a man who rested his gun on the win dow-sill while he capped it." General Ricketts, in reference to his having been held as one of the hosta ges for the privateers, states : " I con sidered it bad treatment to be selected as a hostage for a privateer, when was so lame that I could not walk, and while .my wounds were still open and unhealed. At this time General Winder came to see me. Ile had been an officer in my regiment; I had known him for twenty odd years.— It was on the 9th of November that he came to see me. He saw that my wounds were still unhealed; he saw my condition; but that very day he received an order to select hostages for the privateers, and, notwithstand ing he knew my condition, the next day, Sunday, the 10th of November, I was selected as one of the hostages." "I heard," he continues, " of a great many of our prisoners who had been bayonetted and shot. 1 saw three of them—two that had been bayonetted, and one of them shot. One was named Louis Francis, of the New York Four teenth. He had received fourteen bay onet wounds—one through his privates —and he had one wound very much ! like mine, on the knee, in consequence of which his leg was amputated after twelve weeks had passed; and I would state here that in regard to his case, when it was determined to amputate ,his leg, I heard Dr. Peachy, the rebel .surgeon, remark to one of his young assistants, " I won't be greedy; you ;may do it ;" and the young man did it. I saw a number in my room, many of Whom had been badly amputated. The flaps over the stump were drawn too tight, anti some the bones protruded. " A man by the name of - Prescott ,(the same referred to in the testimony of Surgeon Homiston) was amputated • twice, and was then, I think, moved to Richmond before the taps were heal ,ed. Prescott died under this treat ment. I heard a rebel doctor on the steps below my room say, " that he 'wished he could take out the hearts of the d—d Yankees as easily as he 'could take off their legs." Some of the •Southern gentlemen treated me very handsomely. Wade Hampton, who was opposed to my battery, came to see mo and behaved like a generous enemy." It appears, as a part of the history of this rebellion, that Lien. Ricketts was visited by his wife, who, having first heard that, he was killed in battle. afterwards that he was :dive but wound ed, travelled under great difficulties to _Manassas to see her husband. He says: " She had almost to fight her way through, but succeeded finally in reach ing me on the fourth day after the bat tle. There were eight persons in the Lewis House, at Manassas. in the room where I lay, and my wife, for two weeks, slept in that room, on the floor by my side, without a bed. When we got to Richmond there were six of us yin •a azoom,ll.l/ICMg them Col. Wilcox, Who remained with us until he eras ta ken to Charleston. There we were all in one room. There was no door to it. It was much as it would be here i f you 'should take off the doors of the edllt mittec-room, and then fill the passgte with wounded soldiers. In the hot :summer months the stench from their wounds, and from the utensils they used, was fearful. There was no pri vacy at all, because, there being no .door, the room could not be closed. We were there as a common show, Col. Wilcox and myself were objects of in terest, and were gazed upon as if we wore a couple of savages. The people :would , come in there and say all sorts of things to us and about, us, until I was obliged to tell them that. 1 was a :prisoner, and had nothing to say. On inir way to Richmond, when we reach •cd4Gordonsville, many women crowded around the cars, and asked my wife if :she cooked, if she washed, how she got there. Finally, Mrs. Ricketts ap pealed to the officer in charge, and told him that it was not the intention that we should be subjected to the treat ment, and if it was continued she would make it known to the authorities. Gen. Johnson took my wife's carriage :nut horses at Manassas, kept them, and has them yet for aught I know. When I got to Richmond, I spoke to several gentlemen about this, and so did Mrs. Ricketts. They said, ofeourso, the carriage and horses should be re turned; but they never were. " There is one debt," says this gallant soldier, "that I desire very much to pay, and ;tailing troubles me so much now as the fact that my wounds prevent me from entering upon active service at <Mee." The case of Louis Francis, who was terribly wounded and maltreated, and lost a