahed. In the counties a vote is given t 6 any person outside the limits of the Parliamentary boroughs who pays £lO a year rent. All boroughs with less popula tion than 10,000 are to have one member, and the four boroughs in which corrupt practices elections have been proved, are to be Al together disfranchised. In the House of Lords, on the SOth ult., amendments were made, add ing £5 to the annual amount of rentals upon which the copyhold and lodger franchises are respectively based.—ln FRAMS, imprison ment for debt is likely soon to, be abolished, and Ain Avenue a motion to abolish Capital punishment narrowly escaped . • in the House of Deputies. The prospective _ ofthe Ring of Greece, to the Grand n • Ortm, of Runde, indicates a close political union between those countries, in hostility to Turkey.—The King of Prussia has assumed the dWesesovenageofthelifortheernmalMft —Louis Kossuth has been unanimously, elected to the Hungarian Parliament from - lire city, of Wldtzen:—The Cretan Insurrection has not yet' been mbdued by the Tarim ilismareir's *fa cile] organ urges the great pnwer e ric urope , to interfere on behalf of the and rei. cea them fee. the Turkish —Bnatt.. staffs'areipmersily dell abroad, On of. tiftimsablelresther for grafting* THE FLEET 4011 i. $4,503,8.50 THOMAS JEFFERSON fr*, Atilt „„, . • lIINCSKOMEntetr . 2O/FAMEArss. , Tl44l4Edoe, reb•lC are, , auxiiins tp ha*: Gen. Pope removed, and a Akluinet ion Ocenti , ly forihnt purpOse on-* 'PVIBLOKETI who' replied that in time "Alakami'would be vindicated." Guu. Sickles has removed the police of Sumter for alleged maltreatment of blacks and for inefficiency, and has appointed two color ed- anil one white polliaernen to succeed the late incumbents. He has also censured some of hie subordinates for Interfering with poli tics in North Carolina.' ' Tot last Legislature of Texas gave a blow at "LC* Tenders" in this way. They largely inc iced the fees of officers of Courts, and th ovided that the new fees should bepaid where parties offered United States notes, but the old ones should be paid if the parties of fered gold. These patriots were unable to make % - 'onfedcate notes" a legal tender, so they determined that, as far as they could 'help it, United States notes should not be. Judge SHAESWOOD tried to accomplish a like purpose, in a different manner. GEN Sheridan has removed Gov. Throek morton, of Texas, and appointed E. M. Pease in his place. Gov. Pease is an eminent law yer, has lived in Texas since 1833, was Gov ernor from 1853 to 1857. was a consistent Union man during the war, and was the Re publican candidate against Throckmorton.— General Sheridan has also renuared many of the Aldermen and assistant Aldermen of New Orleans, by reason of the disordered condition to which they have reduced the City credit, and their obstruction of reconstruction. Tar Washington Star of August Ist says, that "it seems to be generally understood here that GCn. Gnesx not only-declines to become l i a party to the proposed removal of SHERIDAN, but will surely see that his policy is carried out to the letter ki whomever the PRESIDE srr may send in his stead. The law, as modified at the last session of Congress, makes it his duty, and not the President's, to supervise and direct the policy of the commanders of the several military districts." The 4Pars t- DENT, it is given out, intends to relieve Sara .this, and put Gen. HAsooox in his place. I Two Northern men recently visited Colum bia, S. C., and made speeches at the Repub lican State Convention then in session. That evening, they were attacked and beaten by a band of ruffians, comprising members of sev eral leading families. When these men were arrested, the magistrate released them on in sufficient bail ; and next day, Gen. SICKLES removed the magistrate, and re -arrested the parties guilty of the outrage. We are person ally acquainted with the young men attacked, and are glad to find that the military power has been exerted for their protection. They are intelligent, educated, and worthy men. Tux Mobile Advertiser (Democratic) ad vises the Southern blacks to vote for colored Representatives to Congress, in preference to white Radicals. It adds : "We prefer them a hundred to one, and we do not see why the negroes should not do it. We prefer them, because, in the first place, we can trust a Southern black man when we cannot trust a white traitor or a Yankee spec ulator in negro votes." Colonel Forsyth appears to be in a very un happy frame of mind now-a-days. He was furiously in faror of the Rebellion after Lin coln was elected, and is furious enough now to be in favor of another. The people "bare the hang" of him, and all like him, and will do as they please. Tbe past is secure, and the future will take care of itself. THE Harrisburg Patriot and Union threatens another war, in case its party can not elect a President in 1868, in violation of existing law. It says : "Let arrangements be made immediately, under the old State laws, of the ten Rebel States, to take the lawful white vote of those ten States, in November, 1868, and it' by that vote, added to the Conservative vote of the North, a Conservative candidate shall be in majority, let that man be made President at whatever cost or sacrifice!" This advice is from an organ of the"law and order" party; the "Constitution-loving" par ty ; the "law-abiding". party. The gentle men whb give this advice did no fighting in the late war. We have no fear of what they may do in the next. The loyal people of• the nation will elect the next President, and carry on the government, in their way, re gardless of all threats. JEFF. DAVIS AND "RE VERMONT PEOPLE.