14isttliantous. ARSH CREEK ANING MILL. undersigned has established a INGII.IIZons lihualtemeth,four nide' from , at which bewnl a te AND DOOR FRAMES, t OW SASH AND FRAMES, II RING, WisATHERBOARD/NO, • ash Boards, with everything dm nada at • and needed In the buildtri Ilse. Th e wilt•fti ways n op the al pr la imted, "vaglar bathes be and promptly attended to. Priam 6 lowest, and every effort made to adiOtEl• 002•1114 JOHN D. 'PFOUTZ. E RAILING, re (I nardsfor Stone Front/4 Iron Bedsteads, Wire for Sheep and Poultry Yards; Brass and Cloth, Stoves, Fenders, Screens for Coal, Sc. Heavy Crimped Cloth for Smirk Landscape Wire* Mr Windows, Sc.; Paper roe, Ornamental Wire Work, de. Every In by addressinr the manufacturers. M. k. SONS, No. 11 North Sixth at., Phila. TSBURG RAIL ROAD. NGE OF CONNECTIONS arter Mondiy, May 11th, 110, Pawn .' ill leave and arrive at Gettysburg, and action. a. follows: A&SIING ER TRAIN will leave Gettyibusi M., With passengers for York, Harrisburgi m, Baltimore, and the North and N eat, Ilanover Junction without change ofcars, . M., connecting with the Fast Line South, rthern Central Railway, and arriving at at 12 30,:n00n. Also, connecting with Mail Baltimore north, arriving in Bart isdnarg .M. Arrive at Gettysburg 12 30, P. M., •ngere from Harrisburg, York, Baltimore, •ngtou. PASSENGER TELLS will leave Gettys -45, P.M. arriving at Hanover Junction at connecti*with Mail train South. Arrive ore at I 20; P. M. Arrive at Gettysburg at with passengers from Philadelphia, liar , , dale North and West and also withpaasen- Baltimore and Washington' by the Put h, which leavesßaltlmore at 1210, noon. ers can leave Baltimore in the Mail train, 11.. and arrive in Gettysburg at 12 30, P. ..ve Baltimgre In the Past Line at 12 10, arrive in Gettysburg at 4 20, P. M. Ent e °foul either way, Tin: at Hanover Junes 11.31c0IIRDY, Buret. • • AND STREET CHEAP STORE, NEW YORK CITY. argcst and Chcapest Stock of RAW GOODS this - City, without doubt. Goods, Ribbons, Silks, Flowers, Parasols, Notions, Skirts, Dress and Cloak Trim and Fringes, all adder regular prices. balebone Corsete, at 50 eta., 75 cots., $l.OO, ,cheap. .lILLMERS SUPPLIED.-E 4 EDWARD RIDLEY, d 311.1 di and, 66, GS mid 70 Allen Fifth Bloch East from the Bowery. ISCB.--Za2 IGENTS WANTED SZIADO WS Ofc G REAT REBELLION. SING lisrllllug Adventures, Daring Deals, 'ug Exploits, end Marvelous EL:tapas, of rte and Detectives. peat, most compete and Intensely interest .kyet published, containing over 500 pages one \ etrgravings. Price only $2.75. Send r and term!. MIL Y t,?L'ARTO BIBLES, best edition pub• WILLIAM FLINT, Publisher, N‘l _6 S. Seventh, Philadelphia, Pa. • ne Custom Made TS AND SHOES FOR GENTLEMEN. LEADING STYLES on band or made to Friers fixed st LOW FIGURES. As Incur co Lid ‘‘lili instructions fur self mearuro- .n receipt of Post Office addrest WM. F. BARTLETT, S.uuth sixth at., alwye Chestnut PUILADELFIIIA 21 1ni.... -1 y E AND EFFICIENT AGENTS WANTED, IX THIS COCNTI" FOR TILL MUTUAL LIFE INSCRA.NCE CO.VPAITF. I\O, wt thig C"niliany iloris,sonse advantages liar to Itself, A gertta are allordeal an easy and 1 method for bocu ring . risks. A liberal Cow aid to agents, alto must furnish trit-esme •A l irneea6,, D. S. G lopipepr. D— Ilenend 11.1r.-0 t• °lnn ;111 , rimat.elPuLa r Pa. •.—/ E-\ TS WANTED COMLIEGI open Sewing Machine,:; Nine is sold complete with table for°Ai' far , It makes the celebrated 44. ;; LASTIC LOCK STITCH, ~. op or four motion feed need by all ff4at-claat 4 It nil! hem, fell, tuck, cord, gather, guil‘, Ider, and do every variety of work th4.' on any other machine. Wo warrant Wit - be the beet in the world. It baa been de.'" eo by the best Judges to bo found, and [met gold medal. over one hundred and competitors, nt Parif. We will give • rant ee to that affect. ith stamp, J. P. 01INE, General Agent, 9j2. Chestnut st., Philadelphia. Jkey 6.--6tu =EMI ce to Capitalists I S desiring of investing, and realizing NINE PER CENT., are requeeted to burziVationa! Bank , BTAIN CIRCULARS 'OF THE ON PACIFIC AN D AIS 0 PACIFIC .RAILROAD 009. GRATIS! truants are daily growing in faTor and can be had at all time* at this Bank II information concerning said invest cheerfully given. ..-tf J. EMORY BAIR, Cashier. ETTYSBURG TONAL BANK. NT BONDS, of all kinds, BOUGHT and SOLD. TYBONDS. converted intoFIVETWEN TY BONDS without charge. 17ND INTEREST NOTES CASHED. 7 PREMIUM paid on GOLD andSILVSR. ' BONDS. of all kinds, bought for persoas out CHARGING COMMISSION. ERS PROMPTLY EXECUTED. .PECIAL DEPOSITS odraneed 1 per cent. Via: I PERCENT. fort year, 4 PER CENT. for 6 months, 3 PER CENT. for 3 mouths. .Ing Information in regard to U. 8. Bonds, )f all kinds, are invited to giro lila call, give all Information cheerfully. J. EMORY BAIR, Cashier. g, Oct. :0, 1857-If ECM NATIONAL BANK TYSBURG, -PENNA., r the sale of the First Mortgage Pacific Rail Road. - T.GOLD INTEREST BONDS, uterest payable aeml-annaall7 at OUT necessary Information given GEO. ARNOLD, Cashier Nov.=. 1867..—tf NATIONAL BANK rysß URG WILL ALLOW :PECIAL DEPOSITS as Wows T. P2l AlqrtrM' 3 a, wax c, ox veer 620 IBONDS AB 1:180AL fret of ckargt; INTIMEST NOTES t COUPONS. or •ell STOCKS sod HONDA of of (tarp u Conaniasion, lad will at 111.0 HUT iltlo2 for LD MID SILVER, re araamsat aIV bulimia pryingly ao • to a well regulated Bank. ORO. ARNOLD, Nobler. OT. b 3107-tf 11.4.111 FM, iterInUMOIN a. avainza. I INAPAILINNIA AND NVILIDUDAII, B.C.:ignore rtreel t between the ciii.44./(11114 nialllo44, Gettysburg, As. TI RISB OF PUBLICATION: 'DIU STAR. ANTI BLNTIBIZI. In p111111.4ii.1 ertry Fri day morning, at $2.00 a year in advance ; of 1`2.60 Ij not pall within the -dear. No subiwriptions &aeon. tinned until all araaragaz are paid, union at the op• Lion of the pubilshera. ADVEITISEXIC.Cts are Inserted at reasousbie rates.— A liberal deductioi will be made to kersona adeecti. Sing by the quarter,hall Tear:or, year. Bpedal !Cal will be Inserted at special ratio, to be agreed upon. SiP-The circulation of the STAN AND Siarrtwn. Is one half larger than that ever attained by any newspaper I u Adams county; end, as an advertising medium, It cennot be excelled. JOB WOBI Of all kinds will bo promptly executed, and at fair rates. liand.bills, blanks, Cards, Pampla lots, ,In eery variety and style will be printed at abort notice. Terms groftsoional Maio, &r. DR. R. B. ELDERDICE, 15 AM:IOMM% to his friends, and the public, that he has returned to NBA/ SALEM, and resumed prem. tice. Office at the lintel. MeEmma:intim, P. O, Adams county, Pa. f DR. J. A. ARMSTRONG, Haring located at NEW SALEM, will attend to all branches of his protonic'', and will be too ad at his office when not profesaionally engaged AlclEmoursdrowx, P. o,l_ Adams want'', PAL I -11-. I R. D. M. ECKENRODE, having located at ILEIDLNREIBURG, offers he services to the public, nod hopes by strict attention to his pro fessioual drytits to merit a reasonable share of public patronage. [April :9.-40 n It. J. W. C. O'NRAL Ilan his Wilco at his residence in Baltimore Street, t we doors above the Compiler Office. Gettysburg, May 29, 1867. JOIIN LAWRENCE HILL, Den ' List, OfficeinChambereburg otreet, one door west of the Lutheran Church, nearly opposite Dr. It. Corner's Drug Store, where ho may tie found ready and willing to attend any case within the province of the Dentist Persons In want of full setsof teeth are invited to cell. [May 29,1867 DR. C. W. BENSON HAs itaSUMED the Practice of Medicine In LIT TLESTOWN, and offers his bervices to the public. Office at his house, corner of Lombard street and Foundry alley, near the Railroad. Special attention given to Skin Diseases. [Littlestown, N0N.13, 18137. DAVID WILLS, ATTORNEY AT LAl9,o*lce at biaremidencein the South-cast cor :or of Cent re Square. May 29,1867. CLAIM AGENCY.—The under- Aligned will attend to the collection of claims against the 11. S. Government, including Military Bounties, Back Pay, Pensions, Forage, to., either in the Court of Claims or before any of the Departments at Wuklngton. . _ R.O.McCREARY, 31... y 29,1867. A t ern ey atLaw,Gettyrburg,Pa J OS. 11. LEFEVER, ATTORNEY AT LAW LITTLZSTOWN, PA., Will promptly attend to Collections, Coneeyances, Writing of Deeds, Leases. dic., and all other business entrusted to his care. /kir - Office on Frederick etreet,et the office formerly Qrntipled by Dre. Shorb, Kinser and ?debiting. Mity 20, 1808.—ly* O. IeCONAUGHT, Attorneya and Counaellora. McCONSUGHY has associa .7 • ated JOIINkt KRAUTLE, Esq., htt the practice of the law, at his old office, one door west °lnt:iglu/JOH Drug store, Chambersburg street. Special attention giren to Suits, Collections and Settlement of Estates. All legal business, and claims to Pensions, Bounty, Back pay, and Damages against U. Stateikt all times, promptly and efficient ly attended to. Land warrants located. and choice Farms for sale, is lowa and other western Staten. (Nov. 27, 1567.