leg, is referred to by General !Ricketts; but the testimony of Francis !himself is startling. He was a private in the New York Fourteenth regiment. He says: "I was attacked by two rob- el soldiers, and wounded in the right knee with a bayonet. As I lay on the sod they kept bayonetting me until received fourteen woundss. One then left me, the other muainlng over Me, Avhey3..a Union soldier coining up, shot - him in the breast, and he fell dead. I lay on tlic gt•Ottra Itniit 10 o'clock next flay.' • I. was then removed in a wagon 'to'a building; my wounds examined hiul partially dressed. • On the Saturday following we were carried to Manassas, and from there -:..o.the genera' hospital at Richmond. t?ly leg having partially mortified, I onSented tb itsbould be amputated, %;bich operation wasparformed -by a young man. I insisted that they :should allow Di Swaim to be present, :for I wanted one' - Union map there if I died under the operation. ' he tithes 'and the band slipped from neglect, and tbe bone protruded ; and about two VeAt'ailtr another operation was per formed;"at which time another piece , iof the thigh bone was sawed off. Six weeks after the amputation, and be fore it healed, I was removed to the tobacco-factory. Two operators were subsequently .performed on Francis—one at Fortress Monroe, and one at Brooklyn, New York—after his release from captivity. Revolting as these disclosures are, it was when the committee came to ex amine witnesses in reference to the treatment of our heroic dead that the Acudishnirit of the rebel leaders was most prominently , exhibited, Danjel Bixby,Jr.,of Washingtori,testiffe's that lie went out in company with G. A. fimart, of Cambridge, Massachusetts, :who went to search Tor the bddy of his brother, who fell •at Blackburn's Ford in the notion of the 114tit-ofJitly. Thek fdnnd the gr'ave. 'The olethes yore identified aq those of hisbrotber on account of some peculiarity in the make, tbr they had been made by his mother; and, in order to identify them, other clothes made by her were taken, that they might compare them. " We found no head in the glare, and no bones of any kind—nothing but the clothes and portions of the flesh. We found the remains of three other bodies all together. The clothes were there; some flesh was left, but no bones." The witness also states that Mrs. Pierce Butler, who lives near the place, said that she had seen the rebels boiling portions of the bodies of our dead in order to obtain their bones as relics. They could not wait for there to decay. She said that she had seen drumsticks outdo of " Yankee shin bones," as they called them. Mrs. But ler also stated that she had seen a skull that one of the New Orleans artillery ' had, which, he said, he was going to send home and have mounted and that he intended to drink a brandy punch out of it the day he was married. Frederick Seholcs, of the city of Brooklyn. New York, testified that he proceeded to the battle-field of Bull Run on the fourth of this month (April) to find the place where he supposed his brother's body was buried. Mr. &holes, who is a man of unquestioned eharaeter, by his testimony filly con firms the statements of other witnesses. lie met a free negro, named Simon or Simons, who stated that it was a com mon thing for the rebel soldiers to ex hibit the bones of the Yankees. "I found," he says, "in the bushes in the neighborhood, a part of a Zonave uni form, with the sleeve sticking out of the grave, and a portion of the panta loons, Attempting to pull It up, 1 saw the two ends of the grave were still unopened, but the middle had been prised up. pulling up the extremities of the unitbrin at some places, the sleeves of the shirt ill another, and a portion of the pantaloons. lie Swaltn ((moot' the surgeons, whose testimony has al ready been referred to) pointed out the trenches where the Secessionists had buried their own dead, and, on examination, it appeared that their re mains had not been disturbed at all. Mr. Scholes met a free negro, named Hampton, who resided near the place, and when be told him the manner in which these bodies bad been dug up, he said he knew it had been done, and added that the rebels had commenced digging bodies two or three days after they were buried, for the purpose, at first, of obtaining the buttons off their uniforms, and that afterwards they disinterred them to get their bones. He said they had taken rails and push ed the ends down 'in the centre under the