The star and sentinel. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1867-1961, May 07, 1869, Image 2

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PridlliY, May, 7 Ism
Advertisers andolhers interested will
hour in mind that the regniar circa•
lotion of the-"STAD AND SENTINEL"
is mach larger than that el' any ether
paper published t
In he County, being
read Weekly by not less than 11400
pers•ns.
THE COPPERHEADS AND THE BAT•
TLE•FIELD
Our Copperhead friends are very un—
happy over the defeat 'Of Jeff. Davis,
the abolition of Slavery, the success of
Congressional Recodstruction, itnd the
sppro4;hing triumph of the great idea
of the Revolutionary era, the equality
of-all men before the law. Nothing
goes right iu their eyes. Indeed noth
ing has gone right since Buchanan-left
the White House and the Solithern
Deniocrats were prevented from divid
ing sod destroying the Nation.
Their disposition to growl and fret
has taken various forms. During the
-war, it took the form of helping the
enemy indirectly, rejoicing over Rebel
victories, and glibly proclaiming the
impossibility of conquering so, brave
and gallailt a people as their "Southern
brethren." - Since the war, it has tak
en the form of resisting Reconstruc
tion on a loyal basis which would give
protection and, power to the loyal men
of the South. - It demands compensa
tion for damages sustained in the
NOrth from the war, but stupidly and
stoutly resists all confiscation of the
property of Rebels to get the means to
pay the damages. It grumbles at Re
publicans for not vying the damages,
but objects - to every reasonable propo
sition to raise the money therefor.
Its latest and smallest specimen of
spite is in the objections by correspon
dent of the Compiler to the Government
making an accurate measurement of our
great Battle-field. We can understand
why Copperheads should be unwilling
to have the remembrange of this Battle
fieldpreserved. It is a daily offence
to them. It reminds them of a pro-
Slavery Democratic Rebellion defeat
ed. It reminds them of a National Dem
ocratic ' , Party betrayed, beaten, and
disgraced. It is prophetic of the pro
gressive growth of the Cause of Liberty
here and everywhere. And it is a per
petual monument to the faithlessness
and treason of the Democratic Party
to - whom the people blindly committed
their - government.
Now, these reasons all go to account
for Democratic malignity towards the
Battle-field, the decoration of Soldiers'
Graves, and all that. But they are
reasons which'have impelled the Gov
ernment to desire to preserve this sa
cred spot. AND THIS WILL BE DONE,
Democratic grumbling to the contrary
notwithstanding.
The survey complained of was begun
last fall, stopped by the winter, and
will be finished this summer. It real
ly involves no expense, as only regular
officers and troops are employed, who
would be on duty, in any event., some
where. These gentlemen are perform
ing their duty with as little inconve
nience as possible to land-holders, and
we Pave heard no complaints except
from the class who have accustomed
themselves to hating everything in
spired by patriotism. The citizen
who objects to the slight annoyance in
volved in procuring an accurate meas
urement;of the Battle-field, only shows
how incapable he is of appreciating
the great blessings which the victory
on that field has secured forhim. Let
us hope that his children, at least, may
prove less unmindful of their duty to
the country, and less indisposed to sac
rifice something, if need be, to the
general good.
THE MR AMENDMENT
The XVth or Suffrage Amendment
of the National Constitution will un
doubtedly he adopted. The Southern
Democracy are supporting it, as the
only end of the long-agitated Slave
question. The Virginia Democrats, in
their State Convention last week, in
dicated a purpose to ratify it in the leg
islature to be elected in a few months.
7. announced that Gen. Robert E.
• Lee favors it, and that he does not be
lieve that - the enfranchisement of the
negroes will work such prodigious
harm as has been predicted by some
men North and South.
An exchange says that "there is a
large and influential segment of the
ex-rebels of Virginia who have about
made up their minds to act hereafter
with the great Republican party. They
are composed mainly of men who be•
longed to the old Whig party and voted
aginst secession, but were engulfed
by the rebellion when it broke out,
went with their State from State pride,
and fought fiercely and desperately for
the 'lost cause.' These men have bit
terly lamented and repented their
folly, and they now wish to place
themselves once more in sympathy and
co-operation with the great Union par
ty of the country. The Copperhead
desire to defeat the Fifteenth Amend
ment will receive no assistance from
these old Whigs of former days. They
will throw their whole weight into the
scale in behalf of its prompt ratifica
tion by their State ; and their votes,
added to those of the white and colored
lisclicals, will secure an overwhelming
majority for it in the Old Ddminion." -
We believe that 95 out of every 100
voters inVirginia, without distinction
of party, are in favor of the Fifteenth
Amendment, and will so vote at the
ensuing election. The Richmond
Whig, the organ of the old Whigs,
"pours hot shot" Into the Northern
Democracy after the following style;
"They meanly appeal to a crushed, bleed
ing and broken hearted people to sacrifice
the lust feeble remnants of their political
and social existence, in order that they
(the Northern Democracy) may be saved
from the opesatious of the Fifteenth
Amendment. Nothing more shameful has
occurred in these days of degeneracy and
profligacy."
IN CALIFORNIA, the Copperhead
papers are making a fierce fight against
the Chinese. As there are but 4,000 or
-6,000 Africans there, and probably 40,-
- 000 Asiatics, the 'Copperheads think
more capital Is to be made out of agita
tion over the latter, than over the
former class. Bence they have ceased
to talk about the "heel, shinbone, fore
arm, cerebrum, cerebellum, and other
anatomical peculiarities of theAfrir.an
race," and have betaken themselves to
researches into the physical, mental
and moral condition of the Mongo
lians.. A Crusade against the latter
class is DOW in progress, charicterized
by ail the -brutality and knavery of
which. Copperhead politicians are ca
pable. And the Copperheads are hap
py,'because their happiness-consists in
trying to •crush the weak and pOor and
friendless. Were the Chinese in cat
lornia aristocrats instead of poor labor
ers, Copperheads Would 'fourry favor
with them." As it is; they seek to de
grade and outlaw them. Such is the
devilbih spirit of that party, every
wbere—the result of its long ajfrookui r
-With lillavery.
aIIt.,ICONIIITIRIICT/031-DAT4JONT
AE AD.
The problem. of Re-construction 1
bids fair to fre definitely settled this fall,
and that in the intyrest of Right and
Justice. The Democratic party in,the
Southare apparently waking up to the
coniletiorr that they haie been pursu
ing a suicidal policy to following out
the counsels of their Democratic allies
in.the North. The latter contributed
largely to precipitate the Rebellion by
fierce invectives against the Republican
party, urging the South t-, defend their
rights, and assuring them that in case
of War, it should be on Northern, but
on Southern soil. Under the inspira
tion of these counsels the South in
augurated Secession and Rebellion,
and -during four long years reaped'
their bloody fruits—carnage, desolation,
dtath and ruin. The War ended and
the great crime of Human Slavery
blotted out, the Government, under
Republican administration, magnani
mously proposed to forgive and forget
the crilneof Rebellion, upon the simple
condition that the logical results of the
war should be recognized, by incor
porating into the organic law of the
Republic a piovialon asserting the
abolition of Slavery, and by enact
ments securing perabnal and civil rights
to all men. Not a word about negro
Suffrage. But the Democraoy of the
North counselled a refusal of these
magnanimous terms—denounced the
War, and made profuSe promises of the
great things they would accomplish if
the South would only abide their time.
Thus advised the Rebel element con
temptuously spurned the liberal terms
offered them, and announced their pur
pose to secure by the ballot what they
failedto secure by the bullet. The loy
al men of the ration took up the chal
lenge, again and again at the polls as
serted. their determination that the
fruits of the War should not be lost,
and that Reconstruction must be con
summated iu the interest of Freedom.
The White Rebel element of the South
having sullenly refused all terms, Con
gress was crompelled to turn to the loy
al Blacks, who during the War had
stood by the flag, befriended our sol
diers, and finally shouldered the mus
ket in defence of the Republic. And
thus it came about that Negro Suffrage
was' invoked as a necessary element in
reconstructing the Rebel States on a
loyal basis—thanks to the Democracy
of the North and their misguided Re
bel adherents of the South.
The final issue was made in last
November, with a result as fatal to the
new Rebel programme, as that which
followed the struggle around Appoma
tox Court-house. The fruits of this
last and discomfiture of Secession
and Rebellion are being now developed
all through the South. Southern jour
nals, which have hitherto been content
to tread the path prescribed by North
ern Democrats, now pronounce for a
political divorce apd denounce their
Northern allies as their worst enemies,
to whom the South is largely indebt
ed for all its misfortunes. Realizing
the hopelessness of a further struggle
against the dominant party in the Re
public, they seem disposed' to ac
cept the situation, swallow the dose
prescribed for them by Gen. GRANT
and a Republican Congress, negro suf
frage and all, and get back into the
Union as quick as possible.
In the unreconstructed States of Mis
sissippi, Texas and Virginia, we have
a remarkable development of this new
tendency. The leading Democratic or
gan in Texas lays down the following
programme :
"Our positi , in in the present canvass will
be—
To throw the whole respcinsibillty of re
construction upon We Republican party of
Texas. '
And to this end we urge upon the Demo
cratic party—
Firgt—To aid and assist the moderate
med of the Republican party in restoring
the State to the Union, upon a basis that
will be acceptable to the President and Con
gress.
Second—To vote unanimously for the
constitution which they have offered us.
Third—To hold no patty conventions
and make no nominations whatever as a
party for office.
Fourth—To meet the moderate Republi
cans in council whenever and wherever in
vited by them, arid in ail ioatances to con
! cede what they will not yield."