-4.1 J. COVER, ATTORNEY AT • LAW, will promptly attend to collections and all of her Business animated to his care. . . . . °dice between Fahnestnek and Danner and Zieg are 'tures, Baltimore street, Gettynburg, Pa. May 29.1867• DAVID A. BUEHLER, ATTOR NEY VT VS', will promptly attend to collec tions and all other business entrusted to Lie cars. . . - 64-Office at hisresidonce in the threostory building opposite the Court House. [Gettysburg, Muy 29,1867 Auointoo Tardo. 01IN W. TIPTON, FASHION ABLE BARBER, North-East corner of the Diamond, next door to AfcClallatt's flotal,)Clettye bnrg,Pa. where he can at all times be foundready to atten d to hnsineetln his Ilne. Lie has also an oxcellents•startant and will insure sttlsfaction•— Gl•e him. all. May 29, 1867. • URVEYOR AND LICENSED CONVEYANCE& The undersigned, having ta ken out s Conveyancer's License, will, in connection with the office of COUNTY SUILVEYOB, attend to the SAT LNG OF DEEDS, BONDS,RELEASES,WILLS, ARTICLES OF AGREEMENT, CLERKING • • • • AL CIA 2 120 itanoe hadcouslderable expe:,:zoe in tbisline, be hoped to receive a liberal share of patrtmage. Bull ne.. prompt ly attended to and charger reasonable. Postoffice address Fairfield, Adams Co.; Pa. ' ' May 29, 1867.—tf Crarptuttro and Tontractors. G. C. CASII3IAN CARPENTERING. TflE undersigned respectfully in tuna the public that they have commenced the Carpenting in the Shop formerly occupied by Andrew Schick, York street. We are prepared to do any work in onr line of business and u reasonable u any other eatablishment in Clettyaburg We hope by a strict attention to business to merit • share of public patronage OABHILiN A ROWE May 29, 1887.-t 1 WM. C. STALLSMITH & SON, GETTYSBURG, 1"21., CARPENTERS & CONTRA(' MRS; ♦re prepared to do all kinds of Carpentering—contract- ing and erecting buildings of all kinds, Repairing, lc. They keep constantly on band and manufacture to order, DOORS, SHIITERS, BLINDS, SASH, DOOR AND WINDOW FRAMES, CORNICE, DOOR AND WIIiDOW BRACKETS, And any other Article In the Building Line Seasoned material constantly on band, experienced workmen alway► In roudlness, and work executed with dispatch .16. Orders promptly attended to WM. C. STALLBIgTH, a. 11. sTALLainvn Bept.lB, 1867e—tf TO THE BUILDING COMMUNI TY AND ALL OTHERS WHO WISH TO IMPROVE. THE undersigned respectfully in forms the public that he still continues the CARPENTERING BUSINFIZfi at his old stand, on West street, Gettysburg, and IS ready at all times to accommodate those wanting any thing done in his line. He is prepared to furnish all k Inds of work for building purposes, of the best ma terial, and as neatly and cheaply as it can be done at any other establishment in the county. Experienced Hands always in readiness and work executed with p romptneut and dispatch. neon receive favor", be hopes, by attention buitlnees to a liberal 'here of public. pat ronage. May 29.1867 ,fountirg. FARMERS, Attend to your Interests GETTYSBUR - G 7 FOUNDRY.' T R . el,,..a.,bisLritbbo.ri law %inform tu h geg Tari al ona ers kind d a of castings and &Nati nee, made to order, on short no tice,snoh ea THRESHERS AND Pow sae, ore different sizes of Powers,) CILOVELEEZD HUL LERS AND SEPARATORS, OORNIODDRR CUTTERS, STRAW AND HAY CITITERS; CORN PLANTERS: - - - • PL OL' ,11 , -duch all Cut Ploughs, Bushear Ploughs, Sidehlll and Corn Ploughs; the WIRE-SPRING HOME HAKE, the latest Improvement; also 61111,11111AN'O SZLY- DlBOl l / 1 1131t96 HORSE RAKE. Ile will Moyle manufacture MOWERS AND REAPER& M RTAL OCILEWB for Cider Presses, IRON HAILING or Cemeteries or. Porches, with Avorythlog Moo In hls hoe, all M low rata. FOR WA—A &whom War= IDAWD Aprlll6, 1110.-41 OX TUE ADAMS COUNTY AGRICULTURAL SO- On Tuesday, Weduesckly and Thursday September 22nd, 23rd and 241 h, 1868. July 17. -em Ccess No. 1. Stallions, Mores and Colts for 'teary Draught. Beat Stallion over 4 years— ............... —.............512 00 Second best do 5 00 1 Beat Stallion between 3 arid 4 years 000 Second beet do 3 00 I _llol4 Stallion bet ween 2 and 3 yeah 3 00 Beet Brood Mare 5 00 Beat nurse Colt between 2 and 3 years.— ........ 3 CO Best Mare C.•lt between 2 and 3 year 3 00 Best Colt between 1 and 2yeare 3 00 Rest Colt under 1 year.. 2 00 Cuss No 2. Blooded Stock. July 24. 1468.-tf Best Ste Mon over 4 years Second beet do Beet Stallion between 3 and 4 years ..... Second beet do Boot Stallion between 2 and 3 years Beet Horse Colt between 3 and 4 years. do do 2 and 3 years Be t Bores Colt between 1 and 2 years. Best Brood Mare over 4 years Best Mare between 3 and 4 years Best Stare between '2 and 3 years Best Mare between 1 and 2 years Beat Colt under 1 year Ciase No. 3. Quick Draught and Saddle. Best Stallion over 1 years Second beet do Best pair matched horses or ......... Best and Fastest norms or Mare for light Har ness owned In the county 25 00 Second beat do 15 00 Beat Family Horse or Mare for General Utility.. 10 00 Second best do do .. 5 00 Beet Saddle Horse or Mare 5 00 Fastest Waiting horse or Mare 5 00 Fastest Backer or Pacer 10 00 tie. A SPECIAL PILEALIcx of $lOO for tho fastest trot ting horse, mare or gelding, In hantems—best two in three miles—open to the world. $5 entrance fee is to be paid upon entering for this premium. ..The Fair Grounds will be open Ibr training of horses two weeks prior to the Fair. Cuss No. 4. Best team nurses, Aot less thou 4 Best team Mules, do Beet single Draught Horse or Mare s Beat Jack Best pair of Mole* over 3 years Best pair of Mules between 1 and 2 years— -- Best Mule Filly =am Beat Bull over 3 yearn Best do. between 2 and 3 ypan.... Beet do between 1 and 2 yearn. Beat Bull Calf under 1 year Best Cow over 3 years Second beet do. /lent Keller or Cow between 2 and 3 yearn Best Heifer between 1 and 2 yearn. Beet - Ilaifer CalL . Persons competing for Premiums for Blooded Cattle must give satisfactory assurance to the Committee of the parity of the stock, Premiums to be given fyr each of the following breeds— Durham, Devon, Ayrshire, Alderny, Teesaatar. Best Bull over 3 years 35 00 Best do. between 2 and 3 years 300 Beef do. Calf Yetween I and 2 yearn 2 00 Bost do. do. milder 1 year 200 Beat Cow over 3 years 5 00 Second beet do. 260 Best Heifer or Cow between 2 and 3 years. 3 OD Beat Helfer between 1 and 2 years-- 2 00 Best llei ler Calf uuder 1 year 1 00 Crass No. 7. Best pen of Sheep not less than 3.... Best pen of Lambs not less than 3. Best Buck over I year Beat Boar over 1 ......... Beat do. underl year Best Sow over 1 year Best do. under 1 year......... ~._... Beet pen of Shoat.; not le. than 3, Best pen of Pigs not leas than 3... Cuss No. S. POULTRY DEPARTMENT. Best coop Chickeas not less than 4...._... deeond beat do. do. --- Beat pair Chickens Beat do. Turkeys Beat do. Geese Best co.. Ducks. .................. .____—__ Bost do. ♦ .• • CLUB No. 9. MACHINERY & IMPLEMENT DEPARTMENT. Beet Farm Wagon *4 00 Best Horse Cart for farm Best Hay Carriage or Ladders. 2 00 Best Horse Reke 3 00 Bast Reaping and Mowing Machine 6 00 Best Mower 3 00 Best Separator*• 6 00 Bent Horse Power Thresher. 4 00 Beet Portable Hay Press 3 00 Beat Lime Spreader 3 00 Beat Corn Sheller 3 00 Beat Clover Huller 3 00 J. 13.WITITBROW DEEM Cuss No. 10. FARM IMPLEMENTS. Beet Fanning Best Corn Stock Cutter Beat Hay and Straw Cutter Beat Three Horse Plough Beet Two Hoi se Plough Best Subsoil Plough Beet Harrow Beat Corn Cultivator Beat Grain Drill Best Cern Planter Beat Cultivator for general purpuies... Best Broad cast Sower Best Roller for general use.... Best and largest collection exhibited by one person of Agricultural Implements, tube de— cided by the Managers ....... Cuss No. 11. FARM AND HOUSEHOLD IMPLEMENTS. Beet Butter Churn $1 00 Beet Milk Strainer Beet Washing Machine Best Grain Cradle Best Scythe and Swath ..... Best 6 Hand Rakes Beet 6 Hay Forks Beet Axe Beet Manure Forks Best Long Handle ...... -- Bee t Short Handle Shovel Best Spade Beet Corn floes Best Sett Horse Shoes Best Wire Tied Brooms ........ ..««..«... Best Twine Tied Brooms Best 6 Cora Bushel Baskets...... Beet Weighing Machine for general purposes.... 1 00 Best Portable Cider ...... 1 00 Beet 6 Flour Barrels-- ..... ........... ....... 1 00 Best Shingle and Stave Cutter ' 200 Best Shingle Cutter 1 00 Best Stave do . 1 00 Bert Bee Hive 1 00 Cues No. L 2. AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIONS Batt Barrel Family Flour, White Wheat Best Barrel Flour, Red Wheat Bost Barrel Flour Superfine Best Barrel Rye Flour Best 25 pounds Corn Meal. Rest 25 pounds Buckwheat Flour.---.. Best halt bushel White Wheat Best do. Red Wheat........ ............ Best do. White Corn Best do. Red Corn Bee do. Bye. Bret do. Oats. Beat do. 