- Jeff Davis visited Otanstead last week, and was the guest of thegon.T.Lee TerrilL Fred. ,Terrill, Fag., brought him from Sherbrooke there, in a very quiet manner on Wednesday last, profeSsedly to see the country and to con sult in regard to an investment in the gold mines of Harley. On Thursday, as we learn from the Newport (Vt.) Express, Mr. Terrill, in his best turnout, took Jeff. about the village to ride, when several incidents transpired not altogether plefu3ing, we should imagine, to either the host or hii guest. Not only boys but men hooted at him in the street, and grew ted him with these familiar words, "Well hang Jeff. Davis to a sour apple tree." He was frequently asked where he hall left his "petticoats," and various like remelts, more suggestive than pleasing, everywhere fell up-. on his ear. ' One lady, stung by the recolleO tion of the suffering and death of a near rela tive at Andersonville, gave nttegince to her feelings by hnrling a stone at him. Penis: sion was asked that Jeff might ride *bout the grounds of gado., rime, Esq., end take Is look at his noted herds, but the request was emphatically denied by Mr. Henry Berne, irt charge of the premises, who declared In un mistakable husguage, "that in no event could 1 Jeff. Davis he admitted to those grounds. A Snocrtse case of matricide occurred at Chillicothe, Ohio, on Tuesday. A young man named }flutter was standing in front of a saloon with several companions, all very drunk, when Bunter's mother came to the party and implored her son to accompany her home. Suddenly he seemed 'seized with a frenzy, rushed into the street, and picking up a heavy stone, threw it into the group. The fatal missile struck his mother on the temple. She sank to the earth and died in ten min utes. Hunter and his companions were all arrested. I A Nzw Congregational Newspaper is to be started in Chicago on the let of September, called Anwicz, Rev. Wm. W. Pat ton, Editor. The publishers define their aim to be, to ADVANCE the cause of evangelical religion, in its relations, not only to doctrine, worship and ecclesiastical polity, but also to philosophy, science, literature, politics, busi ness, amusements, art, morals, philanthropy -and whatever else conduces to the glory of God and the good of man by its bearing upon Christian civilization. The subscription price is $2 50 In adVance. Address "The Adnuce Company," P. to. Drawer 8874, Chicago, 11l JIRMAILII duns, of Wilmington, De, who waa a Member of the First Delaware Regiment, . and a prisoner at Andersonville, bas been suffering from indisposition for near ly a year, and i was seized with a vomiting a few days ego,l when he threw up a °ben about as large as k robin's egg, and on lank lug it, found it' to =Wet of corn ladle, which mulkhare colllttid`widie be was in the Re - - i nal& relieve, slit *Azi o4 4# 3l , o .4 l alitilogineilail *Oda K===i flcia• 1 odudng in rapidly frank . bitroluis. • Tax Internal Revenue receipts average about a million a day. A names maker in New Bedford, Memo has been left 11137,000 by a deceased relative in England. • Aooonouto to a New York paper that city contains 050 men who , make their living es decoys fbr the faro table. A CITY OF MEXICO paper says that NB per sons were shot during the .Empire without having been legallytried. A2l Ohioan is said to have invented and patented a knitting machine, which caa knit 4lfty pairs of stockings in a day, and is so simple that a child can manage it. AN Ohio editor has received a. cake of su gar made from the sap of the black wnhmt tree. Be prcinounces it superior to maple sugar. Hzavr rains have knocked from theipeac.h trees in Delaware, a very large percentage of the fruit, and prices have stiffened in, conse qence. IT is hoped that the parties recently detec ted in stealing property of the State from the Capitol at Harrisburg, will be prosecuted, and punished. Gaartirms J. PENN, the last direct descen dant of 'Midair' Penn, died recently, in Eng land. He visited this country some years ago, and was warmly welcomed. IN Troy, N. Y., a servant girl, who was carrying an infant in her arms in the street, fell, the child's nose striking on an iron hoop, by which that organ was completely divided. AT the recent trial of reaping and mowing machines near Paris, the American machines worked better and faster than their English, French, or Spanish competitors. Jour( Hurrea, a colored man, has received the appointment of Postmaster at St. Marks, Fla., in pursuance of the request of all the principal citizens. TIIE deaths in the world are nearly 88,000 every year; or 8,600 per hour, 60 per minute, or about one person every second. The births are about 70 per minute, and the pop ulation grows. As armless negro in the Shenandoah valley writes an excellent "hand" with . his toes, loads and fires a pistol, shoots accurately with bow and arrow, threads a line needle and sews with it, &c. JUDGE Chase is said to have recently ex pressed the opinion, that Congress, at its next session, will promptly afford relief to the op pressed Union men of Maryland, by passing the Universal Suffrage bilL The Salt Lake Vide& thinks that, through the accession of population of the anti-mor mon character to the mining regions in the close neighborhood of that city, the remain ing "relic of barbarism" will die of its own weight. Paz Pennsylvania Railroad Company has purchased a controlling interest in the Lack awanna and Bloomsburg railroad. The Phila delphia and Erie, and the Warren and Frank lin railroads are to be consolidated on the 9th of August. ORDNANCE Sergeant Morrison has just re enlisted in the regular army. He has been a soldier sixty-seven years, and for fifty years he has been connected with the American service. He is now eighty-two years of age, and has eharge of Fort Wolcott. A General Convention of Presbyterian Churches is to be held in Philadelphia, on the second Wednesday in September, at the call of the Reformed Presbyterian Church, to con sider the question of the union of the Presby terian Churches of the country. A MARBLE Monument, twenty feet