But it is in Virginia—proud, con
servative, slave-breeding Virginia, the
"mother of Presidents," the boasted
residence of -the F. F. V's of the Ft.,-pub
lie, and the most stubborn in her resist
ance to the new order of things—that
we find the most significant indications
of the changing tendencies of parties.
The "Conservative" Convention, re
cently in session at Melia:lond, has de
clined to nominate candidates, and re
commended the support of Mr. WAL
KER, Republican, who is running for
Governor against WELLS the regular
nominee. Both wings of the Republi
can organisation, whether supporting
WELLS Or WALKER, claim to support,
the administration of General GRANT,
and quarrel as to which are his real re
presentatives. Each profess to accept
the situation, to favor negro suffrage
and the ratification of the Fifteenth
Constitutional Amendment. The Rich
mond Whig—which is the chief organ
of the Walker wing, and about equally
opposed ta.the Republican and the De
mocratic, or as it , chooses to call itaelf,
Conservative party—referring to the
new Reconstruction bill in connection
with the Fifteenth Amendment, says:
"The decree has gone forth—and there is
no stopping its ' execittionthat suffrage
shall be universal. President Gesztr Is
pledged to it, Congress is pledged to it, the
Chief Justice of the United Butte' is pledged
to it, and it is inevitable. We have negro
suffrage without it as effectually as we would
have whhit, and the only effeerwill be to
fix it upon the Northern sad Western
States.'
The Whig goes on to show that the
pursuance of a refractory course by the
enemies of the Republican party in Vir
ginia can only result in giving the con
trol of the Stare to the "radicals" for
years to come, and alienate the con&
dence and respect of thi best men of
the nation. Some few of the more
ultra Democrats, led by the Enquirer,
cling to the "lost cause" and sullenly
stand aloof from the inew movement ;
but t4ey are the fossil representatives
of a past political age and will be lost
sight of in the breaking )4) of party,
lines and re-orgapliation of partias. 7 -
Even HENRY A. W/BE,. who hup,,g
JoaN BROWN at Harper's Ferry,, ac
cent* the situation and thus delivers
himself:
"The long agitation of the question of
slavery, Its history before the war, and the
war itself, convinced me that an exodus
from African bondage wee obliged to be by
the almighty band of Providence. God
Xnew What poor finite minds North and
South did rot foresee—that nothing short
of fire and sword, of war sod its blood and
violence, could "emancipate negro slaves on
this continent, in a country g.overned as the
United Stake, in , the form of constitutional
republics bound together hi* constitution=
al union. By no steps ii 6 dorsal {lmes
could Congress ever have abolished slavery
and 'the States would never have commenced
emanciation by peaceful eans, adual
otherwise, reasons w h ich it w gr ould b or e
irritiniat ,now to state. It is stacient tO
sa y th ia , . t 3 o:Eh i io n the South fought for
nothing bet of PrhrolitY Alms
14 it la the lank w‘i i
uto 1 . 3 1,611 40: 11 6 miipsoiable portion Pt
the hp
p :pt il l' a uaipto tor. 80 thetOnii
far Shore IP /0 **,247 11(1 P 0
being th e Woes. .aney *fusel
libbee
prilittee sv or
MAO*
19+414/
slaves in their ewn time and own way, but
1e.„ 41
were not willing allow gongress to re
gulate their demesti vernment and con
cerns for them, either to slavery or any
thing else. Thus there ere double re
stratus against emancipati • which could
not be removed in time top vent either
i‘id
dissolution of the Union or civil l ar. The
war was a national necessity pe by
bivinefimvidence to prevent (In the , I
hope,) greater evils than the war Itself. ,
The ex-Governor grows pions an
argues that the Almighty "ordered, di
rected and forced the result of emend.
pstion of slaves in America," because
there was no other way of bringing it
about. 314 h therefore, who resists, orla
any unreasonable way obstructs the
legitimate consequences of this special
Providence, "kicks against the pricks."
He then joins with GRANT in making
an earnest call for peace :
"The old strifes must cease and be hush
ed. igext, charity, toleration, brotherly
and patriotic kindness. It is not for me t• '
upbraid you, or you,me, for the offences and
injurieesof the war. Slavery was Its cause,
was our weakness if nor our wicke•Jness,
and God has purged out its sin and satanic
influence by fire and blood. His fire and
blood, for the war was His if the sin was
mine. But woe unto tuose, on either side,
who shall cause the fires ,to burn and the
blood to beat after the sin and causes of
woes have been burned to ashes. We must
ut keep the fires ignited—the ashes must
be allowed to cool, and then, as from battle-
Ids, the green herbage may be made to
grow more luxuriant then ever; so good
truit way be made to spring even from the
cinders and ashes of this horrid war."
Verily the work goes bravely on,
when HENRY A. WISE and his con
freres turn out Apostles of Freedom.—
Once more we remark, the War for the
suppression of the Rebellion has been
a wonderful educator, and his Excel
lency has proven himself an apt pupil.
Twenty one States have already ad
opted the 15th Constitutional Amend
ment. Connecticut, Rhode Island,
Vermont and New Hampshir.! : ill
bring the number up to 25, htaving
Virginia, Texas and Mississippi to close
tip the requisite number to make Man
hood Saffrage part and parcel of the or
ganic law of the Republic—with Flori
da, Georgia, Ohio, Indiana, California
and Oregon to spare ! The decade of
18843-70 will be a memorable era in our
national politics. Within that period
the Republic "will have passed from
Slavery national in power to Freedom
universal in fact; from Dred Scott ism,
proclaiming the negro debarred from
citizenship, to suffrage declared in the
organic law to be the right of manhood,
without regard to color, race or previ
ous condition ; from secession and civil
war to union and peace enduringly
founded upon equal rights, and cement
ed in the hearts of the people."
WE clip the following paragraph
from an editorial of the Pottsville
Miners' Journal of the Ist inst.:
"The present week the senior editor of
the Miners' Journal entered upon the
forty first year of his publication of the pa
per. He is now the oldest political edi
for in the State, no other persou to his
knowledge having been connected contin
uously for a period of forty years with one
newspaper."
Pottsville is quite a town, and the
Miners' Journal a capital paper; but we
object to Pottsville robbing Gettysburg
of the honors of seniority in editorial
life, which of right belongs to our es
teemed colleague, ROBERT G. HAM
PER. The Miners' Journal was estab
lished in 1824, and purchased by its
present editor - in 1829, who has thus
been in the editorial harness for 40
years. The Adams Sentinel was estab
lished in 1800 by the father of the
senior editor of this paper, the latter
taking charge of it in 1816, upon the
death of his father, and continuing as
sole editor and proprietor until May,
1867, when the Sentinel was consoli
dated with the Star, under the present
firm, of which Mr. HARPER is the
senior member. Our colleague has
therefore been in continuous editorial
life for 53 years-61 years as sole editor
of the same paper, the Adams Sentinel
—just 13 years longer than the Journal
claims for its editor.
BRICK PDXERAT, with all his Rebel
hate and veudictiveness,can't stand the
villainy of New. York politics, and
has opened his batteries on the Demo
cratic leaders of that city. He says
"If bUying, and selling, if fraud and
corruption, if double-dealing, trickery,
dishonesty, and nothing but a love for
gain, is to mark the course of, the lead
ing Democrats of New Yqrk, I just
ask God to spare my life for the next
two years."
TriE late session of the Legislature
passed a Registry Law—or rather two
of them—one for the city of Philadel
phia, and one for the rest of the State.
We will publish the latter in full in
our next Issue.
Oonits.—Of this new town on the Pa
cific Railroad, the point of junction of the
two roads, a correspondent of the St. Louis
Republican writes:—"Ogden is about to
become the commercial city of the Rocky
Mountains. The greatest activity now
prevails at the point. When I left work
men were buoy putting up a siding or
switch, and the work of transferring goods,
materials, tools, boxes, bundels, bales, bar
rels, &e., was going pp as though the peo
ple were making preparations for an earth
quake. Restaurant keepers, peddlees, tra
ders, gamblers, loaferB, rowdies, "dead
beats," merchants, mechanics, blaCksmiths,
carpenters, seemed to be running a race to
see which could get away from'the switch
at Taylor's mill the quickest./4
LIABILITY OF BAILROAO I COMPANIES. —A
case of much importance to the public, and
particularly to railroad companies, was de
termined before Judge , Taylor, in the Com
mon Pleas of Huntingdon county, last week.
In April, 1868, a warehouse took fire from
the sparks of a locomotive at Mill Creek,
which was consOmed, setting fire to an ad
joining hotel, Which, with most of its con
tents, was also destroyed. Suits were
brought by all the parties injured, but sil
were amicably compromised; except that of
Mr. Kerr, the occupant of the hotel,' on
which the parties went to trial, and after a
tomcat of three days the jury awarded $l,-
960. •
Ina public debt statement for May Ist,
just issued from the Treasury Department,
shows the total debt, principal and interest,
to be $2,685,032,888.12. Amount in
Treasury—Coin belonging to the doyern
ment, $92,081,782.96 ; coin for which cer
tificates of deposit are outstanding, 1316,-
807,200 ; currency, $7,896,564.07-11116,-
# 8 b.3 9 7. 0 8. Amount of public debt less
cub In P/134484171 $2,618,797,891.09;
a
mount of public debt lees cacti in Treasury
on the Ist ultimo, $2,525,186,461,74; de
crease of public debt during the past month,
$6,889,070,65. It is expected that the fig
ures for the present month will make an
even more gratifying exhibit.