'Barley Best peck Timothy Seed...: Best do. Clover Seed Beat do. Buckwheat Best sample needy introduced Grain, valuable to the termer not less than half bushel.. CLASS No. 13. VEGETABLES. For the best half bushel of any earlety of Po • tatoes—each *1 0 Beet half Simnel Sweet Potatoes. 1 0 Best do. Turnips.-- 60 Beat do. Beets ......- ..... 50 Beet do. Rutabagas-- 50 Beet do. Carrots 60 Bestdo. Onions.- -.. ................. .._.....-.- 50 Best do. Parsnips 60 Best 5 stalks Celery 60 Beat 16 heads Cauliflower 60 Beat Uwe& Cabbage so Beet 12 Tomatoes - . . -.. . ..... .... .50 Best 3 largest BweatiMmpklns • 60 Beat 3 Field Pumpkins 50 Best 3 En Plants ... .. ------- 60 Best half peek Lima Beau 60 Beat S Garden Squashes 50 Cuss No. 14. FRUITS, WIN= AND CIDER. Beet and largest exhibition of Apples:correctly labelled, not less than Ave eqcimens each... $2 00 Beet specimen of Fall Apples, bu5heL........ 100 Beet specimen Winter Apples, ..bushel...—. 100 Best and largest collection of Pears, cerrectly labelled, not leis than S specimens each 2 00 Best assorted basket or dish of ...... 60 Best collection of Plums, 6of each ..... 60 Beet collection of Grapes, grown in the op..= Best specimen of 11 — usk ....... 50 Best specimen of 0ante1eup5......... ........ 50 East homemade Wines, not less than 6 kinds— 200 Best Catawba Wine.-- ...... 60 Beat Currant .......... 60 Bast Blackberry Wine... .. ..—. 50 Beet bottled Older, with the !node Wearing to keep sweet 1 year.... ...... 60 All Fruits exhibited must be « grown by the com • petitors, and the Judgeemay withhold premiums if Fruits of sufficient merit are not presented. WM. OURITZM AN CLUE No. 16. BUTTER., CHEESE, HONEY, HAMS, &c. Best 6 pounds 8utter............._ E 2 00 Beat Cheese 1 00 Beat Ham cured i 1.7 exhibitor— 1 00 Best pounds of 100 ail competitors for premiums we required to have their Hems cooked end brought to the exhibi- tion with the skins on, and also to give statement of the mode of curing, au. • Cum N 0.16. CARILLILGE, LBATBBIt 3 STOVE DEPARTMENT. Vnett Pelileasuttegr.toeOarriap ire.......--..... ....... ....... .. 34 00 Best P 1dage„.........«- .-----••••• a a° Beet Opetesop do. ...... ...... .... ••••••• 3 00 Bolt 3 Wag 00....-„.. . . .... -..—...........—. 00 Bad art Wa g e5k... ..............—...................... 2 00 la 8arne55............ ..... ..... 2 00 Best 3100 0 1 Ultrutst.,-- . .. ........ 3 00 Bad Warm Elution. •• BatWos Wad 6;sit ..» » ».» O3 twines, geari...... ........... it 0 03 0 Bort L 0 1 1 .010:Alk. ••••••beat ••• .. • ..... ••••••••......—....... 3 00 Salt Blltsi 111fflas 1 00 . . ; ~ ... „ „ ! : , :• • - -- - „, . , . , • , ..............._....._,_,..- ----...... .......... . . •• , , . -- --- N, I ~; • • - : ' \ ~ . 1 , \ ) ' 7.,,,,............ N5. : Nt -... ..- . -'7• ." ' • • t • -..\ i \ , • t- i , H ''•' • ' .-.• 11 , . . L ( r.,, L _ ~ . x ... ,o\li N . •.„,„„:\--:-----------)„.....ritt.--,.:',.....e VOL. LXVIII. NO. 42 gist of .'rtaxitisuo. SIXTH ANNUAL FAIR CIETY, AT GETTYSBURG, PREMIUM LIST HORSE AND MOLE DEPARTMENT CATTLE DEPARTIIINT. dells No. 5. Bloodal Chill& cues No. 6. Natire and Grade Cattle. Best Lot Sole Leather Best do. flatness do. Beat do. Upper do. Best do. Calf Skins Beat dressed Sheep Skins Best Cooking Stove, for Wood or Coal, Best Oas Stove Beet Ornamental Parlor 5t0ve..... :.... Best Drain Tile .Bast sample Iron CLASS No. tr. Best 15 yards woolen carpet Best 15 yards rag carpet-. ....... ... Best hearth rag ....... ..... .... .. . Best double coverlet..-- Best pair of woolen knit stockings Best pair half hose, woolem ...... Best pair lines stockings Best pair linen boss Beat pair to.ton stockings .......... -....-. Best pair half hose. cotton Best pair woolen Mitten, Best table corer Second boat, , Best petclowork quilt Second best " Third beet • " Best silk quilt Second beet - - Best delaine quilt Best counterpane Boat pair woolen blankets Second best Beat 10 yards home-made linen Best 10 yards linen diaper Best 10 yards tow Blau Bent home-made shirt Beat pound linen sewing thread CLASS No, 18 WORSTED WORN. Best general display of worsted work... Beet ottoman cover Best sofa cushion • Best worked reception chair...... Best pair worsted slippers Beet worsted lamp mat Best flower TAWS mat Best child's worsted worked dress Best child's afghan Best worsted tidy Best worsted breakfast shawl Best worsted toilet cushion 412 00 500 .. BCO CLABS No. 19. ESEBROIDERY AND FANCY WORK Beet knit quilt Beet embroidery on muslin Best embroidered skirt Beet silk slipper Best crochet tidy ........ ..... .... Beat lace shawl ... Best embroidered case pillow Beet embroidered handkerchief Beet embroidered child's cape Beet embroidered collar Best specimen of we's flowers Second beet • Beat hair flowers Best shell work Beet leather work Best button basket Beet bur basket Beet bead cushion....----... ......... ............... Beet bead basket Best work basket ..4 , 8 00 . 8 00 . 4 00 .500 .300 . 200 .100 Best home-made bread Second best Beat five loaves baker's bread Second beat Beat pound, sponge, fruit, Jelly, lady, Dover, gold, silver, marble, Madison, mruntain and cocoanut cake., each Beat ginger and sugar cakes, macaroons, Jum bles, milk, blacult, each 10 00 0 00 400 2 00 8 00 4 00 4 00 J 00 2 00 Best prenerred strawberries, quinces, plums, peaches, pine-apples, pears, appricots, toma toes, crab apples, cherries, citron &c., Best currant, qtrince,raspberry, apple, calf's. foot, bockleburry and peach Jelly, each Best brandy peaches Beat canned tomatoes, peaches, pears, corn, cherries, &c., each Best apple, peach, pear. quince and tomato but ter, each Best pickled cucumbers, peppery, tomatoes. can del.:lpr, plums, mired pickles, each Best tomato catsup CLASS No. 23. Greatest variety dahlia-a, roses, verbenas, each... 50 second best varieties dahlias, roses LO Beet varieties German eaten, pansies, collect ion of green-house plants, by ens parson, floral ornaments, each . Bast hand bottuet 50 Yor the most beautifully arranged basket of flowers—... Cum No. 24. MUSICAL /NSTII.UNIY—\T3 25 00 5 00 4 00 5 00 2 00 4 00 3 00 .. Boat piano Beat melodeon Best cabinet organ - • CABINET WARE AND lIOUSEIIOLD INVENTIONS Best variety of cabinet ware $2 00 Best sewing machine 2 00 Beat case cutlery, special premium For all inseutions and Improvements of lsousalsOld` utility, having salualile properties, and not Included ender any of the foregoing heads, discretionary pre mlume, or diplomas, may tie awarded.CL.L;NO. 16. -. 100 - . 100 i 00 ... 100 -. 100 Jx, EIATP, .BOarg Beat display of boots andahoos 1 00 Best display of men's clothing 1 00 Best display of *agars 1 00 Beet display of smoking and chewing tobaccos... 100 Best cigars made in the county ......................... 1 00 Cults No. 27. PAINTINGS, PENNHANSIIIP, &C. Best display of drawings and paintings ji 00 Best display of oil painting., drawn by a native .of Adams county Best water color painting Best crayon or pencil drawing Best displayWf photographs and ambrotypea. Best sign and ornamental painting Best marble work. Best pennmanship AIISCELLANEOCS ARTICLES $3 00 3 00 3 00 2 GO The Society invites the exhibition °fatly and every thing that may be useful or convenient in the practice of Agriculture or Horticulture, or be the product uf either; all articles and Implements of convenience or age in the domestic or social life, or of all the pro• ducts of art and skill, and for alisuch things of merit, although not enumerated Idllithe foregoing list, pre miums or diplomas may be awarded. ... 200 - 200 .. 400 - 2 00 .. 200 .. 200 .. 200 RULES AND REGULATIONS. ill awardeo premiums hmallecl for,for thirty (Lull after the close of the Fair, shall be deemed donated to the Society. Premiums shall not be awarded when the animal or the article is deemed unworthy. AN articles must be marked with cards, a hick will furnished by . the Secretary, designating clan and number; and these cards must not be removed until after the Awarding Committees have finished their examinations. The lin:entire Committee will take every possible precaution for the safe keepi^g (gall articles on exhi bition, alter their arrival and arrangement, but the Society will not be responsible for any loss or damage that may occur. They desire exhibitors to give per sonal attention to their animals or articles, and at the close of the Pair attend to their do animal or article shall be taken out of the Hair Grounds without the leave of the President. Exhibitors are expected to obey the Marshals promptly in-producing their stock, when instructed to do so; and any person proving refractory will be ruled out from competing. No animal or article will be assigned A place on the .groonds until the entries are made, as the regulations of the Society require. Persons renting refreshments booths will not be permitted to sell intoxicating drinks. Amy person found intoxicated upon the Pair Grounds, or acting In a disorderly manner, shall be Immediate.. .ly ejected front the grounds. A prompt and severe example will be made of any fraudulent use of Admission Tickets. Any person attempting to interfere with the judges, In their adjudications, will bepremptly excluded from competition. Should any doubt erne as to the regularity of the entry or any other important matter which the com mittee feel Incompetent to decide, they may at once report the same to the President. .. 