middle of the bodies, and prised them up. " The information of the negroes of Benjamin Franklin Lewis corrobora ted fully the statement of this man, Hampton. They said that a good many of the bodies had been stripped naked on the field before they were buried, and that some were buried naked. I went to Mr. Lewis house and spoke to hint of the manner in which these bodies had been disinter f*lle admitted that it was hie:MMUS, condemned principally Ilse Louisi ana Tigers, of lien. Wheat's division. He admitted that oar wounded had been very badly treated." In confir mation or the testimony of Dr. Swalm and Dr Homiston, this witness avers that Mr. Lewis mentioned a number of instances of men who had been murdered by bail surgical treatment. Mr. Lewis was afraid that a pesti lence would break out in consequence of the dead being left unburied, and stated that he had gone and warned the neighborhood and had the dead buried, sending his own men to assist in doing so. `" On Sunday morning (yesterday), I went out in search of in brother's grave. We found the trench and dug for the bodies below. They were eighteen inches to two feet below the surthee, and had been hustled in in any way. In one end of the trench, we found, not more than two or three inches below the surface, the thighbone of a man which had evi dently been dug up after the burial. At the other end of the trench, we found the shinbone of a man, which had been struck by a musket ball and split. The bodies at the ends had been pried up. ' While digging there, a party of soldiers came along and showed us it part of a shinbone, five or six inches long, which had the end sawed of They said they had found it, among many other pieces, in one of the cabins the rebels had deserted. From the ap pearance of it, pieces had been sawed off to make finger-rings. As soon as the negroes noticed this, they said that the rebels had rings madoof the bones of our dead, and that they had them for sale in their camps. When Dr. Swaim saw the bone, he said it was a part of the shinbone of a man. The soldiers represented that there were lots of these bones scattered through the rebel huts sawed into rings," &e. gr. liewlB 'and hlS , negrees all spoke of Col. 'James Cameron's body, and knew that "it had been stripped, and also where it had been buried.' Mr. Seholes, in answer to a question of one of the committee,deseribed the different treat ment extended to the Union soldiers and the rebel dead- The talker bad little headboards placed at the head of their respective graves and marked; none of them. had the appearance of having been disturbed. The evidence of that distinguished and patriotic citizen, lion. William - Sprague, Governor of the State of Rhode Island, confirms and fortifies some of the most revolting statements of former witnesses. Ilis object in Visiting the battle-held was to recover the bodies of Colonel ~f,iloann and Ma jor Balton, of the Rhode nand regi ment. Ile took out with him several of his own men to identify the graves. On reaching the place ho states that " we commenced digging for the bodies of Colonel Slocum and Major Balton at , the spot pointed out to us by these j men who had been in the action. "While digging, some negro women came up anti aslced whom we were looking for, and at 'the satvetime said that 'Colonel Slogan' had been dug up by the rebels, by some mon of Geor gia regiment, his head cut off, and his body taken to a ravine thirty or forty yards below, and there burned. Wo stoppe'd digging and went to the spot designated, Where we found coals and ashes and bones mingled together. A little distance from there we found h shirt (aill buttoned at the neck), and soblankeli with large quantities-of up6n tit, everything indicating- rthe burning of a body there. We returned and duo- down at the spot indicated as the grave of Major Fallon, but found no body there; but at the place point ed out as the gra \'U . when Col. Slocum was buried, we hutritl a box, which, upon being, raised and opened, was found to con lain the 1)ody of Cu!. Slo cum. The soldiers who had buried the two bodies were satisfied that the grave which had been opened, the body taken out, beheaded and burned, was that of Major Ballou, because it was not in the spot where Col. Slocum was buried, but rather to the, right of it. They at once said that the rebels had made a mistake, and had taken the body of ! Major Ballow for that of Col. Slocum. The shirt, found near the 'lace where the