Tux Newport Lodge in Rhode Island
has the *Weis Odd Fallow in tl}e world--
Mr. ileszjunist Dow*ag, 0ged . 414-lemen
yews, iite Au been .0 member AI sixty
one pars. He 18, 00 In good heal th : Mr,
as
Downing w present when the first Grand
Lodge was organised in the Slate of. New
Tort inteti, and lic the oely earthing the otherasY when he was accosted by a
maw . woo I►oootte4 too company. He Meld, who asked where be was bound.—
to o
member
of too cooortoto L s tloo,
o e fo e poet replied i 'To Boston this altar-
Neer 'fork, hates , hi realthe itlfewport he book Deoeakeife." " l iVia t ell that?"
Se liitorcors of by she mod . ** of goe iteited the lagejler. "By way al 4,1*
• '-- et eeetie
L
61.11111011 A L'3K6 Wg.
NEW Yonx Is rejoicing over green peat
Aic Irish girl of Easton has fallen heir to
1150,000.
MINISTIRwi
W sai led for Europe on
ti urn
Saturday.
irmorsts planters are abandoning , the
culture of tobacco for peanuts.
Tar= Was a heavy hail storm in New.
York city on Sundiy.
Tris,wheat crop of Pennsylvania 18 said
to protrilse \ finely.
ExoEssiva, rains are complained of la
Texas.
AhNIBTIR MO2lit will sail from, New
York for Liverpool on, the 19th inst. •
lon formed in Boaton'an Friday night to
the thickness of a silver half dollar.
Visfamta planters are cultivating peanuts,
as they pay better than cotton or•,tobacco.
Porkross are a drug in the Maine mar
kets, and sell for 55 cents a bushel. "
Turas was a heavy snow storm on the,
line of the Catawissit Railroad on Saturday.
'FRE Pope will be seventy-even years (.1d
on May 13, 1869.
Jon!? C. Bezeittrunnua is to be chosen a
melliber of the Kentucky Legislature.
Wrrimi less than six years 25,000,000 for
est trees have been planted in lowa.
TWENTY ONE hot house peaches sold at
Washington market, New York, on Tues
day, at $1 .50 each.
A YOUNG lady in Philadelphia the other
day died from hydrophobia, caused by the
bite of a cat.
TIIE Catholic Provisional Council, in
session at Baltimore, last week, finished its
labors on Sunday.
Elm:au:rim+ . to the United Status from all
purrs of Prussia is to be larger this year
than ever before.
IT is calculated that it will take six mil
lion baskets to move this year's tomatoes to
New York markot.
A COMPANY has been organized to build
a telegraph line from St. Louis, through
Texas, to San Francisco.
PARDIE College, Pike, county, Mo., oon
fere the degree of M. A. (maid of arts,) up
on young ladies.
A. DETROIT woman has secured a divorce
because her husband compelled her to black
his boots
IT is understood at Washington that Gem
Sickles will be sent, Madrid as United States
Nlinisler
FIRST-CLASS private houses in Paris, in
good localities, rent from $B,OOO to $20,000
per annum in Gold.
A wasT Texas farmer, fearful that his ea
tle will stray out of his little yard of 130
000 acres, has fenced it in.
AN Indiana clergyman makes his pastor
al calls on a velocipede. He was eolone
of cavalry during the war.
A vorsa man was killed at Davenport
lowa, on Monday, by the accidental din
charge of a pistol in his own hands.
Tun assistant Chief Engineer of the Bal
timore fire Department died on Tuesday o
injuries received at a fire on the 17th ult.
IT is asserted that three hundred men,
uniformed and equipped for active service,
left New York, for Cuba, on Monday night.
As Spain has been unable to hunt up a
suitable King, the Cortes are looking to
wards the appointment of a new Ministry.
SECRETARY Boutwell proposes to prohib
it smoking, chatting, receiving visits and
drinking among the Treasury clerks during
business hours.
Gov. Curtin is the fourth Minister to
Russia from Pennsylvania. His predeces
sore were William Wilkins, Jamas Buchan
an and George hi. Dallas.
. A mass meeting of the friends of Cuban
independence was held in New York Tues
day evening. Henry Ward Beecher was
among the speakers.
THE Republicans of Franklin county
have chosen A. F. Schofield as their dele
gate to the State Convention. and instruct
ed him to vote fur Governor Geary.
has. Lucinda Sharp, of New Bedford,
died on Monday last, aged eighty years.
She weighed 450 pounds, and was six feet
one inch high.
VICE President Colfax, it is said, was in
strumental, in the Order of Odd Fellows, iu
procuring the creation of the Degree of
Rebekah for the wives of membirs.
Amoso the new round hats 'worn by the
ladies, the "bee-hive," the "shepherdess,"
and the "bomb shell" are said to be the most
popular.
Is the village of Tiptdn, Indiana, all the
liquor saloons are closed and have crape on
their doors, the combined effect of a revi
val and of a raid by the ladies.
All the promtnOnt officials of the Reve
nue Bureau, who were immediately con
nected with the Commissioner's office dur•
ing Mr. Rollin's administration, have, with
a single exception, been removed.
Tna average price of horses In Vermont
is $100; in New Jersey $l4O. The value
of horses in Vermont is about $4, 000,000,
and the value of-horses in Orange county,
N. Y., is about $5,000,000.
SECRETARY Boutwell contemplates the
enforcement of the act of Congress of 1862,
authorizing him to set apart a portion of
the public revenue for a sinking fund to pay
off the public debt.
jAIfES Madigan, the celebrated circus
rider, was instantly killed while attempting
to throw a double somersault at Paris, Ken
tucky, on Wednesday last. He fell and
broke his neck.
THE French Geographical Society has
complimented Dr. Hayes, the American
whose energy and zeal in exploring the
Artie regions have made him famous; , by
decreeing him a gold medal.
A act master in Indiana has successfully
protected his bees from the disease which
has swept the hives throughout the country,
by feeding them with salt, rye flour and
sugar, boiled to the consistency of honey.
Joux Holmes, a colored member of the
late Virginia Constitutional Convention,
was shot and killed at pharlotte Court
House on Monday by John Marshal, in
whose family he had formerly been a ser
vant, .
FLonicnnrcita is beginning •to receiveitt
tention in lowa. The Keokuk Gate City
says : "Mr. Rose married Miss Violet at
Winterset, last week. There is a tibwer
bed for you. That Rose may reasonably
expect to be a poppy—in time."
Oils Government will not reply to Gen
eral Rosecrans' despatches, and whatever
the Administration may have to say will
be through our new Minister, General Nel
son, who will soon leave for Vera Cruz,
expecting to arrive there before June.
Tun is no truth in the report that Pres
ident Grant sent for Robert E. Lei, sod had
a long conversation with him about recon
struction and suffrage. The visit was brief,
and the weather, Virginia railroads, and
mops, were the only topics of Conversation.
A TERIZ-BTORT brick house, eighteen by
ferty feet, and in the construction of which,
49,850 Woks were used, was built in Lee.?
Paid, Pa., last week, in nineteen and a
ball hours, and persons were, living in it
within three days from vie time it was
Joan G. SAMS was walking Up Broadway
~ V'-i:i;:~~
MIISIMI
Toaseatr lfairs.—The London journals
devote ct nsiderable space to discussions of
the rejection of the Johnson-Clarendon Al
abama
claims treaty by the United States,
and theespeech of Senator Sumner uponthe
'subject. Each take somewhat different
views of the , question of the .claims of the
United States, but through various channels
of reasoning arrive at the conclusion that
the demands of our Government, as an
nounced and intimated in Senator Sumner's
speech, are unreasonable and must be re
sisted by England, no matter what the con
sequences may be. At the same time they
deplete way prompts* of settlement by an ap
peal to arms. The Star, Mr. Bright's or
gan, says that if Mr. Motley's instructions
are similar in spirit to Mr. Sumner's demand,
his mission will be fruitless; and defends
England from the general charge of sym
pathy for the Confedeiate cause. The
Times saytthat Mr. Sumner's view is un
reasonable, unstatesmanlike and feminine,
although in the next sentence it speaks of the
speech as worthy of his ability and deserv
ing of imp ,rt ial consideration. The Stand
(zed, the Tory organ,. congratulates brief
that so much candor has been displayed by
the Senate, and that when the demarid has
reached its present proportions, 'even the
Bright Cabinet is safe from the - chance of a
disgraceful capitulation. It considers that
war might better any settlement the present
British Administration might make if the
attitude of the American Senate had been
less ridiculous,' At a Cabinet meeting on
F 1 iday Mr. Bright declared that England
was served right, although be would not
consent to entertain the terms shadowed
forth in Mr. Sumner's speech. Lord Clar
endon expressed his belief that the actual
negotiations on the part of the American
Government would be tar less extreme in
character than the speeches of Senators and
the articles in the press. Mr. Gladstone
stated that the rejection of the Alabama
Convention was purely a political stroke.
Mr. &Muer); speech has created intense
feeling in political circles, and the popular
feeling is strongly anti-American. The
despatches from Gen. Ilosecrans, United
States Miehter at Mexico, are said to con
tain the details of treaties which he is ne
gotiating, looking to a cession of certain
portions of territory to the United States if
our Government will extend to 3lexico the
financial aid necessary to relieve the Juar
ez G..vernineut from its embarrassments.—
Sonora and territory ctiguous to it are
intimated as being the pi ice which Juarez
is willing to pay for the loan of the credit
of the United States. By this arrangement
we would gain possession of the greater
portion of the Gulf of California and the
fine harbor 61 Guaymas. Minister Rose
crane strongly urges that the offer be ac
cepted.