1 00 .. 1 00 - 1 00 $2 00 2 00 1 00 MEI 1 00 -. 100 ..- 200 2 00 1 00 ... 100 PRICES OF ADMISSION. . yard, Tickets, admitting man, wife,anmarried daughters, and minor eons, or one gentleman and lady, during the Fair.... 11 00 Footman, single admission Children under ten years of age...... . One man and horse,single admission One-horse buggy or pleasure vehicle, gentleman and lady single 75 Each additional person In them Two horse buggy orpleamire vehicle, gentleman and lady, single 'admission 1 00 Each additional person In them 25 Pleasure tickets, admitting man and horse du ring the Pair, in addition to family ticketa... 60 Pleasure tickets, admitting one-horse baggy or pleasure venicle gentleman acd lady, during the Fair, In addition to family ticket 50 pi.eu c e tickets admitting two-horse buggy or pleasure vehicle, gentleman and lady during the Fair, in addition to Welly ticket 76 Applicants for pleasure tickets required to give evi dence that they have obtained family tickets. Pleasure admission tickets required to be tied to the right hand side of the horse's head, to avoid detention at the gate. Pleasure vehicles strictly required to keep upon the grotinos assigned them b,y the Board of Managers, and enter the Ring only at the times designated by the Marshal. ..... - 100 1 00 1 00 OFFICERS: SAMUEL lIERBST, President, WM. MCSIIMULT, Vice Preeldent, J. S. WITHZROW, E.G. Istuarroci, Recording Secretary, H. J. STAELX, Corresponding Secretary, D. Wssas, Treasurer, Managers—WY. B. WLL&M, iLISHA PlllllOB2, JoslB gotikylAßN. Wet, WLBLZ,JOI/ff IL MoCLru.A i. Chief hlarshal—Jorns BUZIERoLDIE. Aug. 11.-tt gardwart, guttery, &c. HARDA W RE AND 0 R 00 ERIE Tliganbscrlbershavolustrstarned from the cities with CD immense supply of HARDWARE & GRO CERIES, which they ars orating at thalrold stand In Baltlmorestrest, at prices to snit the tlmes.Our sto:k consists in part of Gary 's Tools Blacksmith's Tools, Coach finding 13h o e If lading, , Cabinet Maker's Tools, Ilaitsekeeparos Pt:tures ALLnd aired do: ORO CERIES OP ,D4' 011aPaints,de.,ste. Thereto noartiebalaeluded the several departments zaaatkuted above. bat what east he had at this Store. Every classed Ifiatwatcs can he aeomosodated here with teals mad Audio/pi, and Housekeepers can dad diary *Mohan their line. Givens &tall as we areprepared tosell as low agouti a s any° titer house eat ofthe JOEL 11. D4JtNZ& • Karla, lag • A LL lupe or 'Law, ccuilinspirso : R. surd lizipeqUitprievtlltdltulsausgs. azemptSon, Saanaosi, IlebpaiThe sad Iftiaillanl4 Male tbolkill AND caw pot of grtiniumo CLASS No. ai Ou.se :No. 21 CLASS No. 2'2. Cuss No. 25 Free == PrUllO, Vitditinto. HUBER'S DRUG STORE. - 100 100 . 100 ... 300 2 00 .. 100 Forney's old Stand—Baltimore Stree GETTYSBURG, PA. $2 00 HAVING purchased this old and popular Staod and laid In an entirely new and fresh Stock offer a fall assortment, consisting in part of ... 100 _ 100 DRUGS AND FAMILY MEDICINES PATENT MEDICINES—A LARGE ASSORTMENT. PURE LIQUORS & WINES FOR MEDICINAL PUR SPICES AND FLAVORING EXTRACTS. ROSES. DYES & DYESTUFFS—HOW A I-TEVENS' DYES.. EXCELSIOR DYES, AND THE ANILINE DYES,- THE CHEAPEST AND NEST IN THE MARKET. ALL THE NEW AND ELEGANT PERFUMES AND TOILET ARTICLES. COLO AT E'S, AND OTHER SUPERIOR SOAPS. FORNEY'S HORSE POWDERS—THE BEST AND CHEAPEST; ALSO, FOOTE'S, ELLS, DALE'S PERS! AN, STONE E II AK ER'S AND ROBERT'S. STATIONERY OF ALL KINDS. CIGAR-q, TOBACCO AND SNUFF—THE BEST BRANDS. PHYSICIANS' PRE , CRIPTIONS AND FAMILY RE CEIPTS CAREFULLY COMP'AINDED. PHYSICIANS AND COUNTRY MERCHANTS SUP PLIED AT REDUCED RATES. Medicines /urn ish.ci AT ALL 110U88 or tint pun wr.— .IVii/Al Bell of Use door. Alan I, 1668.—tf $2 00 100 1 00 I CO DR. JAMES CRESS, DRUGGIST, Store in Brant'd Building, Ballo. st., El 00 LITTLESTOWN. AVING opened a new DRUG m--A. STORE and fitted it up lu the best rule, I offer my stock of pure and freqii Drugs to the citizens of Llttlestowei and vicinity et the lowest market rates, modeling In pert of Drugi and Family Medicines, Pure Liquors for Afediciizal Purposes, Patent Oledieines, Horse $1 00 50 1 00 50 Powders, Pure Spites, Dye spd Dye SNITS, Perriuuery, Toilet Soaps airol fries. A full sistortment of Drushos,.Btotiouttry of rll kinds. citors, Tokscts.t cud Snuff. ANY - Moore's Electro-Magnetic Soap will wash, with hard or soft water, cold or warm. Clothes washed with this Soap are made beautifully white without boiling or Wooing. This is the best Fioap i.e use. Try It. It is warranted not to injure the hands or fabric. Littiestown, May 13.-1 y DR. R. HORNER, PHYSICIAN A .ND DRUGGIST Office and Drug Et-re, CHAMBERSBURO STREET GETTYSBURG Medical advice without charge CUM= DRUGS, MEDICINES, PATENT MEDICINES, STA TIONERY, PERFUMERY, SOAPS, BRUSU ES, TOIL ET ARTICLES, DYE STUFFS. SPICES, BAK ING SODA, CREAM OF TARTAR, LAMPS, COAL OIL, AC., AC. PURE LIQUORS for inc.:Drina! purposes. Dr. R. norner'd OLII;N, a reliablo remedy for chapped hands, rongh tr. $4OO 4 00 4W All articles warranted pure and genuine Jan 8, 1368.-tf A. D. BUEHLER, DRUG & BOCK STORE "ri utatbis L Jai ST ITtai St...lr the Iliattiond STATIONERY OF ALL KINDS, DI?(ICIS AND MEDICINES', 1 00 1 00 1 00 2 00 1 00 2 00 1 00 PERFUMERY AND TOILET SOAPS. ANY-COUNTRY 31:'11C11 ANT:. supplied at wholesale city prices. Feb. 12.—tf pads and gtstaurautO. _ • EAGLE HOTEL. The largest and must COMITICOIOIIII to OkTTYSELTRO, PE.NNA CORNER. OF CIIIMLEISSRUEII ATU Wl3lllllfotoll STRIXTE JOHN L. TATE, Proprietor —An Omnibus, for Passengers and Baggage, rani o the De- ot, on arrival and departure of kali Road Trains. Careful servants, and reasonablentlarfrims. May 29, 1867.—tt KEYSTONE HOTEL. GETTYAKBURG, PA WM. E. MYERS, PROPRIETOR NOW OPEN TIIIS is anew House, and hasbeen fitted up in the most approved style. Its location e pleasant and convenient, being In the most business portion of the town. Every arrange- meat has been made for the accommodation and com ort of gnosis, with 2 ample 'tabling attached. With experienced _servants, and accommodating Clerks, we shall use every endeavor to please. This hotel now open Ibr the entertainment of the public, and we kindly solicit a share of puhilepatrenege May 29, 1867. UNITED STATES HOTEL, I= N. Y. & NEW HAVEN & WESTERN H. R. DEPOT, BEACH STREET, BOSTON. BY F. M. PRATT, FORM - RELY OF TUE AMERICAN BOMB October 9,1887.-1 y Cashtown Springs. EIGHT MILES FROM GETTYSBURG E. P. KITTINGER, Proprietor THE undersigned, having thoroughly re-fitted the NATIONAL HOTEL. in Cashtown, with the Springs attached thereto, invites the attention of the public to his superior accommodations. Persons de siring to spend a few weeks or months in a healthy neighborhood, with the advantages of pure mountain air, daily bathe, troutrishing, B.c. can find no more at tractive place. Vititors to Gettysburg and the Bat. tie-field can reach it in a couple hours ride over a good road. The Stabling accommodations are among the best in the county. A good table and the best of Wines; and Liquors. Charges reasonable. E. P. KITTINGER Juno 17, 1868.-3 m (Cabinet Waking. FURNITURE. D. C. SHEAFFER PETERSBURG; (Y. 8.,) PENNA., Is prepared to offer:to the Public, anything tn hU line as cheap n can be had la the county. Is.Pnrobsokezia win 4io welt to call sad gumbo loy itoek beton baying Wonders. • - . YU R NI T ;mkt. Order. Repdrisig dose use,. cessi sad iidit difigto ALA 11111.-tt ~ 1 GETTYSBURG. PA., FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1868. 