high, is to be built over the grave of Gen. David B. Birney, in Woodland Cemetery, Philadelphia, and one in Doylestown, to cost $2,500, thirty five feet high, to the dead of the 104th regi ment. Le FArsrrs College has worthily bestowed the degree of L L. D., upon Hon. William Strong, Judge of the Supreme Court of this State. This year, we have bad the usual proportion of Doctorates, many of which are a positive discredit to the Institutions confer ring them. GAIL HAMILTON, in her new book, entitled "Wool Gathering," remarks that "a single fact will show how rapidly the course of em pire has taken its westward way. Only in 1840 there was but a single scho•l in Milwau kee, with twenty-five scholars; now there are three hundred lager beer shops!" TWENTY thousand Swiss women earn a comfortable living by watchmaking. They make the movements, and even mostly put them together. A few women are finishers. The English Women's Review says: "Geneva has refused to employ women, and totally lost the watch trade. Ncine of the so-called Gene va watches are made there,but in Neufchatel, where women have always been employed.!' T ot PoPs.—According to the Roman cor imp** of the Paris Liberte, the Pope, tioW"Vis 75th year, is by no means in so wok ' feeble a condition as some recent IsCeottoWhave represented him. The writer, Wider 4te of July 4, says : soda the Pope yesterday outside the An gelimph pate. He was on toot, accompanied by oge Obis camerieres. It gave me as much N I could dote keep up with him, he walked so rspidly. Everything about him shows ex trowilnary 'vigor, and the longest ceremonies notdid , exhaust him. He takes a walk every day on foot in the Pincio or outside the was." Tax Constitutional Convention of Meld , gatt has decided to extend the laws of the State over all its inhabitants, by taking the Indians into the community and admitting them to the suffrage. In adopting manhood suffrage they expressly included the Indians. A motion to exclude those who adhered to their tribal relations was decisively rejected; So was another to require a qualification of civilization or education, on the ground then it was impracticable in application, and that vo ting was the beat education for voting. - This removes all legal distinctions smog the in habitants of the State. It is a system which has not been before tried with the Indians.— They are excluded from our political commu nities, and yet our progress and our habitual disregard of their property rights left them no separate abiding place. Our Indian poli cy had no outcome but the extermination of the Indiana IN the Circuit Court of the United States for Maryland, Judge Giles recently decided a patent cue involving $200,000, in favor of Joseph H. Shireman, of York, and ether assignees of Mason, Fenwick and Lawrence, to whom was re-issued the patent originally granted to Harvey W. Sabin. An initmction was granted, perpetually restraining Rata Smedley, from infringing the horse hay rakes protected by the patent. The combination of an elastic spring tooth with a pram* bar, and of that again with. separate articulating joints far each tooth, forming a combination of three &imams, were shown to hare 'origi nated with Survey W. /Mini, whose model, filed in the Poing Oticis In 11150, clearly ex bibiteiltherkaudinstifledtberoasominwhich Abele combinations were spealiteany claimed. Sabin's claim as the inventor of an eye tooth,"behrhig . on the )1t wird& krasbissid• was Slab fay alib; 141014:-. 5:1 alettlefibleeSp le,xmatensoitiike apOurron. Ainuaut lattirOLD is theilirst parson vito Ilse applied for the benefit of the Bialtrupt Tea Cornwall branch of the Reading dr Co lumbia railroad is about being put under con tract. Mwrox E. Bamyss, of Taneytown, was arrested on the lot, in Baltimore, charged with eroding' mosey and other articles from his partner and brother, David Bhriver. The latter testified that this was not the former's first attempt to defraud him. He was com mitted for Court. Caialberhind. A. asTrutssAxs, having fifteen rattles at tached,was captured alive on Tuesday of last week, at Lewis', Cave, near Doubling Gap Springs. Tan road from ifeclutnicaburg northward to the Harrisburg and Carlisle turnpike, Is to be graded and macadamized ; proposal; to be received till 20th of August. Tax carriage and coach establiihment of Stouffer dc Kenaga, and the wagon maker's shop of Haney Stouffer, (with about 8,000 feet of seasoned lumber), wire burned in Shipper's, burg on the night of the ist. Supposed to have been set on fire—no insurance. Joan Duesky, of West Pennsboro' township narrowly escaped fetal injury on Monday of last week. While Cutting oats with a reaper, his horses became unmanageable, and he was thrown in front of the reaper, receiving a se vere wound in the thigh. Had he not been at once released' by on the knives would have cut him to pieces. Franklin. A Coatostry.—We were shown on Saturday last, by Mr. Geo. Minnich, a chicken with three eyes, two beaks and throats, and per fectly natural in all other respects. It was not hatched oat and was dead when. taken from the shell. It came from the fam of Mr. John P. Grove, in' Hamilton township.