body was burned I recognized as one belonging to Major Balton, as I had been very intimate with him. We gathered up the ashes containing the portion of his remains that, were left. and put them in a coffin, together with his shirt and the blanket with the hair left upon it. After we had done this we - went to that portion of the field where the battle had first commenced, and began to dig foe the remains of Captain Tower. We brought a soldier with us to designate the place where he was buried. Ile had been wounded in the battle, and had seen front the window of the house where the Cap tain was intetvd. On opening the ditch or trench, we found it filled with sobliers, all buried with their titres downward. On taking up some four or five, we discovered the remains of Captain Tower, mingled with those of the men. WO took them, placed them in a eolith, and brought them home." In reply to a question of a member of the 4 eommiltee, as to whether he was satisfied that they were buried in tentionally with their faces downward, Cov. Sprague's answer was, "Undoubt edly! Beyond all controversy t" and that "it was done as a :nark of indig nity." In answer to another question as to what their object could have been, especially in regard to the body of Col. Slocum, he replied, "Sheer brutality, and nothing else. They did it on ac count of his courage and chivalry, in forcing his regiment, fearlessly and bravely, upon them. He destroyed about ono half of that Georgia regi ment, which was made up of their best citizens." When the inquiry was put whether he thought these barbarities were committed by that regiment, he responded, "By that same regiment, as I was told." While their own dead were buried with marble head and foot stones, and names upon them, ours were buried, its I have stated, in trench es. This eminent witness concludes his testimon3- as follows : "I have pub-. fished an order to my second regiment, to which these officers were attached, that I shall not be satisfied with what they shall do, unless they give an ac count of 0110 rebel killed for each of their own number." The members of your committee might content themselves by leaving this testimony to the Senate and the people without a - word of comment; hut when the enemies of a just and generous Government, are attempting to excite the sympathy of disloyal Men in our own country, mid to solicit the aid of tbreign Governments by the grossest misrepresentations .of the ob jects of the war and of the conduct of the officers and soldiers of the Repub lic, this, the most shu•lling evidence of their insincetity and inlitonanity, de- SMITS some notice at our hands. History kill be examined in vain for a parallel to this rebellion against a good Government. Long prepared for by ambitious men, who were made doubly confident of success by the aid and counsel of former Administrations, and by the belief that their plans were unobserved by a magnanimous people they precipitated the war at a moment when On: General Adininis iratiou had just been changed, under circumstances of astounding perfidy. Without a sinrde reasonable ground of complaint, and in the thee of repeated manifestationsof moderation and peace on the part of the President and, his friends, they took up arms and de clared that they would never surren der until their rebellion had been rec ognized, or the institutions established by our forefathers had been destroyed. The people of the loyal States, at last convinced that they could preserve their liberties only by an appeal to the God of battles, rushed to the standard of the Republic in response to the call of the Chief Magistrate. Every step of this monstrous treason has been marked by violence and crime. No transgression has been too great and no wrong too startling for its leaders. They disregarded the sancti ty of' the oaths they had taken to sup port the Constitution; they repudiated all their obligations to the people of the free States; they deceived and be trayed their own fellow-Citizens, and crowded their armies with forced levies; they drove from their midst all who would hot yield to their despotism, or filled theirprisons with men who would not enlist under their flag. They have now ,crowned the rebellion by the per petratlon of deeds scarcely known even to savage warfare. The investigations of your commit tee have established this fret beyond controversy. The witnesses called be fore us were men of undoubted vera city and character. Some of