110011and's German Bitters HO 0 FLAND'S GERMAN TONIC The Great Remedies for all Diseas es o f the LIVER, STOMACIT, O. DIGES- Hoofland's German Bitters Is composed cattle pureinloes (or, a■ they are medici natty ormpa,Extraets)of BOMA Herbs, and Barks, ma king a preparation, highly concentrated, and entirely free frost akoholic admixture of ally kind. ROOFLANTYS GERMAN TONIC Is a combination of all the Ingredients of the Bitters 'With the purest quality of &eta Cruz Runt, Orange, te., making one of the most p iceman t and agreeable rem edies ever offered to the public. T h oie p re t en i ng a Medicine free from Alcoholic ad mixture, will use 1100FLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS Those who have-no objection to the combination o the Ilittids, as stated, will Ilse 11 00FLAND'8 GERMAN TONIC They ars both squally goal, and contain the same medicinal virtues, the tholes between the two being a mere matter of taste,the Tonic bet og the molt p.tistable. The stomach, from a variety ofeanses,such as Ind wee. Hon, Dyspepela, Nervous Debility, etc., is very apt to have Its functions deranged. The Liver, sympathising as closely as itdoett with the Stonascb, then become. at footed, the result of which is that the patient suffers front several or more of the following diseases: co..sipast o n, Flatnienee, Inward Plies, Fullness of filood to the Head, Acidity of the Siomsch,liausea, lirart-burn, Disgust for Rood, fulness or Weight in the Stomach; Sour kintotations, Sinkinz or Fluttering at the Pit of the Stomach, Swimming of the Head, Har ried or Difficult Breathing, Fluttering at the Ueart, Choking or Suffocating Sensations when in a Lying Posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots or Webs before the Sight, Dull Pain in the !Lead, Deficiency of Perspire. lion, Yellowness Of the Skin and Eyes, Plain its the Side, Pack, Chest, Limbs, ear., Sodden Pluseei of heat, Burning la are Pali., Constant Im aginings of Evil, and Great Depressi o n of Spirits. The sufferer from these diseases should exercise the greatest caution In the selection of a remedy for his cote, purchasing only that which he is &inured from hie iorestigflloas and inquiries passimoe true merit, is eklifully compounded, Is free from Injurious I ogredlents, and has established for Itself • reputatiim for the cure t Ilene diseases. In this connection we would submit those well-known remedies— 1100FLANIT,S' GERMAN BITTERS 1100FLAND'S GERMAN TONIC PREPARED BY Dr. C. M. JACKSON, PHILADELPHIA., PA. Twenty two years since they were d Ist In troduc ed In to this eosin iry from Germany, during which time they have undouhtedly performed more cures, and benefited suffering humanity to • greater extent, than any other remedies known to the public. These romedim will effectually cure Liver Complaint, Jaundice, Dyspepsia, Chronic or Nervous Debility Chronic Diarrhea, Disease of the Kidneys, and all Di/ease' Brisling from a Disordered Liver, Stomach, or Intestine... Resulting from any Cause whatever PROSTRATION OF THE SYSTEM induced by Severe Labor, Hitrd- ships, Exposure, Fevers, etc There is no medicine extant equal to thew remedies In each eases. A tone and vigor is imparted to the whole system, the appetite is strengthen ed, food hi enjoyed, the stomach divans promptly, theblood lopnrM..dd thecom plexion becomes sound and healthy, the allow tinge is eradicated from the eyes,•bloom is given to the cheeks, and the week sad nervous Invalid becomes • strong and healthy being. PERSONS ADVANCED IN LIFE And feeling the hand of time weighing heavily upon them, with all Ile attendant ills, will find In the useof this lIITTERAI, or the TONIC, an elthir that will inatil new life into their veins, restore In a measure the eafergy and ardor of wore youthful days, build qp their shrunk en forms, and give health and happiness to their re loathing years. &Weide Porthole of our potifirzthse fully one-half or Me Joy meta of good health; or, theme oewr own ev presalou, "never fuel well." Th ey are languid, devoid of allener gy, ex t rem ely nervous, and have no appetite. To this class of perilous the BITTERS, dr the TONIC, is especially recommended. WEAK AND DELICATE CHILDREN Are made strong by the meat/tiler of these remedies They will cure every case of HA RAMIE'S, without fall. Thousands of certificates have accumulated in the hands of the proprietor, but space will allow of the pub lication of but • law. Those, it will be observed, are men of note and of sorb standing that they mast be be. tiered. HON. GEO. W. WOODWARD, CT (rf ✓attire the Supreme Cowl of buss., writes: Philadelphia, March 16,1867. "I find 'llocfland's German Bitters' is • good tonic, useful In diseases of the digestive organs, sad of great benefit In runes of debility, end want of nervous action In the system. You re. truly, GEO. W. WL/ODWARD." HON. JAMES THOMPSON, Judge of Me Supreme. Cheri of Annsyisania. Philadelphia,dpell 28,1866. "I cons Wei , ilootlanit's German Sitters' a valuable medicine In ease °feast Ls of Indigestion or Dyspepsia, I con certify this f, om my experience of It. Tours, with respect, JAMES THOMPSON." PROM REV. JOSEPH it. KENNARD, D. D., Flastor of the Tenth Bap/ is: Church, Philadelphia. Dr. Jackson—Dear i r:—l have been frequently re quested to connect my name with reemmmendations of different kinds ofmediciu., but regarding the practice as out of my appropriate sphere, I bare in all cased de clined; bat with a clear proof la various Instanced and particularly in my own tam ily, of the neefalnass of Dr. Hoofiand's German Bitters, I depart for oats from my usnal course, to exprees my fu II conviction thatjorgeow ere debility 011ie:Mess, and cipeciatly for Liver Cbse plaint, it is a safe and eaiectbkpreparalion. In some cases Itmay fail; brit nettelly.l doubt not, It will be very beneficial to thaw who suffer from the above causes. Yours, very respectfully, J. 11. KENNARD, Eighth, below Goatee at. FROM REV. E. D. MID/ay, AiliSittla Editor Christian chroaick, pha a d e z phia . I have derived decided benefit from the nee of Roof land's German Bitters,and (relit my privile ge t o reccui . mend them*, a most valuable tonic, to all who are oaf. fering from general debility or from diseases arising from derangement of the liver_. Youn, truly, It D . P.L.NDALL. floofland'e 0 erman Remedies are counterfeited. See that the signature of C. M. JACKSON le on the wrapper of each bottle. AU others ere coanterfelt. Principal Office end Manufactory at theGennau tedf clue Store, No. 531 ARCH street, Philadelphia, Pa. CHARLES M. EVANS, Proprietor, Formerly C. M. JACKSON a CO. floollancrsi/enn an Bitters, per bottle, El 00 half dozen , 5 00 Hoodand's German Ton lc, put op In quart bottles,sl 00 per bottle, or a half dozen for $7 450. .50rDo not forget to examine well the article you bety In order to get the genuine. Ran. 15 ,1868.-ly For sale by all Druggists and deale rs In medicines. gm, gumber, ghat, &r. GETTYSBURG LIME KILNS. TUE undersigned Las bought out his former part- ner, WY. Gum, end now contlnnem the THE LIME-BURNING} BUSINESS himeelHt th e Gettysburg Lime ICilas; on the corner of the Railroad and North Stratton stmt. lima. hal for past patronage, he wlll endeavor to deserve hi continuanoe, by prosecuting the businnan u vigomo, ly and on le large a scale its Pallvilds—elmaye selling o good article mg g i v i n g good measure. Fanners and ethers ma look for the prompt filling of order& ' He &ha continues the COAL BUSINESS, offering the most popnhi kinds. }lon a k eepai asd otheis showd give bun s mill. Blacksmith Ooal oar dankly on kand. pliaie aid OW daliverld anywharela o ttylbilrs Gettysburg, Nov. 20.1817.-tf JACOB Baum JOB PRINTING; - OF lIMT VOICUPPOW •1. 1 :4 1 NEATLY AND CiILEAPI,t7 Wallal. AND TIVE ORGANS. AND DEIALITY, NOTICE TESTIMONIALS CAUTION PRICES AT vas O»J(!•! Zhe star and ffitutinel. THE GREAT ISSUE WHO IS REAPONIVIRLE FOR THEite,.. HELLION 7 RECORD OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY. Senator Wagon', of Massachusetts, made a great speech last week in Bangor, Maine, at the great Republican Mass Meeting.— The following extracts we commend to the careful perusal of every reader. esesAL Oy TIIII MISSOURI COMPROMISE. Mr. WitsoN commenced by review., the course of the Democracy since 1853, On the 4th of March of thatyear It bad received from the nerveless hand of its fallen rival, the Whig party, the administration of the National Government. Alikein victory or defeat, ho said, the Democratic party had for twenty years bowed to the slave propa gandists. When Cougrers met in 1853 President Pierce congratulated the nation on "the sense of repose and security," and gave his pledge that this "repose is to receive no shock during my official term." Those words had hardly made the tour of the public ere the nation was startled by the faith-breaking demand for the repeal of the Missouri Compromise of 1820. After a fierce struggle of four months the faithless proposition received the approval of the De mocratic Congress, the Democratic Presi dent, and the Dernocralic party. But that crowning victory shattered the ranks of po litical organi7ations. The Whig party was broken utterly. Hundreds of thousands left the disordered ranks of the Democracy.