—Re pository. FRLIVELLN & Marshall College has confer red the degree of A. M. on Col. D. Watson Rowe of Green Castle. Tim Presbyterian church at Green Castle has been torn down to give room for a larger and handsomer building. The congregation Will temporarily worship', in the Lutheran church. _ • Tme corner-stone of the 11 eiv Lutheran church in Orrstown, is to tHi laid on Saturday, August 17th. Tin First National bank of Frederick has nude a six months' dividend of ten , per cent. Tax City banks have sued the City Corpo ration for two hundred thousand dollani, paid by them to Early in July, 1864, to save the city from destruction. Iris expected that the track of the Western Maryland railroad will be laid this year as far as Mechanicstown. Mr. Gitt is now surveying the routes west of that point. The grading from Union Bridge to Mechanicstown, has been put under contract. Tait Colored men of the County are to cel ebrate Emancipation on the 91st of August, in Worman's woods, near Fitderiek. Lebaiwn. JICHILVIAS Haman, Esq., a lawyer of Leb anon, and Democratic candidate for the State Senate in 1866, was, on Sunday of last week, thrown from his carriage about twenty feet by the factiousness of his horse and died the fol lowing day. Nortkonaptoe. TR: friends of Lafayette College hive de termined to try to raise an additional endow ment of $200,000. Thomas Beaver and Wm. Adamson had enbectibed $lO,OOO each, and Er. Pardee $BO,OOO, on" condition that the whole amount be made up within the year. Tss Republicans of Perry have nominated Joseph W. Frank for Assembly,. and the Demo crate John Shively for Assembly. Perry and Franklin compose the District. Our old friend Judge Baker is the nominee for Asso ciate Judge. We will chronicle his election with pleasure. Washthrton. HENRY Cl.sr Ham. of Clear Spring, has been appointed a cadet to West Point. Jsmits A. Alma* has obtained the contract for building the Hagerstown & Cross Roads turnpike, at $12,600. 14.Airrm SPECK, near' Leitersburg, obtained eighteen sheaves ofl wheat from a quart of seed obtained last fall from the Commissioner of Agriculture. AN attempt was made to fire the barn of John C. Ankedney, near Chewsville, on the night of the 23 ult. A OOMP4.NT with a capital of $50,000, has been organized to carry on the Tanning busi ness extensively in Hagerstown. York. IttAsoN Bela; a lad of about 12 years, was drowned while bathing in the Susquehanna, about Ave miles from Wrightsville, on Sun day, theilfith of July.. Tax Wrightsville Star says that the Penn sylvania rail oad company have before them plans and proposals for building the Columbia Bridge; but no contract has yet been made. Tax 11th of August will be the semi-Centa nary of the establishment of Sabbath Schools, in Yoilt county, and the varionii Pastors are requested to preach a Sabbath school sermon. A mans number of new houses are in course of erection in York. Mrs. George Bowman, near Hanover, re cently hearing a man trying with an axe to force his way into the house seized a loaded gun and Pod at binr. He at once left Lv a recent meeting Of St. Mark's (Luther ran) congregation in Hanover, respecting the Az:Winnows of Rev. M. J. Allman as Pastor, 92 votes were cast in the affirmative and 40 in the negative. Ten Hanover Spectator states that John Regosill, Req.,of Heidelberg township, though 97 years old, followed in the grain field, for nearly two entire day., a reaping machine, successfully binding the go:den sheaves as they fell in a broad swath before the machine, and never for a moment lagging behind or lo sing an inch of ground, although the heat was intense—the thermometer standing at 95 deg. in toe shade at the time. The old veteran stood it better than some young men who were working alongside of him. Nu m all the farms in Seven Valley, for a distance of five 'or *six miles, and clean through that narrow Valley, along the Nor them Central railroad in Heidelberg township, have been leased Air mining for iron ore.-- On &Mammies bill, where a switch hes hes hew constructed fairly a half a mile in length, connecting the or 9 bank with the Han over Junction railrohd, the supply seems to be inexhaustible. Ore abounds on almost every plantation in this exceedingly fertile Valley, het in many places it Heti too deep to render the rasing of it profitable. Yet the owners ailed of these properties will vote this fall for Quo. finis/Swoon, in= avowed ffee-trader whom! , 'Polley is to ortooilifolOtOiiia Produ cers, and to shut up the home market. TniHarper l oteekeire property et e Ferry, of Hon's 1134 01 4uottog of a large. :'•eot ten giotory, 4.0,1 , machine shop, iw ellb rittro oar mkt** . /c., besides the rataahphys. , Oda; yediltioS, the ;war, -ciilt.r , ..old *F . f)T4000; ,to J. a ropor doka f ahildila Afs r *Oro spit u d e id. `Oda' 4 ' 'is 'lS**.i - the isille 4 . 1 t the, " flan mi. war. , , Berk s. Carvell. Frederick Perry We are requested by the College au thorities to suggest to parents the impropri ety of allowing the children of the town to All the Church, during the various Com mencement exercises, to the exclusion of visitors, of the families . and friends of the speakers, and to the inconvenience of adults generally. This evil has been remedied, at some Institutions, by issuing cards of ad mission to the exercises. It is desired not to resort to this means here; and it is sup posed that a simple suggestion to parents will answer the purpose. PORTRAIT OF MR. STEVENS..—We have received from the agent, Mr. J. O Gammon, of York Springs, a copy of the engraved likeness of Hon. THADDEUS STE YEW; madly published by J. E. Barr & Co., of Lancaster. It is &superb picture, Wonderfully accurate as a likeness,and beau tifully executed on steel by Sartain. The friends and admirers of this great man, whose fame is as extensive as our civiliza tion, will be glad to have an opportunity of obtaining* portrait of him .so handsome and LAYING THE COINER STONE OF STEVENS - TrA JJ4—The addren of Hon. aIISSELL THAYER will be delivered et 4 o'clock on Thursday afternoon, in College Church. Immediately after its oenclusion, a Proostsion Will be formed and proceed to tbe site of Snavns HALL, when the ceremonies of laying iba Corner-stone will be pr o ceeded with. Prom Ilifar. TH4Taa's high reputation ibr scholium/Op and eloquence, an interest ing end speech may be ezpooted. aixxitutt re regret' to esy, not be present. Pad WzLzsair G. SM En, a son of D. M . Smyser, is a : , ed to the Paci.io Railrosa surviving exptition. gROPERTY SOLD:IIEOmm G tit Ns, Sr., Esq., recently sold to J. W. Gums, his farm in Cumberland rownshift, 140 acres, for $4,000 cash. COMMITTEEIefEETI G--. The members of the Republican Counts Committee, will please take note of the c a for a meeting on. the 19th inst. • TALL FLAX.