SLICIDE BY A 110 T AGED FIFTEEN. —North
Andover (Mass.,) was the scene of another
sad tragedy at about half past eight o'clock
on Monday forenoon. Frank Cheney,
about fifteen and a half years old, the
youngest of four children of Mr. A. P.
Cheney, the keeper of a variety store near
the machine shop, committed suicide by,
shooting himself. He had recently com
menced attending the High School, but did
not like the school, and left it on Ffiday
last. Since that time he told one .of hie
chums that his mind was made up, and that
he should not attend that school , again.—
His parents did not sympathize vVith him io
his reluctance to go to school, and his fath
er informed him that he must return this
morning and ask forgiveness of the teacher
for leaving. About eight o'clock one of his
sisters, who also attends tire school, told him
that it was time to get ready, and he went to
his room for that purposed, as she supposed.
As he remaiued longer than anticipated, his
sister went to his room and found the door
fastened. She oohed the father, who burst
open the door, and found his son lying dead
on the floor. He bad used two pistols to
accomplish his purpose, and apparently bad
discharged them both at the same time.—
The ballet from one, a small pistol, had en
tered his right temple, while a bullet from
&revolver, which he had discharged with
his left hand. had penetrated his heart.
Either wound would have caused instant
death. The noise of passing carriages had
probably prevented the discharges from be
ing heard by the family. The boy Was an
open-hearted, lively lad, enjoying the es
teem of all who knew him, but he was
very high oielited, and the command to
humiliate hiThself by apologizing to his
teacher so wrought upon his feelings that,
without considering the effect of his rash act
upon his friends, be seized the ready wea
pons which were kept in the house and
terminated his life.
UNION LEAGUE OF THE UNITED STATES.-
The National Executive Committee of this
body met on Friday at the St. Nicholas Ho
tel, New York, but the session was strictly
private, the reporters for the press being
rigidly excluded. Goy. Geary, of Pennsyl
vania, occupied the chair. The business
transacted consisted principally of organiaa
don and routine business. The reports
from the vat ions States, submitted by Mr,
Baker, the National Secretary, were of a
satisfactory character. Upon taking the
chair Governor Geary made an ad
dress, depicting the necessity for more
thorough organization of the Union Leugue
forces throughout the country, and suggest
ing plans for making the organizations more
efficient. The committee then proceeded
to the consideration of the condition of the
Union League in each State. The commit
tee appointed various sub committees. The
committee adjourned to meet at the same
time and place on Wednesday, the 26th of
May.
Miran:lo is in a worse condition than at
any time the close of the war with the
Imperialist faction. Government is dis
solved and society is a prey to the strong
handed and lawless. The pursu is of in
dustry are so frequently interrupted that
famine is foreboded, and political discon
tent with the government of Juarez pres-
ages an early abandonment of the nominal
respect which for some time has been paid
to it. The elements of private disorder are
stronger than any constructive power which
the leaders can evoke. President Juarez
has asked or tare Congress, just assembled,
a grant of extraordinary powers to suppress
internal troubles, and it is likely to be
granted. There seems to be but little doubt
that our government will be called on at an
early day to intervene, and this suggests a
problem that many people have considered
and decided: Is the present population
and society of Mexico worth saving?
Dams. the rebellion the staff of General
Wise :were riding through a rather forlorn
part of North Carolina, and a young Vir
ginian of the staff concluded toA have little
fun at the expense of a long legged speci
men of the genus homo, who wore a very
shabby gray uniform and bestrode a worm,
fence at the roadside. Reining in his horse
be accosted him with, "How are, you North
Carolina ?" "How are you, Virginia ?" was
the ready respouil. The staff continued;
"The blockade on turpentine makes you
rather hard up, don't it? No sale for tar
now, is th en ion
"Well—yes," was the slow response.—
"We well all our tar to Jeff. Davis no*."
"The thunder you. do What on earth
does the President want with your tar P"
North Carolina answered "He puts it on
the heels of Virginians to
u mke them stick
on the hsttle.gield 1" ThO ro4ll
Hailitees
Ditersatmor received from Fort Bully at
General Sheridan% headquarters wry that
everything that hit been done to make
peace with thellome as a nation is an en
tire talk" and ,that the Indians are prat $$
?lir PO liaosi ,o ihsr wore Iwo Yon
ESE=
.-
NEWS OF NEIGHBORING COIONrE,O.
Comm—The horse stolen from Dr.' B. I
Minn of Westminster, has been recoreredi,
and the thief, a col/ced man named George;
Dickson, arrested at Olney, ,Montgomer,
connty.—Alfred F. Shreeve, of Westmin
ster, has been appointed Clerk in the Balti
more Post Office.-4 corps of surveyors are
at present engaged in surveying the route
for the railroad to he constructed from
Parkton, on the Ntahern Central Railroad,
Manchester.—On Monday tbe Republi
cans of Westminster elected Jacob ipple
Mayor, and three members of M Council,
George E. Wampler, Elias Tiugling, and
William H. Hannan. The other two,
Jacob Wentz and Jpbn Bun3stein, are
Democrats.—Davidli. Feuer has been ap
pointed Pustmastet at 17010/1 Mills, Carroll
county, Md.,
,and Moses Shaw. at Union
Bridge.
Custasstwirn.—Jacob Shrom, one of the
oldest. citizens of Carlisle, died on the 26th
ult..; aged 72 years—Oo the 27th Samuel
Graham, brother of Judge Graham, died
in Carlisle, at an advanced age.
FRANKLIN.—Andrew G. McLanah an, re
siding near Geencastle, while pruning
trees last week, had the knife slip and en•
ter his wrist, severing the ligaments, and
causing a heavy loss of blood.—Dr. E. D.
Rankin, a well known and universally re
spected citizen of Greencastle, died sud
denly at his residence, on 27th ult., in the
44th year of his age.-1. impostor, calling
himself Prot. H. L. Van Cleve, has been
swindeling the people of Orrstown, getting
up a class of pupils at $1 each, and then
decamping after the second lesson.—The
roof of Jacob Hollinger's Steam Flouring
Mill, near Mercersburg, took fire by a spark
from the smoke stack, on the 28th ult., but
the flames were extinguished without seri
ous damage.—The subscriptions to the
Mercert-burg Railroad now amount to $120,-
000, $30,000 being yet needed to insure the
eeterprise.—Abraham Metzer, residing near
Jackson Hall, in Quincy township, had a
valuable colt stolen on Wednesday night.—
A man by the name of Baker wasarrested
near Greencastle, one day last week, for
concealing stolen horses.
FULTON. —Fulton county seems to be in
fested with. a gang of horse thieves, counter
feiters and robbers. Scarcely a week
passes without some bold outrage. Two
weeks ago Mr. Dickson lost two horses, and
last week James Kendall and W. S. Nel
son, residing near McConnellsburg, each
lost a valuable horse.—Henry Spannuth,
who lived two miles west of McConnells
burg, died on last Sunday morning of the
losthesome disease of "Glanders." Mr. S.
it is said, has been dealing in "Giantlered'
horses for the last few years, and &eventl
have died for Pini. About a wet k ago Le took
sick and sicree that time to his death devel
oped this,(Alensive and dangerous disease in
all it forms—On the 21st ult., the dwelling
of Daniel Lamberson, Jr., of Taylor town
ship,.-was destroyed by fire, no insurance.—
On the 25th, the dwelling of Mrs. Reader,
near Hustontown. took fire from a stove
pipe, the fire communicating to the barn,
both of which were consumed, with con
tents.—On the ::Gth the dwelling pf Mr.
Cromer, in Fort Littleton, was destroyed
by the, originating firm a stove-pipe run
ning through the roof.
Yoax.—The Hanover Salving Fund
Society has declared a semi-annual divi
dend of 10 per cent.—Dr. James Culbert
son, ot • Hanover, was thrown from his buggy
on the evening of the 24th ult., while visit
ing a patient, breaking three of his ribs.—
Capt. Daniel Ammon, of York, connected
with the Navy, has been appointed Chief of
the Bureau of Yards and Docks, in place
Rear Admiral Smith, resigned.—Two val
uable horses belonging to Capt. Lewin
Small, of York, while - being driven in a
boat on the Lancaster County side of the
Susquehanna, at Chiques on Friday last,
took fright at a passing locomotive and fell
into the canal and were drowned.—W. W.
Hartman has been appointed Postmaster at
Siewartstown, and J. li, 14eutirts at
Shrewstilirry.—Gtolletwor Lloyd of the lLth
district, has appointed Col. J. A. Stable, of
York, Deputy Collector for York County.
Col. Si able, although a brother of the edi
tor of the Gettysburg Compiler, is a sound
Republican.—A daughter 01 Heury Dust
man, Heidleberg township, aged i 4 years,
had an arm broken in getting out of a wa •
goo in Hanover, on Tuesday.—Two Ger
mans were arrested in Hanover on Satur
day evening, charged with stealing $8 from
one of the boarders at Schmidt's botel,
Hanover.—H ; Brubaker, Lower Windsor
township, fell from the top of a building
on Monday a week, breaking one leg and
fracturing another,
Tug 'ALABAMA CLAIMS. —Upon the au
thority of "gentlemen who made special
and private inquiries in official nifftlfte ft Is
stated that Minister Motley's ufficifil instruc
tions do not suggest any mode cf adjusting
the Alabama claims question at preient or
propose the reopening of the negotiations
with the English Government. The sub
ject is to be left In abeyance, while the
American side is to be firmly presented to
Her Majesty's Government when occasion
shall require. No one connected with the
Administration, nor the liritiah Minister,
apprehends any injurious consequences from
the rejection of the former treaty by the
Senate.
anNEnst. Robert E. Lee made a brief
visit to President Grant at the White House
in Washington on Saturday morning, ac
companied by Mr. and Mrs. Samuel IL
Taggart, of Baltimore. The meeting was
the first that had taken place between them
since that upon the battle-field of Appo
mattox, and is reported u having been cor
dial and pleasant upon both sides. It lasted
but fifteen minutes, and consequently could
have amounted to nothing more than an in
terchange of personal senttmenta.