— Nearly a million and a half of men ranged themselves togther to recover that lost ter ritory—to oppose the further extension of slavery and the longer domination of slave masters. Although the Democracy came out of the contest of 1866 victorious, its chiefs could not fail to see that it escaped defeat by the timidity of that conservatism which shrank appalled before revolutionary menaces. In that grand uprising, in that doubtful strug gle on the prairies of Kansas, the slave-mas ters saw their waning power. They fired the Southern heart with malignant hate and bitter scorn of Yankee institutions. Re solved, in the words of Calhoun, whose dis ciples they were, "to force the slavery issue upon the North," they wrung from the Su preme Court the Dred Scott dicta. They bade New Mexico enact a slave code, and also 4 code for the servitude of white labor ing men. They sent Walker to Central America to win territory, "for," in the words of Brown, of Mississippi, "the plant ing and spreading of slavery," and they sigh ed for Cuba, which they could not clutch. THREATS OF otssoLvrso THE UNION. When the nation was looking forward to the approaching Presidential election of 1860, these Southern Democratic leaders, frenzied with the fanaticism of slavery, came into the XXXVIth Congress haught ily threatening the dismemberment of the Union if the people should choose a Chief Magistrate odposed to slavery extension, protection, and domination. Jefferson Da vis, foremost among that unhallowed com bination, had spent the summer of 18;19 in the North. Returning to Mississippi in the autumn of thaticar with assuranas W Northern Democrats would throttle the Re publicans in their tracks," he advised the people of the South to turn their old mus kets Into Minie rifles, prepare powder, shot, and shell; for if the Republicans should elect the next President, he was "for assert inipthe independence of Mississippi, for the immediate withdrawal from the Union." Brown, not to be outdone by his rival, "would make a refusal to acquire territory, because it was to be slave territory, a cause of disunion." Clay declared that Alabama, "if she is not recreant to all that State pride, integrity, and duty demand, will never sub mit to your authority." Toombs called upon Georgia to "listen to no vain babblings, no treacherous jargon about over acts; the enemy is at your door ; wait not for him at the hearthstone, but meet him at the door " Iverson would not even submit to the election of John Sherman for Speaker. "In that event," he exclaimed, "I would walk Out of this Capitol. I would counsel my constituents instantly to dissolve all political ties with a party and a people who thus trample on our rights." Clingman would wait for no over act, 'no other"overt act' can so Imperatively demand resistance on our part as the simple election of their candidate." Nearly two millions of men, regardless of the treasonable menaces and revolutionag teachings of the Democratic leaders, thronged to the ballot-box and made Abraham Lincoln President of the United States. THE TREATS CARRIED orr. South Carolina, trained for thirty years in the school of treason, leaped headlong into rebellion ; other States quickly follow ed her example. Then the vaunted South ern Confederacy, the dream of slave per petualists for a generation, rose on the basis that involuntary servitude was the normal condition of the Black race in America. Coming into Congress, with lofficial oaths on their-perjured lips, these architects of ruin plotted conspiracies in Congress, in the Cabinet, in the army, in the navy, everywhere, for the dismemberment of the Union and the death of the nation. While these conspirators were organizing treason, sedccing the weak and corrupting the venal, while they were seizing forts, arsenals, arms, and millions of public property, rais ing batteries for assault or defence, tiring upon the old flag, which covered bread for starving soldiers, they were receiving, not the withering, blasting rebukes of insulted patriotism, but aid and comfort from their Northern Democratic associates. AID AND COMFORT FROM THE DEMOCRACY OF THE NORTH. The Democratic President, poor, weak old man, made haste to assure the insurrec tionary chiefs, that he had arrived at the conclusion "that no power had been dele gated to Congress to coerce into submission a State which is attempting to withdraw, or which has entirely withdrawn, from the confederacy." Attorney General Black pro nounced against the power of the Govern ment to coerce a seceding State, and main tained that the attempt to do so "would be an expulsion of such State from the Union," and would absolve all the States "from their Federal obligations," and the people from contributing "their money or their blood to carry on a contest like that." Jefferson Davis, when. he assumed the Presidency of the Confederate Government, and proclaimed that "we have entered up on a career of independence, and it must be inflexibly pursued, through many years of controversy, with our late associates of the Northern States," held the written assurance of ex-Presidertt Pierce, who believed that the disruption of the Union would not occur without "blood," that "the fighting will not be.along Mason and Dixon'e line merely ; it, will.be within our own borders, In our OVA streets." Peadretoo declared, is the Rouse of Re- OEM presentatives, in the presence of his Demo cratic associates, that- "armies, money, blood cannot maintain this Union," "the whole scheme of coercion is impracticable," "it is contrary to the genius and the spirit of the Constitution," He, who had never a word of cheer for the loyal, assured the re tiring conspirators that "if they must leave the family mansion, I would bid them fare well so tenderly, that they would be forever touched by the "recollection." Vallandig ham proclaimed that "If any one of the, States should secede, I never would, as a Representative in Congress, vote one dollar whereby one drop of American blood should be shed in civil war." Referring to that early pledge of faithlessness to his country, after armed treason had opened its batteries upon the steamer bearing food to the famish ing defenders of beleaguered Sumpter, he defiantly said, "I deliberately repeat and reaffirm it, resolved, though I stand alone, though all others yield and fall away, to make it good to the last moment of my of ficial life." In that time of peril, when the Govern ment jotted beneath the blows rained upon it by Democratic traitors, there came from Democratic orators, Democratic . presses, and Democratic convocations, all over the North, bitter reproaches to loyalty, and words of cheer to disloyalty. From the capital of the Empire State, from that great Democratic convention at Tweddle Hall, Horatio' Seymour sent forth these words, to burden the patriotic men who were main taining the just power of the Government, and to cheer on its deadliest foes : "Let us see if successful coercion by the North Is less revolutionary than successful secession by the South." Did not these utterances of such exponents of Northern Democracy lin ger in the memory of Governor Orr, when he said to the men of South Carolina "Many of yon will remember that, when the war first commenced, great hopes and expectations were held out by our friends in the North and West that there would be no war, and that, if it commenced, it would be north of Mason and Dixon's line, and that it would not be in the South ?" When Southern Senators were announ cing that the slave States were intending to go out of the Union, that a "Southern Con federacy will be formed, and it will be the most successful government in the world timid conservatism demanded a compro mise, by which the nation, by irrepealable constitutional amendments, was to recog nize, establish, and protect slavery in the Territories then held, or which might there after be acquired south of 36 deg. 30 min. ; to deny power to Congress to abolish slave ry in the nation's capital; to allow slave masters and flesh-jobbers to take slaves in and through the free States ; to take from men of African descent citizenship and suf frage, and to send out of the country, at the expense of the Treasury or the United States, such free negroes as the States might desire to have removed. THE REPUBLICANS POWERLESS. Day by day, during that terrible winter, the Republicans in Congress, powerless to save, saw with the profaundent sorrow their riven and snattered country sinking into the fathomless abyss of disunion. A Democratic President, a Democratic At torney General, had surrendered the life preserving powers of the Government. A. T[h7finances and sinking the na tional credit. A Democratic Secretary of War was seattt.ring the army, and sending muskets, cannon, and the munitions of war to be clutched by rising trators. A Demo cratic Secretary of the Interior was per mitting the robbery of trust funds held by the Government. A Democratic Secretary of the Navy was rendering that "right arm" of the national service powerless. A Dem ocratic Mayor of the commercial capital of the country was proposing to make that capital a free city, independent of the Na tional Government. Democratic leaders were ostentatiously giving pledges "never to vote a man or a dollar" for coercion.