—Mr. PETER prem. of Li berty township, has left at onr office s fine specimen of flax. It. is four feet three inches high, was sown in the middle of April, and* pulled on the 7th of July. INSURAI4CE.—We ask attention to the Farmers' and Merchants' Insurance Compa ny of York. This Is a prudently managed ,Company and insures at reasonable rates.—. Its advantages are fully set forth In the ad vertisement. Ing.,New counterfeit two dollar United States treasury notes are said to have recent ly been put in circulation. The imitation is said to be a good one and vigilance should therefore, be exercised in taking bills of that denomination. ;t4r7Capt. A. M. lIIINTER Of thief place, has been elected District Commander, for this county, of the Grand Army of the Republic. COl. JAMES G. ELDER is of Franklin, Capt. W. IL Lanus of York, and Gen'l JOHN W GeAriv of Dauphin. Amanda Muinnoart. near New Oxford, received 80MOsevo . ro brni sea, a few days ago, in falling frinu a horse rake, oceasioned by the frightening of the horse. We are glad to learn tivit her mph! ries are not of a serious nature. I'IC NICS appear to be "all the rage."— That in Freedom, township will come off on Saturday, the 10th; one near East Berlin, on We same day; that at Cashtown Springs on Saturday the 24th. .On the 15th, there is to Le one near Hanover, at llnt.Lza's woods. SABBATH SCHOOL PIC NlC.—The an nual Pic Nic of the Ger. Reformed Sabbath School came off at Spangler's Springl,. or. Fri day. A number of the families uonueeted with the congregation participated, thus nit: - king the number unusually large. The eay was of course pleasantly spent. CONCERT.—It will be observed that the Germania Orchestra of Philadelphia, will give a Concert in Christ's Church, to-morrow, (Tli tiredly) evening, beginning at 7; o'clock, Tickets 50 cents, to be had at the storm. An agreeable entertainment may be expected, and we trust our citizens will make it a ?MC- PASTORAL CALL.—The Presbyterian Congregation have unanimously given a mill to Rev. Prof. EDSALL FERRIER to be their pastor at a salary of !SOO and the use of the Manse. RG. :WC:READY, Esq., was appoin ted Colnusioner to represent the Congre gation before the Carli;,le Presbytery at its next meeting. SUDDEN DEATH.—A few weeks :kg,c..l eon of Andrew Smith, near ISortaughtimr , . died very suddenly. At live o'clock in ii evening he was in his usual health, ac•.: • - nine was a corpse. Two physicians wort . attendance, Who did everything p3ssibi. the sufferer, but without avail. It i , said that they pronounced the disease choker-s. TEMPERANCE MEETING.—Rey. G. D. Chenoweth, Corresponding Secretary of the State L'uion Temperance Society of Penusyl vania, will hold a Convention on Tuesday, August 13th, in the Methodist Church, Gettysburg, at o'clock P. M. A represen tation of all the Temperance Organizations of the County is requested. ANOTHER ACCIDENT,.—Wo recorded some weeks ago, an accident which befell Mr. A. MansHALL, of Straban township,--his• falling from a cherry tree and breaking his jaw bone. Another amident, of a painful nature also, has since happened in the same family. A son of Mr. M's. fell from a horse, and broke an arm. Medical aid Wh at once had, and the boy is doing well. - The children of the Bridcsburg Or phans' Home, nearly 100 in all, celebrated onthe 30th, the fourth anniversary of the establishment of that institution. Several Addresses were delivered, and the children, under the careful tuition of their teacher, Mr. ROBERT A. LrrrLE of this place, acquit ted themselves handsomely in their excer cises. GERMAN PIC NlC.—The Pie Nis at Wolf's Spring, on Wednesday, was quite a success. The number in attendant* was large, running up in the hundreds in the af ternoon. Our German friends—young and old, men, women and children—enjoyed themselves finely, and regretted the short ness of the day. The principal amusement was dancing, which was kept up with much spirit until the close of the Plc Nic. ANNITERSARY OF EMANCIPATION. —The colored citizens of this place and the neighborhood celebrated the anniversary of emancipation in the West Indies, on the Ist of August, at WOLF'S Spring. They marched to and from the grounds in procession, car rying the U. S. flag. They pent the day, and were addressed by Rev. Mr. GREEN, AARON RUSSELL, LLOYD WATTS, NATHAN WATTS and NELSON MATTHEWS. . TO THE HOLDERS OF SEVEN-THIR TY NOTES.—Parties who hold United States 7-30 notes should take notice that they have only until August 15 to present them to the Treasury Department for convertion into 5-20 bands. After that time the Depart ment will hold that the holders of 7-30's have elected to be paid rather than convert the notes, and the government will then proceed to pay oil the unconverted balance. This only appliee to notes due . In 1887. tom Rat the Star and Sentinel. eit4LOGFY.