them oc cupy high positions in the army, and others high positions in civil life. Dif fering in political sentiments, their cv idenee presents a remarkable concur rence of opinion and of judgment. Our fellow-countrymen heretofore sufficientlyimpressed by the generosi ty and forbearance of the Government of the United States, and the barbar ous character of tho crusade against. it, will be shocked by the statements of these unimpeached and unimpeach able witnesses, and foreign nations must, with one accord, however they have hesitated heretofore, consign to lasting - odium the authors of crimes which, in,all their details, exceed the worst o.Vecs.ses of the Sepoys of India. Inhumanity to the liOng has been the leading trait of the robe l leaders, but it was reserved likyour committee to disclose, as a concerted system, their insults to the wounded, and their mu tilation and desecration of the gallant dead: Our soldiers taken prisoners in honorable battle have been subjected to the most shameful treatmdut. All the considerations that i . nspiro ,ehivalrin emotions and gcnokons eon sideratidn-Am, bravo inch ttatTo been disregarded. Iris almost beyond that the men lighting' in 'snOta camo as ntirS, atntanstained 11- a Gov ernment which In thomidst of violCnce and I reachery tds giveM,repeated evi deuces of its indulgence, should have been subjected tO treatment never be fore resorted to by one foreign nation in a conflict with another. All the courtesies of professional and civil life seem to have been discarded. Gen. Beau himself, who, on a very recent occasion, boasted that he had been controlled by humane feel hugs, after the battle of Bull RUB, cool ly proposed to hold Gen. Ricketts as a hostage for one of the murderous pri vateers, and the rebel surge Ons dis dained intercourse and communication with our own surgeons, taken in hon orable battle. The outrages upon the dead will revive the recollection of the cruelties to which savage tribes sub ject their prisoners. They were buried in many cases naked, with their litees downward. They were left to decay in the open air, their bones carried off as trophies, sometimes, as the testimo ny proves, to be used as personal adornments, and one witness deliber ately avers that the head of one of our most gallant officers was cut off by a Secessionist, to be turned into a drink ing cup on the occasion of his marri age. Jl onstrous as this revelation may appeal' to he, your committee have been informed that during the last two weeks the skull of a Union soldier has been exhibited in the office or the scr geant,-at-arms of the House of Repre sentatives, which had been converted to such a purpose, and which hail beer; found on the person of one of the reb el prisoners taken in a recent conflict. The testimony of Gov. Sprague, of Rhode Island, is most interesting. It confirms the worst reports against the rebel soldiers, and conclusively proves that the body of one of the bravest of in the volunteer service was burned. Ire does not hesitate to add that this hyena desecration of tho hon ored corpse was because the rebels be lieved it to , he the body of Col. Slocum, against whom they were infuriated for having displayed so much courage and chivalry in forcing his regiment fear lessly and bravely upon them. These disclosures, establishing, as they incon testably do, the consistent inhumanity of the rebel leaders, will be read with sorrow and indignation by the people of the loyal States. They should in spire these people to renewed exer tions to protect our country from the restoration to power of such men.— They should, and we believe they will, arouse the disgust and horror of for eign nations against this unholy rebel lion. Ley it be ours to furnish, neverthe less, a continued contrast to such bar barities and crimes. Let us persevere in the good ArOrk of maintaining the authority of the Constitution, and of refusing to imitate the monstrous prac tices we have been called upon to in vestigate. Your committee beg to say, in con clusion, that they have not yet been enabled to gather testimony in regard to the additional inquiry suggested by the resolution of the Senate, whether Indian savages have been employed by the rebels in military service against the Government of the United States, and how seeb •),-nyfltre has been con ducted by the said savages, but that they have taken the proper steps to ,attend to this important duty. B. F. WADE, Chairman. Correspondence Between Corn. Parra gut and the Mayor of New Orleans. WASHINGTON, May I.