A ales meeting of the friends of Cuban
independence was held Tuesday night in N.
York, which *l.B presided over by Hon.
Charles A. Dkiti, , and speeches were muds
by Henry Ward Beecher, Hon. John Me!
Keon and others. Resolutions were adopt
ed demanding the recognition of the Cubaa
patriots as belligerents,
Tux, last tie of the Central Pacific Rail
road has been prepared in Ban Francisco,
It Is made of polished California Ihrel, the
end enclosed In solid , silver, and will be
secured by a spike of gold. The Railroads
are to be joined on Saturday, (to morrow,)
the all anct spike to be driven into place by
Governor Leland Stanford.
onac Gild of the Holy Cron," a high
church Rphicopal sqciety, was organized at
Christ Church, New York, on Monday,
with intensely ritualistic; services, the forme
and observances being nearly the same
_as
those which characterize the Church of
Rome.
Gzi au 4ohn Ely , recently' appotnted
United States . Marshal for the Eastern Dis
trict of Penn's, died 'suddenly on Wednes
day night at his residence. He entered
on his duties ten days aince. It Is supposed
he ruptured a blood "vessel while playing
with his niece.
Poirritkarett Gerund Creswell has ap
pointed Jam& h3imms (colored) Postmaster
at Savannah, Ga. Simms is the brother of
the colored man of Oast name about wliont
there was such an excitement many years
ago, consequent upon. his rettan:to slavery
front Boston under the Puilitkre Slave act.
Da. Adelaide °rennin, single latr, bas
been appointed emimining pbysieititsof a
1I insurance company in St. lonits, 4
hirp=44lo46mis*.kg!co for:47
IMEZMEM
sptriat Xotirtg.
The Corners Outra g ed—The Gnillothas
at work-01 4 14. 211rPelter Decapitated
and a Ni gg er. made Assessor in his
• Place.
POST QtVlB. COSIFZDIUUT X ROADS, )
Ch is In the &eh uv Keit tuaky,)
April 9, 1869. )
.Df the Dimocrisy nv the North ern% sat
is/fled by this time that the ultimate inten
ihen uv the Ablishnists is to subjoogate em
and redoose em to the level uv the Nigger,.
the voice UV one risin from the dead
wouldn't avail nothin. Yesterday the last
outrage which a chivalrous people has been
compelled to bear, wuz perpetrated onto a
citizen uv the Corners. A Nigger is now
an oils-holder at the Corners! I shel
state thaase calmly :
- -
. The posishen uv Assessor uv Internal
Revenoo for the Deestrick nv with the Cor
ners is the centre, hez bin held settee A.
Johnson hez bin President by Captain Hugh
MePelter, late uv Morgan's Cavalry, C. S.
A. That he hez filled the posishen to the
satisfaction nv the citizens uv - the Corners,
DO one denies. He is a distiller, in fact he
and Elder Pennibacker run the two distil
leries in town, and they hey did 'a thrivin
McPeirer wuz Assessor and Pen
nitpicker Collector, and ez a consekence
none uv the capital nv the Corners hez bin
substracted and carried to Washington to
feed the Ablishen theeves were. Ez no tax
has ever bin paid on the whisky at this
place, Bascom hez bin enabled to continyoo
to self it at five cents per drink, while ev
erywhere else the regler price is ten and
fifteen. There wuz other advantages in
havin the Assessorship and Collectorship in
their hands. By simply hintin to em that
it wuz my dooty ez a Fedral offis holder to
investigate their modes uv doin the Govern
ment biznis, I hey not only bin the happy
recipient uv scores uv two-gallon jugs, but
I hey bin enabled, at divers and sundry
times, to prokoor loans uv em uv various
amounts, the lowest bein 51.75, and the
highest reachin $2O. -
This happy condishun uv affairs is bust
id. Gabriel Babcock, a nigger—that is a
half nigger, formerly the properly of Deck
in Pozzam, and who 'looks enuff-like the
Deekin's oldest son Jehiel to be his ball
brother, waz last week appinted, and con
irmed Assessor in the place of Capt. Mc-
Pelter, and imejitly he entered onto the dis
charge uv his dooties.
There are many feceliers pekoolyerly ag,-
gruvatin in the appointment. 'To begin
with, this Babcock wuz notoriously obnox
yus to the Corners doorin the lute onpleas
antnea. At the beginning thereof he run
away from Deek in Pugram and entered the
Fedral semis. He wuz pertikerly activ and
cussid. His, knowledge uv the country
made him yooseful to the Fedral officers el
a guide and scout, and at least one Fedral
Tit:try is chargeable direct to the intorma
thin he brot. Theu his wife wuz known to
hey hid five Fedral soljera who hed escap
ed from Andersonville. When he finally
fell into the hand. uy Capt. McPelter at
Fort Pillow kin it be wondered at that he
wuz left fu4esid? or ktn it be wondered at
that the peTple uv the Writers wuz cur
prized when be appeared among em at the
close uv the war with one leg off and one
arm stiff? Nut much. Capt. 3lcPelter
wuzn't in the habit uv halt (loin his work,
and the appearance uv this nigger who had
passed through his hands miller astonished
the Captain.
Duorin his absence he bed learned to read
and write, and he wuz made a tenctier in
the Freedmen's Skool with wuz est ab isht
in this place, and now he is A.bsessur, with
Pullock ou his bond.
Ez a matter uv course we despair uv the
Republic. Wat freedom kin there be for
us with a nigger in offt.hel pusish en to ty
ranize over us? Wat man . uv culcher, uv
eojucashen, uv retinal:lest, kin afford to live
in a community where a diagustin mulattoo
is made not only our ekol t but our soope
rior ?
Deekin Pograns mid this indignantly to
Jot Bigler, who Immejitly mkt the LeeKla
whether or not he didn't count Babcock's
mother Ma ekal thirty years ago? Wich
question, wich wuz askt in the, presence uv
the Deekin's wife, who bez a temper, wuz
the occasion uv severe remarks between the
worthy pair. Joe Bigler delit es in openin
old sores..
The first act uv this Babcock In his °M
ahel capassity wus the shuttin up uv 31c-
Peltai's and Pennluacker's dis tilleries, and
Bascian's bar, on the store that none uv em
bed never taken out licenses, or even paid
any taxes ! Ther wus the most terrific
ebulishiu uv feelin at this act uv tyranny that
it hes ever bin my lot to witness.
"Kill the d—d nigger !"
"Hang the black cuss !"
"Down with the Afrikin despot !"
Shouted the enfuriated citizens. With a
refinement uv crooelly with cood only be
the otNpring uv a most depraved and Fish
us mind, he shut up these places at 7
o'clock in the mornin, before one uv the
citizens hed lied his mornin bitters ! Hed
be postponed it an hour we ;night hey
fought it out, for some one else wood hey
prokoored a supply before noon, and things
wood hey gone on normal. But here wuz
the entire populashen uy the Corners at
seven A. fd., with throats like lime kilns,
and nary a drop to De hed for love or mon
ey. The skeem wuz, well considered and
successful, The citizens cood hold out but
fifteen minutes; and they surrendered.—
They gave bonds to wich they all append
ed their marks to indemnify the Govern
ment for the hick taxes, and compelled
Bascom to take out license. This done, the
nigger, who wua backt up by Bigler and
Pollock, opened his doors and the multi
tood surged in and wuz satisfied. To think
nv a nigger holden the destinies sv the
Corners in his hands!
Es a matter uv course, Elder Penniback
er will fbllow next ; indeed, he wants to
resign now, for, see he, "with the Assessor
ship in hostile hands uv wat avail is it to be
Collector?" And then, how long will my
head stay on my shoAkiere? Is a nigger
to take my place! Already Bascom hez
raised his price to 10 cents per drink, and
notified zte that likker from this time out
ilit cash, and already hez Pennibacker and
McPelter retoosed to lend me a cent! My
Kingdom is crumblin. The elec.kshen uv
Grant wuz the wedge with is riven em ;nom
stem to stem I shel be rcompellecl to go
hentz a broken man. Hevings, why
Gat io
coodn't I hem died whiled son wnz still
President.
The blindness nv this present Adminis
trashen is trooly astoniseen. Things wuz
settlin rapidly at the Corners. McNiter
wuz becomin pacified and Eteekin Penni -
backer likewiee, They wax not satisfied
with the Government, or did they approve
ni anything it did; bat thST were passive.
Now the old surer is opened. Now Mc...Pal
ter is broaching slaughter, and is for lonia
slip the dogs uv war. And what he; Grant
got In return? Why, a nigger who wuz
already hizXon, and the two whites at the
Corners who voted for him last fall ,and
will agin, anyhow. General Grant evi
dently don't mean to pacify us—he ain't on
the soothe, nor hez ha a clear idea uv wat
Is needed to conciliate. I shel go next.—
There is to be a meetin held next week to
protest agin these changes, bat it 'won't
avail nothin. We are all marked.
Psivzstrii V. NABBT, P.
(Wick is Psatteaster,)
Newerazza called "The imperalire' is
minted M. No:, York and advocates a
change in our system of government from
Republic to II Monarchy. The "immesikm,
is that Auguste BeiManite t Chairman of the
DemocratkMoknual Committee, furnish*
V* kw* its happw. Timm is nq
*IP*
NASST.