—Ne. I. Viagra. Narrows :--The progress of geol ogy Within the last quargpr of a century, is unparalleled In the history of Science. But a few years eine., and an individual could not be found in the American Republic, who was acquainted with our most common rooks, or with the general structure of the earth ; now, it is not uncommon toiled mem bers of infant schools familiar with the names, the properties and uses of nearly ali the rocks, and the most useful ores. The time is cer tainly near, when geology will be generally considered as elementary and as necessary as its sister science geography, and moreim portant than the theory of grammar. I have only found out the use of geology since I have had something to do with our moun tains. The practice of using Some small manual on geology as a book for reading lessons in schools,.which is now becoming common, has already produced results decidedly bene cialtand not less on the highly important and miserably defective art of reading, than on the progress of science. No fact is more fully proved by experience, than that one of the beet modes of improving the character of reading In schools, woulu be to substitute books of science, and of ura3ftil knowledge, generally, for the collection of scraps found in all our schoolbooks for reading, and some manual on geology as one of the lint. Tlids science treats of things around us and under our feet, and of course leads children to 136- serve, to examine, and to collect specimens in illustration of their reading lessons in school or at home, if those lessons relate to some subject. Connected with the science of geology. various arta have progressed with a rapidity which would otherwise have been impossi ble. Agriculture, Civil Engineering, and various manufactures, have received an aid and a stimulus from the progress of geologi cal science, which has opened many new scources of wealth, while it has added greatly to the success of those before resorted to. A farmer in Maryland, a few years ago. sold a lot of land for a thousand dollars. which but for the discoveries made upon it by geologists, was not valued at a hundred dollars. By the application of marl, dis covered in the progress of geology, many farms, both in Maryland and New Jersey. have been rendered highly productive. which before were not worth r•ultirating or fencing. Copperas, chrome yellow, epsocu salts. alum and many other ingredients essential in the arts, are now made from materials collected from our own bills, mountains, and valleys ; and of course a good quality, and at so cheap a rate, as wholly to stop the impor tation, of those articles. Chrome yellow has been reduced in price greatly. Copperas. which itivade almost spontaneously from a material found in exhaustless abundance, in various parts of our country, has become 160 cheap, that the expense of getting,it to market is equal to that of manufacturing. A mere list of articles recognized as the fruits of science, would swell an essay on the subject beyond a proper length. MAGNET. GETTYSBURG BUSINESS DIRECTORY. ATTULNIT9 AT We. R. G. McCreary, York street, in residence. D. 31cConaugliy, Chambersburg street, in residence D. Willa, on Public Square, in residence. A. J. Cover, Baltimore street, in residence. Buehler, Baltimore street, in residence. • 1113.3126. J. W. Tipt..m, N. $. u.r. Public Squarc Norport it Ziegler, Washington et. near Chamberahnrg CONFECTIoNS,ICS CREAN, TOTE,IC. liphraitu Minn gb, Chambershorg rt., opposite Christ's Church; John Gruel. Cliambersbnrg street, nest to Eagle Hotel. J. u. Warner, Baltimore street, Bret square. M. Gilbert, Baltimore s treet, secotui square. CALPISTias IND COrriticruas. Km. C. Stallionith. York Street, first square. W. Chritzman, Wont strew, mar Chamborsburg Cantu:lan k Rowe, Baltimore strcet, third square. CALILIAGLS, AC. Daurior k Ziegler, Middle street, near Baltimore. Tate k Cuip, Waahlngtou at., near Cbambereburg. CLOTHING. W. T. King, York et_, opposite Bank. F. B. Picking, Baltimore street, first aquere. T. C. Norris. Chambersburg street, first gainers. Jacobs & Br.itlier,Cherubereburg street, first square. Jacob Briukerhoff, corner of York and Pubic Square, Colt, LOUIS, LISS, SO.. C. B. Buehler, corner of Carlisle and Railroad street Jacob She'd; on R tilroad. Weal of Stratton. Guinn & Reilly, corner of Stratton and Railroad. J. L. Hill, CLambersborg, street, opposite Eagle Hotel A. L. Buehler, Chambarsburg st., near Public. Square. J. S. Forney, Baltimore street. Aryl impure. R. Horner, Chambersburg et., opposite Christ's Church Fahnestock Brothers, tor. of Baltimore and Middle stn. J. L. Schick, cor. Baltimore and Public Square. Row k Woods, corner York and Public Square. Duphorn k Hoffman, car. Carlisle and Public Square. Hebert I Elliot, Balt. st.. opposite the C,oort.honae. A. Scott a Sons, cor. Chambeisbu g and Washington sts. ?Oka! OCNDIST. Bringman k W , est street. David Sterner, est street. 4 FORWARDING AND COWIIISSION HOUSER. Culp k Rarnahaw, eon Washington and Railroad W.F. Biddle & Co., cor. /Unman and Railroad. McCurdy k HamUton, Cattalo Street. G10CT.21115, I. M. Swan, cor. Charobersburg and Public Square. Wm. Boyer k Son, York et., opposite National Bank. Meals & Brea, Middle street, east of Washington. Henry Overdeer, Baltimore et., third square. Win. J. Martin, cur. of Baltimore and High streets. Hendricks & Warren, York street, first square. S. M. Gilbert, Baltimore street, second square. lahnestock Brothers, car. Baltimore and Middle streets. Culp L . Rarnshem,cor. Washington and Railroad streets. W. E. Biddle & Co, cor. Stratton and Railroad streets. IleCTlrdy k Hamilton, Carlisle st. PLLIDWLEZ /ND CUTLIZIT. Danner'k Ziegler, Baltimore street, Ann, square. Fahneetock Brothers, corner Baltimore end Middle etre D McCreary k Bon, Baltimore et. °pp:mite Prue Church J. M. Rowe, Baltimore strut, third squire. HATS, CaPtil VISA AC. S. S. McCreary. Charobersburg street, first square. Nowt Woods, corner of York arrest, and Public Square. Jacob Brinkerhoff; corner of York et., and Public Square T. 0. Norris, Chautberiburg street, first square. Ea g le Hotel, J. L. Tata, proprietor, corner Clouuboraborg and Washington. Keystone Rouse, W. I. ?kers, proprietor, Chambereburg atri et, opposite Christ's Chirch. uviar swum N. Weaver, Washington et., north of Hharabersburg. T. T. Tate, Washington et., near BAgle Hotel. John Cannon, corner otßalthnore and Middle atroets Medi Brother, York mt., oast of Stratton. ,4 J• Tyson, York, 'treat, opposite National Batik 'beti ?damper, Baltimore it, drat square. J.W. C. O'Neal, Haitian drag, near High estenne °m at. • r Sestiew; Batinure et, =Wen* , between the Court , Rouse and Pnblic Squere, west Able. noirsaotriwais, ac, C.R. Budder, corker