—The following correspondence is taken from the Rich mond Enquirer . of yesterday, which city it reached by telegraph. The pa per was received by the R e ar Depart ment to-day. The correspondence is between the mayor of the city of New Orleans and Commodore Farragot, the commanding officer of the. United States flag-ship Hartford, off New Or- Jeans, April 261.1?, 1862: To his Excellency the Mayor of the City of New Orleans. Sit: Upon my arrival before your city, I had the honor to send to your honor Captain Bally, United States navy, second in command of the ex pedition, to demand of you the sur render of New Orleans to me, as the representative of the Government of the United Slates. Captain I3aily reported the result of an interview with yourself and the mil itary authorities. It must occur to your honor• that it is not within the province of a naval officer to assume the duties of a military commandant. I came here to reduce New Orleans to obedience to the laws, and to vindicate the offended majesty of the Govern ment of the United States. The rights of persons and property shall be se cured. I therefore demand of you as its representative, the unqualified sur render of the city, and that the em blem of sovereignty of the United States be hoisted over the City Hall, Mint, and Custom House by meridian this day. All flags and other emblems of sovereignty other than those of the United States to be removed from all the public buildings by that hour. I particularly request that you shall ex ercise your authority to quell disturb ances, restore order, and call upon all the good people of New Orleans to re turn at once to their vocations; and I particularly demand that no person shall be molested in person or properly for professing, sentiments of loyalty to their Government. I shall speedily anti severely punish any person or persons who shall coin mit such outrages Ais•,vero witnessed yesterday, by armed men firing upon helpless women and children for giving expression to their pleasure at witnessing the old flag. I am, very respectfully your obedi ent servant, D. G. FARRAGUT, Flag-Officer Western Gulf Squadron. The following is the reply of the Mayor of New Orleans: Flag-Officer D. 0. Farragatt, United States flag-ship Hartford: CITY lIALL, April 26,1862. Sin: In pursuance of a resolution which we thought proper to take out of regard for the lives of the women and children who still crowd the great metropolis, Gen. Lovell has evacuated it with his troops, and restored back to mc the administration of its gov ernment and the custody. c)Gts honor. I have, in cotins'erl . with the' city 'fath ers, considered the detaand you made of me yesterday of an unconditional surrender of the eity; 'coupled with rogniaition to hoist 'the' 'flag of the 'United , States on the pkilsfe ;edifices, and haul down the flag thatikUl floats brepl , te:froM the lora r :of this hall. it ilueomes my 114Ysto trkf t onit to yof , ' an which is the un;v,:,,r_ sal sentiment of my 'constituents no less than the "prompting of my own heart dictates mo on this sad and sol emn occasion. The city is without the means of de fence, and is utterly deStitute of the 'force and material that might enable it to resist an overpowering armament displayed in sight of it. lam no mil itary man, and possess no anthbrity beyond that of exeenting the municipal laws of the city of New Orleans. IL would be presumptuous in me to at tempt to lead awarnly to the field if I had one at command, and I know still less how to, surrender fin undefended place, held as this is, at the mercy of your gunners and your mortars. To , surrender such a place were en idle and unmeaning ceremony. The city is yours by the power of brutal forco, not by my choice or the consent of its inhabitants. It is for you to deter mine what will be the fhte,that awaits us hero. As to hoisting any flag not of our adoption and allegiance, let me say to you, that ,the man lives not, in our midst whose hand and heart would not be paralyzed at the mere thought of such an act, nor could I fluid in my en tire constituency so wretched and des perate a renegade as would dare to profane with his hand the sacred em blem of our aspirations. Sir, you have manifested sentiments which would become one engaged in a better cause than that to which you have devoted your sword. I doubt not but that they spring from a noble, though deluded, nature, and I know