A Olorwmokinf ritiabg, ft !loath America es ik
stisikrasty, diamond •••114 and simple remedy "be
Ohre of GNUS of If rvp4. lirsaktim, !bey P•Coy, Disembli
of the a boa iminal Organs, and the wbolii
tads at brought as by baleful *ad viola's
billAii. , " 'tabus !Ave bean 'aid by this &Ado
or t aiA. , - Prentso4 , V 4oo 6NlMS•bedisfit. *AM:sal
Sba romp. foe preparing
- wad iiitietbWil•Alo In • twabs.suvetelp• i to kir
, Bi.. WWI
'''''': ',4 ] -4 " " aligibl ' iDi lialarteriPailf•
' falotaair
MORE 141:7RENMARE
We hitting received by the ship "ROBERT POR
TER" &large Invoice "Plain Ironstone Ware' of our
own importation. Wo are now prepared to fornteh
"Chest/ Behr that will give give satisfaction: saw
.R. tel furniture. All kind. of Queenswere and Glee
ware peeked free of cost. We have In store a large
lot of.beilt."Sweet Messina Orangee," Sugars, Cullom,
rveps, Salt, fob, etc. All of which we wamnt to
satisfaction, and offer W boleeale and Retail cheep
cash.
• WW. BLAIR & SON,
April 30. "South End" Carlisle, Pa,
ANUOOD.—IN TUE YOUNG AND RISING goo.
'VI *ration, the vegetative powers of life are strong.,
but Ina few years bow nften the palid hue, the lack
lustre e 3• and emaciated form, and the impossibility
aLfridir. t 0 ,0 4•9". I effort. *how Its benefit! le•
at:fence. • St soon ottomans evident to the observer that
somedepressinithaluencemcbecklug the de•elopruent
of the bud,. Moosautoption is talked of, and perhaps
the youth is removed from school sod cent into the
country. This is one f the worst move inka es. Re
moved from ordinary diversions of the ever-ehauging
SCollett of the city, the powers of the body too touch
•uteebled to give cult to healthful and rural exnrc tee,
thoughts are turned Iftwarde Upon thembolb.b.
If the batibbt be a female, the approach of the men.
lien is looked lor with anxiety, as the first symptom
in which Nature is to show her saving pourt, In dot.
fusing the circulation and visiting the chi•si with the
bloom of health. Alas: increase of appetite has
grown by what it fed • n; the energies of the system
at* prostrated. and the white economy is disranged.—
The beautitul and •onnerfol period in which bolt
sod mind undergo so fascinating a *hence fn.m child
to woman, is ',Aso lot to unite; the p treat's heart
bleeds in anxiety, and fancies the grave but waiting
for its vi,tim.
lICLXBuLD'S EXTIACT ticcuu, for WeAmes. *tieing
fr• m excesses or early uoliticretton, stirieled with the
following &motor:Pi : luillap,,,ition to Esetti., Loss
of Power. Lot. of Slelfnuty, Ditliculty of Dresthing,
General Weakness, Horror of Diee.uie. West Nero.,
Treuthitu.r. Dreadful Ilurror of Death, Nl4ht ;Sweats,
Cold Feet, Wiskefultwits. blames' of Vie t, Langour,
Universal Luditnile of t .e )lu.cular sy Rae., Often
Enormous Appetite with DvaptlitlC Fynipteins, Het
ilenda, Flushing ul the Body, Dry nu, ut the Skin,
Ps Did C o ue utimicire And Eruptions on the P.m
tu the Sack. of toe Eyelidii, Friliquenti)
Block Spot. Flying before the Eyes, with Teru perary
Sufruniun and Lust of Sight, Want of A ttentium Greet
liettlesenett, with gum, of Sumety. N.P•
thing le wore di:tin:dile to such patieuti than Solitude,
and teithilm they more dr•:01, fur Frar of Therneelriti;
au Repute of usurer, ne Ea: beet bees, uu tvoculAtton,
but it hurried Trewrition rum one gitelitlutt to an
other.
These. symptoms, If aillowed to go on—which this
Medicine invariably removes—aurn follow Loss of
Power, irataliy. and Epileptic Fits, in oho of which
tLa patient may expire.
During the Supetirdendeace of Dr. Wilson at the
Bloomingdale A ny Iwo, this sad reeult occurred to two
petfout• reason hsd for a time left them, and both
diet) of epilepsy. They were of both stxta, and about
twenty peals of age.
Who cau OA) lb it there excesses are hot frequently
followed by [Lose direlai diseases Insanity iu,.l
suception 1 The sec trda of the Insane Asylums, and
the melancholy deaths by Cousumpt ion, bear ample
witness to the truththese assertion, 111 1.1104 t is
Asylutur the most Metectoily exhibition appears.—
The couuteuance is actually .0,1E1.4 and quit. deo.,
tutu—nether Mirth or Grief ever visits It. dho old a
tound of the volce uCcur, It le rarely articulate.
"With woeful measures wan Despair
Lone sullen sounds their grief ties u lied."
Whilst r e regret the exist...our the above discrete
and ilytapb , l2UK, we are prepared to offer at Invaluable
gift or eheruimtry fur the remora) of the coo Sequ este, es.
ELNDW.D'Ii MOULT CONCVITRATZD FLUID EITItAcr or
BCCati. t here Is uu tonic like it. It Is au anchor of
hope to the surgeon and 11 , 11.4 t, and this is the Leo-
Woody ‘,l all who pare used or pie•criut.d rte
doll Lry Uruggiste and De.thrs BT.') where. PRICZ
$1.2.5 p,r t,of Els, or 5 outtles fur ss.iio. Delivers.' to
soy address. Di:scribe, symptoms In all cowmunlce
Address H. T. HELM BOLD,
Drug and Chemical Wstel..ure,
59.1 Broadway, New York.
\TONE ARE ()MN DINE UNLESS DOSE UP IN
L' ste..l-ougrwrr.d wrapper, with flowtoile of my
Chrtnirni Warehouse, and Filgnwd
April 2-2 m H. T. II ELMBOLD.
SPECIAL NOTICE.
SkAIENCK'S PULMONde SYRUP,
Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills, will cure Con.
Liver.: 'Li:plaint. and Dyspepal If taken
according to dir,ctione. They are all tore. to be ta.
ken at the same time, They cleanse the stomach, to.
lea the lire:, and put it to work; then the appetite
becomes good; the fool digests tad makes g,od bboi;
the patient begins to grow in flesh ; the diseased mat
ter ripens in the lungs,
and the patient outgrows the
li.aee and gets well, This le the only way to cure
cgman /I/ ption.
T. these three roediciuee Dr. J. U , 'cieenck, of
Philadelphia, owes his uur:sslled success in thto treat
cheat of puitnounry cuusunaption. The Punt:ion c
Syrup rlpena the morbid matter in the luugs, nature
throws it off by an easy expecnoration, for whet, the
phlegm or matter It ribs, a slight cough will throw it
off, and the patient has rest •uct the lungs -begin to
heel
To du this, the Seat Tonic and Mandrake NH.
mnst be treaty used to see the storuac4 and liver,
so that the P.lmunic syrup cud the food will make
Scherick's Mandrake Pill* act upon the li•er,
ell obstructions. relax the ducts of the gall.
tdadd*r. the bile .tarts freely, and the liver 4 ~.on
relieved; the stools will show what the Pill, can do;
nothing has e•er been invented except calomel (a
deatil) poison which is very dangerous to one unkw
with great care), that will unlock the gallbladder
and *tart the secrenoos of th. liver like Scheock's
Mandrake Pi/ 4.
Liver Conwhtiat I. one of tlis mast prominent
causes of Consumption.
Schenck'. Seswscd Toole is a gentle stimulant and
alterativaand the alkali in the Seeweed,
praparett , n IS G 411140 of, 1111144 the BLOCIAGit to throw
out th e gastric Juke to diesolve the tool with the
pain/001c Syrup, and It I. made tato good blood With
out rettfleat6tiUll or NoUriChl lo the .tow+ch.
The great n-nsan why ph s/cisme do W.. cure con
sumption ir, they try to do too much; they give me
dicine to stop the-cough, to stop chill., to stop night
sweats, hectic fever, and by co doing they derange the
whole dlge,tive powers, looting up the secretions,
and er actually the patiamt •inks cod dies.
• .
Dr. Schenck, In his treatment, does not try to stop
a cough, night sweats- chills. or foyer. Remove the
canes, and they will all stop of their own accord.—
Yo one can be cured of Consumption, Liver COM
plalut, Dyspepsia, Catarrh. Cant• r. GlceratedThroat,
unless the liver and stomach are made healthy.
If a person has consamptem, of course the lungyl■
seems way are diseased,, either tubercles, abscesses,
Lenonl.l.l Errant L. tin
In
a mass of inflammation ri,nd last decaying. n ouch
case. what must he Lionel It is not only the lunge
that are viselmit, but it 1s the whole body. The
stomach and liver have lost their power to make Llood
o ut oi food. Now the only chance is to take Schenck's
three medicines, witch wilt bring up a tone to the
stomach, the patient will begin to want food, It will
digest easily and make good blood, then the patient
begins to gain in Utah. uset as soon as the body begins
to grow, the lour. curll.ll , ll2Ce to heal up, and the pa—
tient gala Oeshy and welt_ This is the only stay to
cure Consumption.