of Carnal' arid Railroad. O.Cook, York it., awl) , oppadto the National Rank CHANCE FOR SOME ONE ! A FIRST-CLASS SEWING MACHINE, And a Life Seholarship,in Bryan, Strut. BUSINESS COLLEGE, WORTHSSO, GIVEN AWAY! WE will present to anybody . sending us 30 NEW SUBSCRIBERS to the "Smut AND Sarrruom," one of Fini=yon's di ' , first class Family Sewing worth $6O, and considered one of the 'best in the ooun trY• To anybody sending 25 NEW SUB !I SCRIBERS, we will pr t a Life Scholar ship, available in any of li an's, Stratton At Kimbeily's Business Coll as, worth eao. Names may be sent in at once, and if the reqUired number cannot be obtained, the person sending will be peid FIFTY CENTS i n Cash for every One receiyed. Those who intend to compete f ar. Untie Premiums, will say so, when tiendingin Ole first name, that i p l yr tha record ,n2o,ybp,inado. „no rACe.at suliipadplloll (*00 ) must so tam y every RES* (&L d dreriiJemenit.l I= E 2213 I= DAT GOODS 1111CYr&S, IC ECM I . i I IA •fl PHT3ICLLY Finkle & Lyon's WO.RTH $60., ~ tan t Klmbewirs ITOUST 7,1867. [Prom the Hagerstown Hail.] WONDERFUL! WONDERFUL ! I—Dr. J. Valentine cures in most cases, instanta neously by the LAYING ON OF . HANENS. Has been performing cures in Martinsburg, Frederick City and Hagerstown that bare .41 , seemed miraculous. Will be in Gettysburio from 6th to 14th of August. Roomsat Eagle . Hotel. Many persons that were considered incurable e .have been instantly cured. The Poor Treated Free of Charge, Others according to Ability. Dr. Valentine's practice is mostly diseases given up as incurable. Having been in Carlisle, Mechanicsburg and York, performing cures that seemed al most miraculous. His treatment 'is peculiar to himself al though there have been men in ages who have had the same magnetic power over dis eases of the body and mind (the "Gift of Healing;") yet few have seemed to possess it to such an extent over nearly all diseases and lessons. It is life and vitality passed from a strong, healthyi body, to a weak one, that restores the lost or unequal circulation of the vital or nervous fluid.. So powerful is this influence, that persons who have many,. years suffered from diseases which have been pronounced incurable, and to whom medicine has been adminstered with no good effect, have been restored to :health in an almost incredibly short space- of time..f— It will not reStore a lost member of the bo dy or perierin other impossibilities, but it - will (flivayA paiwf from whatever cau s e. The practice is in harmony with all natural laws. Many eminent physicians of every other practice not only acknowledge this Power, but i•eceive the treatment for themselves and families, as well as to advise it to their patients. The Dr. gives no medi cine and causes no pain. By this treatment it takes but a few minutes for inveterate cases of almost any curable chronic disestsl . —and so sure is the effect, that but few dilr l eases require a second operation. Paralv- Nis is slow and uncertain sometimes, though rarely, them • patients have been fully resto red with one operation ; they are, however. always bonetitted. Dr. Valentino will be in Hanover from the 14th to the lith of August. It. THE MEA_NS ehpuid be raised for such an object as educating the orphans of our gallant soldier, and sailors within one month. Lei all who are able respond, and it mighl be done in a week. Let all who have n•. disposition for charity, but simply want to purchase pictai - ea and want to purchase wberelhey can be had for the least money, buy of the Washington Library COmmittee of Philadelphia., and more than enough might be realized in a very short time. [Aug. 7.-2 t THE PLAN of. the Washington Library Association of Philadelphia is to offer to the public an interest in a charitable institution by offering stock iu shares of one dollar, for which a certificate is given with an engrav ing fully worth the money paid. As a still further inducement to have the shares taken up rapidly, every stockholder is promised a present of some value in addition to his stock certificate and picture. The funds thus se cured by the sale of stock are deposited with Messrs. GEORGE A. CooKE a. Co., Bankers, No. 33 South Third Street, Philadelphia, to be by them applied to the object in view. A charitable public institution thus receives the benefit, and not a private individual. Read advertisement. [Aug. 7.-2 t IM=ll=l "To be or not to be—that's the question." Whether to suffer with mental anguish, Feverish lips, cracking pains, tlyspestic agonies,' And nameless bodily suffering; Or whether, wl h sudden dash, Seize a bottle of 'LANTATION BITTERS, And, as Garai er swears, be myself a man again. Gunther said my eyes were sallow, My visage haggard, my breathing tremsn dour bad -L- My disposition troublesome—in fact, -He gently hinted I was fast Lemming Qiite a nuisance. Four bottles now beneath my vest have dis appeared, My food has relish, my appetite is keen, My step elastic, my mind brilliant., and Nine pounds, avoirdupois, is added is my weight. MAGNO.C.LA WATER.-A delightful toilet article—superior to Cologne and at half the Aug. 7.-2 t price A SIICCGEST/ON.—Before making up their list of books for the Fall Schools, teach ers are advised to examine 1,1. - AcKENaos's new Arithmetics, which seem to possess features of decided and superior merit. They are being extensively introduced, and are commended in the strongest terms by some of our best teachers who have used them.