how to appreciate the emotions which inspire them. You have a gallant peo plc to administrate during your occu pancy of this city—a people sensitive to all that can in the least affect their dignity and self-respect. Pray, sir, do not fail to regard their susceptibilities. The obligations which I shall assume in their name shall be religiously com plied with. You may trust their hon or, though you might not counton their submission to unmerited wrong. In conclusion, I beg you to under stand that the people of New Orleans, while unable to resist your force, do not allow themselves to be insulted to the interference of such as have ren dered themselves odious and contemp tible by their dastardly desertion of our cause in the mighty 'struggle it which we are engaged, or such as might remind them too powerfully that they are the conquered, and you the con querors. Peace and order may be pre served without resort to measures which I could not at this moment prevent. Your occupying the city does not transfer their allegiance from the Gov ernment of their choice to ono which they have Aellberately repudiated. They yield the obedience which the conqueror is entitled to extort from the conquered. Respectfully, JOIIN P. MoNuon, Mayor. DIED, In this place on the Ist inst.ofter short but severe illness, JOHN DANiEr. P., son of David . and Mary I.Virove, aged 4 years, 7 months and 14 Aays. A few days ago, happy and joyous; the hope of fond parents, the joy of a household, beloved and esteemed by all who knew him. Now, alas! cold in death, decked in the ha biliments of the grave, and consigned to the "narrow home." Another little voice is hushed on earth; ifs childish prattle will no more gladden the hearts of loving parents, or soothe the lonely hours of solitude. Those little feet, early tired in life's rough path way, and that little form has lain down in its saint-like slumber, leaving darkness and gloom to brood over a thrice stricken house hold. But, such is life, and such the mingled cup of joy and sorrow we are called to taste here below. Another lamb is added to the fold of the great Shepherd, and we know that lie doeth all things well. " In grief and tears we now have given This star to gild yon azure dome— Nor dare we call it hack from heaven, To gild the darkness of our borne." M. ATRIMONI Two young ladies, whose modesty prevents them from calling themselves handsome, intelligent, and re• fined, use &shone of opening, a cot reap tndence with two gentlemen, Address, 'LUCCA ff k HELLEN', 'May 6-It. , Epruce Creek, l'a. NEW CONFECTIONERY STORE. JOHN WILSON Inform the citivne of !fun t Medan and vicinity. that be bee opened n CONFECVONEUY opposite, A. B. Cunning ham's Mere. II ill ntreet, here be null be pleased to nerve the fopie Avith Caben. Candice, Nuts, Tobacco, Cigars, eta, etc.. and everything else uspglly,rept In a tountry confection. y establishment. T.GI4 p. 414. lb Alpo inform tho people that ho ham lltled PT a Mara in a handsome outliner. It hero he trill keep conitantly on hand 10E CREAM, which he will ho pleased to servo out to those who favor him with a call. Ilpnliogdot), Nap 6, 1862-t f. MME. DEMOItEST'S Quarterly Mirror of Fashions, GREAT 131PROTEMIMS,AND ADDITIONS, TUB 601.01E11 CONTAIr3 Pour Large and Splendid Fashion-plates, Three Pull-stzea Patterns of Dresses, New French Triirst, an Elegant Sleeve, and a Misses' Sack, =I Braid and :Embroidering Patterns, Together *WI nearly ono !unlaced Engravings of all the Dos olden fur Skimmer Bonnets, Cloaks, Trimmings, Childretep Dresses, Etc., and valuable Information to 51illinare, Dress Makers, Mothers, and Ladies generally. presenting the largest and best Fashion Megasine in the World, published 473 Braes!nay, and sold ererynhere at 25 Cents, or sent by mail post free, on receipt of the amount, In damps or silver, Yearly St, with the following valuable premium: Each yearly subecrTher affil be entitled Wri receipt Ter the selection of 50 Cents worth of plain talterns, from the designs to the boot, er from the show room, or they may be ordered and sent by mail any time during the Year, by paying the postage. Splendid Inducements to Canysopers SUMMER NUMBER No*REABY. May 6,18624 a, QIIERIFFS SALE.