When there is no lung disease, arid ully Liver Oom•
plaint and Dyspepsia, Scheuck's nutweed Tonic and
Mandrake Pills are sufdri....nr. without the Pulloonic
syrup. Take the Mandrake Pills frosty in all blindus
complaiats, as tl,.ey are perfectly harmless,
Dr. dchetic-k, who has enjoyed uninterrupted health
for many years past, and new weighs :2:2.5 pounds, was
wasted away to a mere skoletoo, in the very last litaoi
of Pulmonary Consumption, his physician' having
pronounced his Cage hopeless and abandoned hint le
oje f a t e . Ho w as cured by the aforesaid
and since lila recovers many theineettide nmihsely af
flicted have used Dr. tchuick's preparations with the
Same reinarkalds success. Full uirectioes accumpaoy
lag each. make it nut absolutely necessary to person
ally lee Dr. Schenck, uulesie fhe patients wish their
lungs examined, and for this purpose he is profession
ally at his PrlncipslOLOce, Phil .delphia, every eater
day, where all letter. for advice must be addressed.—
kle is •.10 professionally' at N 0.32. Bond street, New
York, every other Wednesday. Me gives advice free,
but for s thorough e'en,' scion with his Iteipiro
meter the price Is $5 (Men houreut each city from
A. M. to 3 P.M.
Nice of the Yu'mon' , Syrup and Seaweed Ton,c
each $1.50 per bottle, or $7 50 a halt-dozen slandralea
elits 25 cents a hoz. Fur sale by all druggist,.
nit. J. FI. SeIIENCK,
15 N. 6th of Plailad'a., Pa
April 23,1869.-1 y
A GREAT REMEDY
POE THE C TEE Or
TEIIIOAT AND L 0 DISEASES.
Dr. Wishart's Irin Tree Tar Cordial
It la the 'vital principle of the Pine Tree, obtained
by a peculiar progress In the diitillatiop of the tar,
by which Its highest medical properties are retained.
It is the only safeguard and reliable remedy which
has exec been prepared from the Juice of the Pine
Tree.
Is invigorates the digestive organs and restores the
appetite.
It strengthens the debilitated system.
It purifies and enriches the blood, and expete from
the system thscorruption which scrofula breeds on
the lunge. •
It dissolves the mucus or phlegm which stops the
sir.paleages of the lungs.
Its beeline principle acts upon the irritated surface
of the longs aud throat, penetrating to each diedased
part, relieving pain and subduing infl•mmat ion.
It Is the result of )ents of study and aapariment,
and It is offered to the afflicted, with the positive
•orance or its power to cure the following if
the patient hes no'. too lung delayed reign to the
means of care:— •
Coosnmption of the Lii;io, Cough, Sore Throat and
Briar, [DewittMs, Liver Complaint, B lind ant Bleed.
log Pile., Astkme, Whooping Cough. Dlpthoria, &a.
We are often asked why are loot other canoodles In the Illitket for Consumption. Cough*, Colds, and
other Pulmonary affections e. - I,usl to ltr. L. Wiz
hart's Phis Tree Tat Oordtla. We enewor--.
LG. It cares, nit by stopping cough. but by loosen.
log and aseiating imitate to throw off the unhealthy
matter tollectodabout the throat and bronchial tubes,
ceasing Irritation and cough.
2ud. [duet Throat and Lou Remedies are composed
of 'anodynes, which allay the cough (Pr awhile, but
by their constrhogi;g effects, t he ilbres become harden
ed, and the unhealthy fluids coagulute ander. retain
ed In the system, ceasing disease beyond the control
of our most eminent physicians.
&rd. The Pine Tree Tar Cordial, with its asderants,
are preferable, Micatme they remove the cause of
irritation of the mucous membrane and bronchial
Cabals, enlist the limp to act load throw off the an
healthy 110CflitIODI, and purify the blood, thus scien
tifically making the - cure pertict.
Dr. Witten has on Ale at hie office hundreds and
thousands of Cortitlestes. from Den and Women of
naqut. etiooable character who Were once hopelessly
given op to die, bat through the Providence of God
were completely metered to health by the Pine Tree
Tar Cordial A Ph.pletail 19 attendance who can be
consulted In period or by mail, free of charge. Price
or Pine Tree Tar Gordtaill.6o per bat/444u per don,
dint by liapreee on receipt of price. Address, "L. Q.
0. Wishart, 3A- D. WW Wor th V 4 Meet, Piuladolphis,
. (Apell 23, 18119,441
MARSHALL'S 1441X18.
Headache—Dyspepsia—Castivergeal.
, Ttyou oufrer with Headache try hilladianl,L'S
ELIXIR, and be convinced that although other
remedies have failed to ogre .you, this will give you
Instant and permanent railer.
If by aver-excitantern and Salve year nerves have
become sovresksaed that Headache adiumitshes you
something more dangerous may happen, snok as
'PALSY, lIIHNICHS 01 MIGHT,
and other shinning nervous affections, then Marshall's
Elinir, by giving totie &NI maniple to, yew - ortoto,
reddens you to perfect health.,
nod which shoeld be divested resin! :n
the stomach, causing pain and uneganoos for ite went
of that principle which would render It eeLy ofdtgoo
, icon
, then by using Marshall's Blum you will supply
thilldellokumby . iud prevent toe runtime*, and so be
radically cured of DopepoLo.
The imeeselt beteg thee cleansed from an unhealthy
to a healthy condition, coati ropes, and the other at.
togriani disorders s r the hovels are of necessity pre.
Price of ufarshiin's DO per bottle,
Ito? ode ey ell Drumlin,: Depot, 180 t klikruc.L .
1111.11SH/4 4 L d OtteDllyglide,PrOprjeters, "7
♦ CARD,
#pttiat 4oticto.
WIRE RkILINO, WIRE-GOARDS,
For Store buts. Asylums, Se,: from Bsd•teedt
Wire Webbing for Sheep end P ou I try Yards; Brass en
Iron Wire Cloth, Sieves, renders, Screens for CO. .
ores, Band, he., Heavy Crimped Cloth for Elpsr!
Arreews; Landscape Wires for Windows, he.: Pepe.
makers' Wirea,Ornementei Wire Work, ho. Every It
formation by addressing the cusunfecturers. 81
WALKER. A SONS, Ne. 11 North ftlxib •t., Phil.
delphis. (Veli.lt, 1889.-1.
*a-DEA/NUS. BLINDNESS AND CATARRH
treated with the utmost Saco .., by J. asec.. 31 . D.
and Professor of Diseases tAs Eye and Ear ; (hi
specially) in the Medical ()olive of Pennsylvania. 1:
ytire' experience. (formerly of Ludes, lloilando
tit 6 Arch , Phila. Testimonial. cat. be .ern
hie office. The kledkal &malty ars invited to accom
pairs their patient., as b• has no oiterets in prac
rite.' Artificial .y.s Antsited without pun. tit
charm. tor examinatioa. • [Jan 29.-13
Tarriagefi, giuntOSt
DAVID 11cCIMAILY. JOHN Y. IdeCIILARY
"Best always Cheapest. "
THE Best and Cheapest,
SADDLES,
BRID.Lbs,
COLLARS and
HARNESS of all kin e, in the Count!,
ere always to be found •t the old and well know:
etaud,Bnitinsore st.,oppooltethe Presbyterian Cburct
(MeCREARY'S.)
Our Riding and Wagon Saddles,
are the most sobstanually built and neatest.
Our Harness, (plain and silver mount
ed,) are complete in er.•ry respect and warranted to b
of the very beat material and workmanship.
Our upper leather Draft Collars,
CAN NOT as IIZAT. They are the beat rirrino an
coat durable.
Our Heavy Draft Harness,
are made to order. a. cheap as they can he made •ny
trh are and to lh• molt au bstan tia I ma abet,
Riding Bridles, Whips, Lashes, Draf
Hamra. Yly-uets mud ey•ryiblng In the line: Non
'ea or cheaper.
Our prices
bare been selncin to the lowest living standard.
.e. liberal percentage for cub, off all bills salon n tin
toss or wore.
We work nothing bat the best of - stock end wit
warrant every article turned oat to be itt every romper
no represented.
Thankful fur put favor, we invite attention to on
present stock. .
1•3.01 , 8 us s coal and eXikailoe PAWNS •NT QV•u z r
1en.29.1e019.-tf D. IiceREARY ar. SON.
CARRIAGE -MAKING RESUMED
ins war being over, the andereigned hare return♦
the
CARRIAGE•MAKI\G BUSINESS
at their old stand, In Zest Middle street, Gettystiori
where they are again prepared to put up work in th
moat P•rehtonable, substantial, au,/ superior manor
A lot of new and serond•hand
CARRIAGES, BUGGIES, tC ,
on hand, which they will dispose of ►t the lowe,
pricn., and all orders will be supplied ►e prompt)
and satisfactorily as possible.
EirREPAIRING.IO
done with dispatch, and nt cheapest rates.
A large lot of new andold HARNESS on band fo
9.1 e.
Thankful for tha liberal patronage heretafore at.
need by thaw, they Solicit end will endeavor to di
servo a large share in the tutus.
May t9.-tf MANNER a ZIEGLER.
Buggies and Carriages
REMOVAL.
9 -1 HE; undetidglied has removed his Carriagt , tos
log *hop to 1.1 e ea,t end of Nliddle etreet, Getty
burg. Y., where Istit contious to build all kinds
work in Lis line, gut:
CARRIAGES, TRC.)TTING & FA Z.
lIVG--TOP.BCGGIES, ✓AGGER
&C. , &
Mr work is all put up of gond materrat and b
the beat of mechanics, and cannot rail to give sail
116CLIU13. His pricesare always reasonable. Be soli
its orders, confident that ha can please.