— Democrats were giving their assurances that regiments marching to the coercion of the South, "must pass over their dead bodies." Sam Houston hail not called to gether the Legislature to hasten . Texas out of the Uulim. Iverson said, that if he did not yield to the sentiment of the people, "some Texan Brutus may arise to rid his country of this old, hoary-headed traitor." The unarmed "Star of the West," bearing food to the defenders of Sumpter, was turned back by the frowning batteries of reason. Wield' tauntingly told U 9 tha she had swaggered into Charleston harbor, had received a stunning blow on the fore- head, and staggered out helpless, and we dare not resent it, . Soon the men to whom the Government had been entrusted were summoned to its defence. Mr. Lincoln, In assuming the administration, had proclaimed to his dis satisfied countrymen of the South that "the momentous issues of civil war were in their hands." Fearing that the already aroused passions of the South might not completely sever the bonds of affection, the rebel Secretary of War ordered the batteries me nacing Summter to open their fires upon that devotafortress. That order was swift ly obeyed. The flag of united America came down, and the Confederate flag waved over its smoking ruins. Thus was in augurated, by Southern Democrats, that great civil war in which 350,000 loyal lives were sacrificed, 400,000 were wounded, $4,- 0030300,000 were expended, and the produc tive industries of the country burdened with an enormous debt. The uprising of the people, startled by the echoes of the cannon which treason trained on Sumpter, had silenced the rebel sympatbi7ing Democracy. Little was now heard against "coercion ; " bat Breckenridge, who yet lingered in the Senate, and Powell, Pendleton, Cox, Vallandigham, and their Democratic associates, protested against' "the subjugation of the South." The Ad ministration raised and sent into thi field more than two million men, created the most powerful navy that ever rode the ocean, fought six hundred actions upon land and sea, "coerced"rebel States, "subju gated" the South, destroyed or captured the rebel armies, and utterly annihilated the power of the Confederate government. In this grand work, applauded by earth and blest of heaven, the Democratic party had no part whatever. After civil war had reddened the bright waters and green fields with the blood of our slain sons— after it had sent wounds, sickness, and sorrows into the homes of the people—the Demo cratic party persistently continued to resist every measure for the nation's defence, if that measure tended in the slightest degree to weaken the admitted cause of all our woe. In 1864 when Grant was holding Lee in his grasp in the rebel capital, and Sherman was lighting his bloody way to Atlanta, when patriot hearts were cheered by, the hope of soon subjugating the rebellion, the. Democratic party assembled at Chicago.— Homan Seymour presided. The conven tion, Inspired by slimly, and In empathy . WHAT SEYMOUR SAID THE. POPULAR UPRISMO TIM 188tT IN 1864 WHOLE NO. '3526 with their rebel Democratic friends in rebel lion, resolved that the "war is a failure," and demanded "the cessation of hostilities." The Republican party met in convention, declared for the complete abolition of slav ery, the subjugation of the rebellion, and the re-election of Abraham Lincoln. The Democracy, boastful as is its wont, received 21 out 0f234 electoral votes, and was beaten by a popular majority of more than 400,000 , votes. TIM ISSUE IN 1868. In November there is to be another strug gle between these two parties for the control of the National Administration. The Re publican party met at Chicago, reaffirmed its policy of reconstruction, pronounced against all forms of repudatlon, for the re duction and equalization of taxation, for the equal protection of American citizens, for the recognized obligations to our sol diers and to the widows and orphans of the gallant dead, and fur the removal of re strictions imposed upon rebels as rapidly as the safety of the loyal people will admit.— The convention then preSented the name of General Grant, the great captain, who has so often marshalled our armies to victory ; and Schuyler Colfax, a statesman of pure life, stainlea honor, and commanding in fluence. The Democa.ttic party assembled in na tional convention in New York. Horatio Seymour again presided. That selection of its presiding officer was a monition to the country that this convention would be no more patriotic or wise than was the Demo cratic Convention of 1864, There assem bled the self-same leaders, or their com peers, that pronounced, in 1864, the war, to preserve the nation's life, "a failure," and demanded "a cessation of hostilities," which would have made inevitable a dis memberment of the Republic and the death of the nation. To that convention came also a few disappointed, sour, and fallen spirits, who once were enlisted with the legions of Liberty, but who were never imbued with the generous and ennobling impulses of Human Equality. There came, too, the exponents and representatives of the "lost cause." TILE RPLING SPIRITS OF THE NEW YORK COE- VENTION There was Wade Hampton, of South Carolina, who, on his way to the conven tion, said to the students of General Lee's college, "the cause, for which Stonewall Jackson fell, cannot be in vain, but in some form will yet triumph." There was Gov. Vance, of North Carolina, who told rebel troops, during the war, to "pile hell so full of Yankees that their feet will stick out of the windows." There was Buckner, of Kentucky, who came to Washington at the opening of the war, to procure arms for his State and a commission for himself; but who went back to Kentucky, betrayed his State and country, joined the rebel rankiand was afterwards forced to surren der - unconditionally" to Gen. Grant.— There was Preston, also of Kentucky, who abandoned his State, became a rebel gen eral—a commissioner and conspirator in Europe—against his country. There was Basil Duke, one of John Morgan's lieuten ants, in his thieving, robbing and murder ous raids through Ohio and Indiana. There was Robert Quid, of Virginia, a rebel gen eral and commissioner, and familliar with the horrors of Belle Isle and Libby Prison. concerning whose fiendish conduct a Con gressional committee thus report, "Of men, from three hundred to four hundred are known to have been killed at Fort Pillow, of whom at least THREE IWNDRED were murdered in cold blood after the post was in possession of the rebels, and our men had thrown down their arms and ceased to offer resistance." Of one hund red and eighty-two members of the conven tion from the rebel States, there was not one Union man of well known and approved loyalty. There were more rebel soldiers than soldiers of the Union army—more members of Jeff. Davis' Congress than of the Congress of the United States. Is there any wonder then, that one who had heard the rebel battle yeti in the land of the rebel lion should have Instinetfvely exclaimed, "the rebel yell," as he heard the shout that arose at the words of Wade liompton's resolution declaring the reconstruction acts "revolutionary, unconstitutional, and void It" WRY TUE REBELS SUPPOET BEYMOT AND B 1 tll2, iioary A, Wise proclaims that "secession is more alive than ever," and he supports Seymourand Blair because they will "as sume military power" fur the overthrow of the reconstructed governments of the South. Vance boasted to the people of Riclunend, on his home from the New York conven tion, that "the South would gain by the election of Seymour and Blair all it fought fbr in the Rebellion." Admiral Semmes, who commanded the Alabama when the gearsage, in the face of Europe, sent her to the bottom of the seas, and who reveng ed himself by destroying unarmed Yankee whalers after the rebellion had been sub dued, said, in a ratification speech at Mo bile : "I have been a Democrat all my life, before the war, during the war, and since the war, and fought the war on the princi ples of the Democracy • * • The grand old Ddmocratic party has risen from its long slumber—and the election of Seymour and Blair will reduce the negro tog subor dinate position as an inferior race." Percy Walker told the same Mobile assemblage that this is the first time, since Lee tendered , to the •enemy that sword which "flashed victoriously over so many battle-fields, that I have seen a light on the clouds hanging over the South ;" for "the great Democratic party has taken up our cause." Robert Toombs, who went into the Rebellion for the right to call the roll of his slaves on Bunker Hill, and came out of the Rebellion without the right to call that roll on his own plantation, vauntingly proclaimed to the Democracy of Georgia, in mass convention at Atlanta, that, "as the war late was produced by the defeated Democratic party in 18G0, we shall never have peace till it is restor ed in 1868." He divines