— The Publishers, D. APPLETON at CO., of New York, want a local agent in evory county to work for these Arithmetics, and offer liberal- terms THE INDIAN DOCTOR, desiring tolocate himself within the reach of many who need his professional servi ce s, has engaged rooms at the house of FREDERICK SNYDER, or, the Emtnittsburg road, two miles below Henley, at the cross-roads leading from Taneytown to the Two Taverns, in Motmtjoy township Adams county, Pa.. where he will remain from Wednesday, August 7, until Monday, August 12. FOUND AT LAST, a remedy that not only' relieves, but cures that enemy of mankind, Consumption, as well as the numerous satel lites which revolve around it in the shape of Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Sore Throat, In fluenza, do. The remedy we allude to is Dr. WDSTA.II'B BALSAM OF WILD CUEBBY, pre pared by SETH W. Fowi.r. it Sox, Boston. Aug. L-It FLY-NETS.---The largest and cheapest lot of black leather fly nets, light, for buggy use, on hand and for sale very low for cash. 7 different varieties. Call and see them at the Saddlery and Harness establishment of DAVID MCCREARY & 801.7. `Why longer delay when yon can have your Photographs taken at titaissrmt's New Gallery, Hanover, equal to any in the world and warranted to please, and never fade, or change color. ; [July 31.-2 t REMEMBER that Dr. C. M. Arnold has located permanently in Gettysburg, and will respond promptly to all professional calls.— Office on Baltimore street, near High. Its WE CIEMIENGE THE WORLD to pro duce anything equal to "Barrett's Hair Re storative," which took the Medal. It. FOR : SALE.—A. small two-story Dwel ling House on Chambersburg street. For further particulars inquire st this aloe. * The "Sentinel" Books having been closed a settlement of the accounts is expected.—l therefore, ask of all those indebted to me for subscription, advertising, ac., to call with me and arranges settlement of their accounts.— My books are at the old office of the Sentinel R. G. HARPER. Gettysburg, May 29, 1867.-If 'The death drift Ilichwairr, and change. In the Proprietorship of the Sear, renders ft necessary that art arresuages fiw subscritsion, advertising and job work, be closed, up, with., out unnecessary delay. Each enbecriber can ascertain the amount of indebtedness on sub scription, by reference to the printed sip, iii dicadng the date to which he Iris paid. Tar , ties knowing themselves indebtedn►rtl passe Inward at once the amount due to - the under. signed. D. A. BMCButa, Mmlidetrator of Estate ofJ. T. Mollhesal district Oi 1 framework of mine in the n' ny,%.gave way,• . trable maaa.df depth of about top. -At the . !. tired and two porters of 1 bottom ail* calculated fok the date of-cair where the fail was such a iti • standing.en it. - the most avail. conviction tha. enough to save cued, as it, • we're doomed . fresh air. On. E ly fur nerteral weeks iota I 1 u , tuti sevaral Kethedlat . , calving any reHeri u W 1 (acted a ape-ily Itid per. • happy to certify any mall' Y?cuil II Onk OS The COhnkii pers are Ailed eat dttister reach the' I .• • process were:, plan was dye v(!51 could be e • two feet la .1. the obstnictio. Among the de s' one of'whom ...` dren. The are descri bed as, lel. One hurid filled the air wi the superintend , negligence the d . people, coultdon bed by his sudde ill IVISTAR'S I (ough.s,Aids, Dr , ugh, (lum py, nud .li.ea•cm of the thr. hAtigultblis clinuitto fortunate ettougltio in. purtautthearto Cvl4.lpllaill o" , :star'S Babas% te. hortver tuuth utt he. (4:1.!! . t . • was cried 4 k for soy lag , nut produce lountelf. Ou the nieritx, I procured it lun. with %bathe pby Ie to be tumble toll, end raisin • giv lug the Italousine with i ;AM/MA{od' t 4, tin ued g reins iti ohs ,ciwied coughing The filth bottle enttr • that which immoral P Pr.psred. by strit Horton. and for rte h • 7, 13tri..-101. IRMO ently it penutcat plioving nutttrers A 11 wound t a it heats C tits, BUrisS, from ruplimts, Alibi! • e kilts lose each et 5 A o'l. suds Ma es.A. A 11 to its .trosultem L et tbuedintio dein • V erily, then It• Mt t: 'en unbeliever* %ug. 7, 1887.-lln CotiSUALPTION' To CURB COMIC !wed 60 that the lee the liver and stomach.. petite created f..r good medicines will be dips blo,el made; thus bu SIANDR of ell bilione or • • •• • the Sea Weed Tonic In SCHENCK'S EULIII' a, medicinal, end. by purities areexpelledl+,• come blood, made. irbi tient.; will take.theee Con •II inptiod imp ft readily to their &silo cleanse the User 41 et beraase the bowl:agate for sometimes in Oa et must be kept to sii.iw the Palmist's organs properly and al i • r,17.11 1.1 , perfini a tr4ing cool. Ezerefge cat all tbrriehies (set, anythinF the tippe rit,,tiCaloo well. Is A iertAin 81..1 KIDXgI - 8. IrE.IKNESS, FNMA *ml All clistaisi of ibr lY . , vi,ther exietfryg in ' al whatever daufie m IP i,.axe n - of 44(19 4 . Ii no lreat unlit Los ..,ty may mums. Cipx the 90nrcei. and 111kALtEl I r Ilepen rf In. ty. • 11Eb1 BOLD' •a I ed niTartbsgt 1 16441/4 9S, 1867.-1 y HEI.NIBOLD'e EXTU WA, it c ureeseerin amid nt little expeosil, littler° inrr and no expkure. emmeiliate In its saplin, per [lel. Th., . Gl4.lllibioit the Bible Exatiptiner,p7 medicalcortiliclott 4.312, of :. , criifult4, .04 d ••We publ,ll thisstatezu to Gud who bu answered kndere : being ealtlitled t • Witter tr.sainstit. wbkh ,111 thank its Editor Circulars tree. Dr. If. Anders' lodine MOltr. Proprietur, 381hy J 1 bti7.—ltti TO OQ.ZI adrertlver,haelteg *seta by a rery .im p 1d f.r. several yeurs with p dread diflellio COMIC= • • W his fellowanforers 4 To all who deliirsi • In, licription used (inkier preparing and us= m scat c" kw COS Cocoas, and all Throat object of the advertiser benefit the aillietwi, conceives to be it:lantana will try his remedy, Spir I luny prove a blest tra wl l.utt, by return an id; Jnl/0 3, 1.967.-17 GRAMS 31f. Grace—Dear I certify to tlifttltitbfu NTII W. F(4t i t Sold all D June 50867. HELMBOLIVI3 CtENCLI - le the .G 11 Ia Use Greta • Both are prepared iiooo Chemistry, and KIP the le Fen.280.1861,1y A NEW P HAND PHA LON d PUA I ON'B PH A LON'S PIIALON.B PIIA.LON'S A 'Tina exquialte,ll . tilled (n um 166 sae 1,11:r. It. name. kfillitille BEWARR 0 AsK FOR PLIStt laLy IB6o,4oirtiff 'OLUATt ,t CO'S =l= :.•O.IP