IidiPAIIIING promptly done, at mod rate,.
July 1,1115111.-1 y
( C ARRIAGES AND BUGGIES
PERRY J. TATE
is now building a •ariety of COACH WORE
the latest and most approved 'Wee, sad construe
ed ofthe heist maternal, to which be 'Ai:sleuth, atte
(ion of buyers. flaring built hip. 'sort .itb gr
care, and of material &elected witk, special refer..
to beauty of style and durabltisyi, be can coanden
ly recommend the work a•nainer;oassod by any oth
in or out of the cities. All k" laalis la an Inspection
hie work, to cunrince those Is want of soy kind of
vehicle that this Is sike place to bay them.
416,-REPAIII,ING in ovary branch doe* •t olio
grottos and on raaaonabi• forma.
Give me a call at my Factory. soar th• corner
Washington and Chazoszsbusg, strait Gettyebta
Pa.
I=
Murry stablts.
GETTYSBURG LIVERY,
Sales & Exchange Stables
N. WEAVER & SON, Proprietors,.
HAVING. this day associated with m
my sold LEVI in the Livery Bunn.
carried on by moon Washiegtou street, lore numb
of years, I would respectfully return, my thanks t
tuu nun lie for the kind petrouele ties•sofore etteud
ed to me
!laving now euperlor accommodation to mappl y th
publlc, we would solicit a ountnuation of ticr •
t conga.
We claim that we eau flariMb superior t
ae as moderate prig/seas asp other •stablishmect
illettyebarg.
Our •tables >•ilt be fbood stocked with the ►.et•o
Horses sad Volsisisk
Ws can furnish on a )tau Slack tarot with cutest
■nd obliging drirsra for long or short drivsa. W
eau furnish you a pair Of Morass and Baggy.
We can fa rulalt you a nice single Ilona and B . •
tar business or plassurs trip.
Ws can furnish you a Anis Saddle nom for manta
man or Lady.
We tau furnieh you a /amity Rotes and Ceoriage
W• eau furnish superior facilitiem for Tisitsig
Battle-field and Elpriors j
Particular 'notion paid to sapplying Racks fe
Xutterala.
In fact, you 4sa get any kind of a town to be ha
in a Gnt•clau Livery.
HORSES BOUGHT AND SOLD
at all times and on reasooable terms. Perimr.epluf.
Horses et this establishment have a goo•Zi
to select from. All Horses sold guammteed as rope
mooted, or no salt
By ■trict att.OtIOD to baldness, WWI & deolre to
please, •• hope to have lotoethiog to do.
xICH.V/A 'NIA TYE
LETS a. WILATSR.
April 9, 1869.—tf
-THE EAGLE LIVERY,
SALE & EXCHANGE STABLES
Washington Street, Gettslstomp, Pa.
ADJOINING TEE. YaHLE HOTEL
T HE under - signed would respec
lo'cirtit the public that he has open •
a new LS V kftY, BALE AND EXCHANGE STABL
in (44 place, and is prepared to offer superior ac
coeurtiodatiruis is this line. Helms provided hirnsel
with Buggies, Carriage.. Hacks, Light Wagons, dc.
of the latest ■tyla. aulluient to moot the public d
mend. His barges are all good, without spot or Glom
ish, and perfectly reUable—none of year "old cri
pies," but all of the "140 V order.
Riding partlie esti always be accommodated as
eozatortable egalpmaa[■ harnisbed.
Partlea,largeor small, sae get last what they was
ow the MOIL accommodatlag terms.
Visitors to the Bottio-dold politely atteaded s•
►nd reltable drivers tarnished if deoired.
Parties conveyed to and from the Depot aped 11
arrival and departure of *Very trial.
Horses bought, sold, or sschanged, •ad shwa
• chance for bargains glran • Our motto Is "thlr pla
and no gouging.
in... Particular attention paid to far:amidst 'I
biol.. sod Backe !by Panerais.
girl's &tut onrsolvesibat by abatitag soder
cad by furnishing espartos accommodations
we cannot tan to plots' every ozo who oattalcilms
car witablJahmowt. T. T TA'J.
W., 29. I INT
gaols and NotaurantS.
EAGLE 110 TE,.
_.....
The largest and utast ocanaio",l o ,,,, bi,
GISTTYBBITRO, PraNA_
OCOLNIZ 07 IMAIMIIIIOIO AY., ►Y/lIfI}OU griurig
JOHN L. T , .,TE, Proprietor
iiiirAn Oxonlb:as, tbr Pusengers and Bang*, ria
to tie Dr",ot, am Arrival and detiitivre of Rall
Trains- Clarefalservanbi, and reasonable diaries
'As: 19, 11197.
KEYSTONE HOTEL.
GRTTYSBUBG, PA.
Vic B. myERs, PROPRIETQW.,
NOW OPEN.
THIS ie a new House, and WU.*
acted ago Is the mot ykpproM et7le . h a
lecollos I plasma sad ow•aleaS. Wag Is the
=set beam* portioik of the Mrs. limyy, mange.
Rad Isa boos is* tot ' lly mosciaspialoa az/ Gm
Ore et IsedY,loslltrpN "Wei* attadisd. with
acperbuml iservelts, Bad saeashisiattag Maki,
vs shill m trey, sadasm. be plow. Thli Hotel
slew" eirat timpubbe, sad
Xlll St Mt
W. K. GALLAGHER
Mt
ahe star
Clettyeburg. •r
OP A. W. Mislita
adds his name to laid
the office of Clerk of
DON'T FO
Creditors and
burg Railroad Co •
o'clock. P. a., hit*
lot
NEW GAMS •
on our Brat paw s dit
the Legislature. Our
wall to consult
. It." pro
THE CIRCUS:—T.
clear day, brute tt to .
to sea Ilryan'a Circ
Everythinkr
DIVIDEND —Tbt,
of Gettysburg nee d •
dividend of 4i per Oro ,
inst., end the (3007,,
per cent.
ZOIJA.V ---The
will meet In New Oat
urilay,) it 9 4.• 14.;
The trabi Will leave e
1! , 1. -
SHEEP KL14,2
that a nii ID bar of va
been killed recently
townsthlp, A. fipfrtna
the beav teat loges%
- TOIL NSLII P -ACCO
poised by toe list -
publication nt invites&
po , itlitures in tke no
otiloariii will pla4e
SUPREME CO "
Court met at Harrill
The , Adam county
number, w ill beargts
and York cues are d
SAILED.—Rev. Dr
bor of years prominen
ti .o German Reform ,
Europe on the 21i
of the Arnerieitn Bln
Evangelical Alllinoe
eariehl in England.
ARREST.— A sirlin:
as Jarnos McCall. an,
front Baltimore. wasa
last weok for stoalin
shirts. and other artfc
Fluid. and conithlttt
the August torah.
7.--0,-Fi”dinir a "ft.
Tiry.in's Menagerie
Ch ism lier•les rg ('at
pesi - last week for ara
With a ne-tlect to cr-
Our residers will there
the Inest afbrestaid is d
and energy of our oh
TIJ E SPRINGS RA
etruction or the Pa
connect the town
Spring, la a axed f.
Compauy contract•
SMITH ,who COMM° ,
day, and obligates
raid graded, ties lai
rails, within 40days
man to do what he u
COLD.—The war
last week . RUN NU
a heavy storm—a
,r
north-eater. Slon.
hltn.tery and cold, r.
fires. Our ezchang
snow In various pla•
damage to fruit bud
of elowntial Injury
the high winds p
far.
UNEXPEVTED
Shay - all, a well kuo
nau Valley, Ulla co
pectedly on the 26
on Satraday, and
Sunday. A neigh
Sunday night. and
-as his daughter
Awoke to him, she w
.covery that her fat.
.came so quietly as
.attentiou of the at
:about 48 years.—Cb
erne 3fercersb
upon the "Borough ^
sundry reorrue, lac
whir*, might be des
these die :
dectioas of
lOW lett, wha 0.
make obscene recast
limes compelled to/.
them, acid vlllo
their bowllagA
This tiling baa •
call upon the Illy
Conetable—to abate
ally.
paragraph frau'
April 15th last;
"Mr. Edward Mc
House of Represen
"Politica , Manual
Lion or his Invalubi
appear before Aug
,wlll be strictly up t
em;'s leisure, if be
a life or the /ate
W e way add,
Polllloal Stx.:n hal &FL
referred to la thew
colleague is also ct p
vising the sheer of
for the current year,
States.
EXellaniON
ready noticed that A i
Instrumental Music'
over on Tueadsy
legs Church Moil
by other ladles •
Hancirer friends
treat. ?he proceeds
fit of the habbati.
Luthemt Cnaircia.
alon Train has •C
Gettysburg
o'clock, returning
Tickets, of which , ' •
will be issued, cab
stoma A. D. Bunn
abiding adicia-ion t.
NEW POSIMMEI
LER, Ma new P.
haying received h
charge of thaw °face
the present the o&.
old place. Mr.
present effkdent
CRKARY, Wlloll* • •
with the dotage of th
.dating disposition , r
ultr sod acceptable
Postmaster ta,kos eh
his acknowiesfgmen
general expression
administration of
last eight years, win
this is due Mins •
McCanaßY—than w
to scare up a better P
Where.
SPRLNGS HOT
Hotel, under the -
dance of Dr. , Elet
ing completion. ~ J r
hundred hands
Including Coven
tors, At% Although
completion by the
to have it ready for
'tie a mammoth'
-erection is due to th.
and executive caps,...
Cies and Water p
through the buildi
Sion of the Com.
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by the Gatcyabn
Smith la pulting
.an no- bolidingo.
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