the mission of the party, for he tells the delighted Georgians that "the grinning skeletons which have been set up in our midst as legislators shall be ousted by Frank Blair, whom the Dem ocratic party has expressly appointed for that purpose. All these things shall be swept •from the bosom of the country." Howell Cobb, denouncing Governor Brown, the loyal white men of Georgia, and repent ant rebels and loyal men, who are honestly striving to secure peace, order and law, as traitors to the country, thus characterizes and counsels concerning them : "You owe it to the living, you owe it to your own children and to their children. Write down in their memories this day, and all days, and for all time to come, the feeling and spirit of abhorrence with. which you regard and estimate these men. 0, Heaven l for some blistering words that Lmay write infamy upon the forehead of these men; that they may travel through earth despised of all men, and rejected of heaven, scorned by the devil himself. They may seek their final congenial resting-place under the mudsills of that ancient instltl3- tion.' This reconstructed Democrat is the I same Howell Cobb, of whom Andrew Johnson said : "Cobb remalmal in the Cab inet until the treasury was bankrupt, and the Malone! credit disgraced at home and abroad, and then he conscientiously sece ded." Wade Hampton called on his Democratic associates in New York to "register an oath" that they would place Seymour and Blair in the White House, it they received the majority of the white votes, "in spite of all the bayonets that can be brought against them." Th's rebel trooper and Democratic leader tells the people of the South "not to employ any one, white or black, who gives aid to the Republican party." TOZ FIFTY OF PATMOTS. Mr. Wilson concluded as follows : —"Con sider well, I pray you, the histories, the platforms, and candidates of these parties now askingyout suffrage.. Remember that by its fruit the tree is known, and by his deeds man Is Judged. Apply to these polit ical organizations those words of holy Writ. Test them by the high standards of love of country and love of man, and vote as they prompt and approve. So voting, you shall do something to heat the wounds of war, rebuke and repress lawlessness and violence, develop the material and -moral forces of the land, secure equality of rights and privileges, and thus lift our country to its predestined rank among tho.najionte: ABOLITION Or THE NATION* i BANhM. Among the cherished plans of the Demo cratic party is one that has not yet made its appearance in any regular platform re solution, but which is avowed, nevetheless, by no less a man than es-Senator Pugh, of Ohio, the friend of Pendleton. At a Sey mour and Blair ratification meeting held in Cincinnati last week, Pugh said that "the Democratic party demanded that the na tional banks be abolished." It is to be here remarked that he did not put this forth as his personal view. lie said that the party demanded it, and he was undoubtedly right. The party Is altogether opposed to the banking system now established. The party in Congress voted against the pass age of the law. It has consistently, ever since, voted for every proposition to restrain the privileges of the banks, to supersede their currency, to Impose constant additional new burdens upon them, and to attempt to render then odious In the eyes of the public by incessant attacks upon them. When the act to enable the Pennsylvania State banks to organize under the national sys tem was pending - In the Legislature, every Democrat voted against it. In New York the Democratic opposition to the change was so great that the banks carne in very slowly and reluctantly, and the party or gans continually inculcated the idea that they were doing it under compulsion from the national government. 3lr. Pugh was therefore perfectly right in saying that his party demanded the aboli tion of the national banking system. Such is and has been its purpose all along, and although it has not had the courage to put it into the national platform, it is none the less a regular tenet of the party. This sys tem took the place of a localized banking system, in which in most of the States there was really no security whatever for the outstanding currency and no limit to it. Banks issued as much as they chose, and gave no guarantee of ever redeeming it.— In some other States there was a stock secu rity system, which did give the note hollers something to rely upon, although the guar antee varied in value with the credit of the State. The paper currency of a large ma jority of the State banks was unsecured.— The national system was modelled after the best of the State security plans, but afforded additional safb-guards. Prior to its adoption, our currency was almost entirely localized, liable to a dis count everywhere except just at home, and a source of universal trouble and loss. All this has been changed by the adoption of a that renrter , ..“ - r7V7I national 0...1 umform throughout the. country. In proposing to abolish this the Democratic party obviously means to return to the intolerable localized State bank cur rency. The people, who have tried both plans. may make their choice between - them. By the national system, no note holder can pormibly lose anything by the failure of a bank. By the old sys tem, the note-holder was generally left without hope in such a ease. By the na tional system, the amount of the currency s fixed and publicly known. By the old system it had no limits whatever.— / 1 / 4 i/a. Xort/i American. The Republican Policy is to correct whatever evils may ex kt in the hank= log System, and make it tributary to the business interests 'of the country. Its violent overthrow would result in a paralysis of business, and great In jury to the Industry of the country-- But the Southern Rebels care nothing for this. These National Banks are in the hated North. Their destruction will chiefly harm the North, and re duce its labor somewhat to the level of the bankrupted South. So, the Rebels say, "it won't be our funeral, let it go 0n.,, As the Northern Democracy are merely the tender to the fiontheru lo comotive, they obey orders, blindly, even to their own destruction,and that of the section in which they live. U-KLVIWILLAN INHENTUCK Y, A correspondent of the Cincinnati Gazette gives an interesting account of this wicked and murderous Rebel-Cop perhead organization "This society extends all over the South, and its great object Is to put the rebel or Southern wing of the Democracy in power and defeat the reconstruction measures of Congress. There Is no doubt about the formidable proportions of this organization in this State, and there is no doubt about the efforts of this organization to raise money to-influence the elections wherever Republicans have a show of success. In diana will feel the potency of this or ganization in its sending both men and money to that State. There is also no doubt but thal this socie ty' will be the moving body in all such schemes as Blair's to upturn the recon structed Governments: This powerful and desperate body of men mean mischief.— They will use every means within the reach of bold and desperate men to accomplish their designs. At their call an army would spring into existence in Ken tucky in a very short time. They aro ready to stake a great deal upon success in their present movement. They assert, everywhere, with great confidence that Grant will be defeated, reconstruction over thrown and negro voting abolished. Let loyal men who love the Union be upon their guard, for they have to deal with quite a different class of people front those that composed the Sons of Liberty of war times. We hope that good citizens, North and West, will take these flatters in hand and settle them for all time to come ; for, if they do not, the whole power of the South will pass into their hands and be con solidated and used for purposes directly hostile to those results which the loyal peo ple have been endeavoring for near four years to evoke from the happy terdiination of our civil contest. Liberty, that liberty declared by the Declaration of indepen dence to be the birth-right of man, 14 on trial in this Presidcaal campaign, as it has not been since Lee surren dered. Would that the people could be aroused to the energy neccomary to meet this crisis in the affairs of the nation tut they met that of the war. Then all would be well." We may understand now how It happened that Kentucky recently gave 90,000 copperhead ma ority. TwsLva architect* In Chicago report that during the present year 259 buildings have been erected In that city, coating_nearly $7,000,000. , - trurrin States itirthills are seizing the rolling atria of Southern railroads ibr debt. Of course the Praident will restore eneb property, is it was held by ex-rebels.