—By virtue of a 1.0 writ of Vend. Expones to me directeit, I trill expose to public tale, at the public house of 3lre. Catherine Fra ker, in the twai& of Shirleysburg, on FRIRAY,.the 16th day of 3IAY next, at 2 o'olocl/,l'. the•followlng 4e. scribed Real estate, to wit : The defendant's right, title and interest, In and to 134 acres of land, more or less, situate, in Shirley township, Huntingdon county, bounded on thanorth•onst by land of Andrew Spanogle, on the loath by land of 11011, on the west by land of Robert flicsm, and on the north by land of John Lutz, having thereon erectgpi two dwelling houses, ono bank berg 30 feet square, tind Other out buildinge,—about Macro of the laild.are cleared. Seized, taken In execution, foul Co ho eplttae the property of Si mon. 31eGarvey. , , • . JOHN C. AVATSOIC, Sharlff. Sheriff 'a OQtca, Huntingdon, April 21,,1862, RMUNP l'Hi - kc [AN te• sa'OlWAr: Oflivo la•Hrly oppnlita head's Drug Storo, Ituntingdol., la. If TEASUREIR'S SAL[ 3 OF UNSEA, TED LANDS IN HUNTINGDON COUNTY. ' icliElLEAS;blif an act l of Ole flOpetal Assembly °CAM, Continents ealth of Ponenyltania, entitled ".fn act to unwed an eel directing the mode of selling linsented lands for taxes and other purposes," passed 13th IlataitlBls, and the other acts hison.the subjert, the Trensurers'ortho several counties within title Commonwealth ate.direeted to commeneolim the Vslyrihday in June, in the 3etfr 1816, and at therkpiration tffirtrrery ttin 'yeatij,dheeetifter, and adjourn front day to day, if it be neseoearklntio ao, end make public .ale of the whole or any part of Ruch tract Of Unseated 111111 i, situate in the •proper county+, as will pay the as rearages of the taxes which' eltall, then have rein/tined dun or unpaid for the apse° of One yeas' before. together Stith all costs necessailly accruing by, reason of such delinquency. kc. Therefore, I, J. A. NAM, Tressen rer of the county of Huntingdon, do hereby' giro hence that linen the following tracts of unseated land,,situate no hereinafter described, the several sums stated are the arrearagea of taxes, respectively, tine and unpaid for one year, and that in pursuance of the direction of the afore said Act of Assemblv, I shall, on MONDAY, TUE OTII DAY OP .lUNF. NEXT, at the Court Home, tit the bar ongh of Tfuntspgdon, commence the Public Sale of the ;thole or any part of such teteete of unseated land, mien hich ell or any part of the taxes heroin specified shall then be due; And continue such sale by adjournment un til nil the tracts upon which the taus shall remain tine anti unpaid, Miami he JOHN A. N'ASTI, Treas. of Hunt.. Co. Trensineem Office, Ain il o,log. Amount of Taxes due and unpaid on the follmeing'neteir of MS' Id"? Lauds, TT to and including Me year 1860: Warrantees or Go nets. Acres. Perches. Tax. , , Barrec Township. . , Moses Tiniest, 437 , 20 12 James Asli & William Shannon, 065 68 02 John Hall, 400 450 Brady Tnenslup. , Lewis Igo, 54 1 29 Andrew Bell, 43 33 214 Robert Walnuts. 797 10 01 William Trianon. 425 10 32 James Rona' wow', 90 10 80 Abraham Peachy. 72 212 Chrintian Kauffman, 53 66 Daniel King, 33 60 Case Township. Robert Miller, 400 William Miller, 400 A 30 685 Chrbott Township. • Henry Rhodes. 23 8 28 cook & Elder (now Schell,) 133 3 06 Win. Spring. 400 920 John Murphy, VA 920 Wm. Man, 400 9 'X John Bran, 400 9 20 Benjamin Price, 200 4 60 Alexander Henry, 400 920 Win. illowan, 418 862 Benjamin Perm, 107 80 247 Giafrius Miller, So 181 Samuel Snare, DO 160 Henry Miller, 12 , 84 Matthew. Atkinson, 100 4 99 Jonathan Pen, 100 3 80 David Linsley, 343 760 Speer & Dougherty, 439 10 08 Speer & Dougheity, 430 10 08 Thonian 51g honor, 105 17 26 floury RoUrts, 76 864 J. Anderson & E. Horton, 100 ,11 50 Daniel Nen - Varner, 100 ' 948 A. S. !Omen, 76 695 J. 5 Stewart, 26 4 60 John lifiseor, 400 920 Jae. N. Spangler. /90 4 60 Cloy 7 'owlish, p. Abraham Weight, 209 8 37 Isaac Glenn, 232 61 698 John Dune, • 440 550 Robert Dunn, 440 660 Cromwell Township. Charles Bayles, 390 31 292 John Smith, 393 17 ' 294 J. Stcvennon, 403 51 300 John Jourdan. 418 20 .3 16 Samuel Galbraith, 393 41 294 Joseph Galbrnith, 400 70 800 John Galbraith, 408 77 308 James McMullan, 110 1 14 Titus dairy, 416 88 307 John Torrent, 400 9 05 James Old (pm t,) 350 1 112 .63.anklin Townshtp. Trent & Koller, -92 004 Mary Joe flan, et 718 J 60074 McClellan,„_ 79 704 David Caldwell, ~.” 40 • 478 James Logan, 5 48 Ifenderson Township. John Graffius, . 9 41 James Port, 80 45 fforteell Township. , Peter Het ring, 210 7 67 Conrad Herring,' 200 730 David Shaffer, 212 7 72 Sarah tell, 202 7 44 3largnret Lett 207 8 54 Adam 'Levi, 205 7 51 Abraham Levi, 200 7 30 Hannah Holing, 97 • 242 Fred. Herring, 37 1 95 ;untold Township. Samuel Caldwell, 100 4 21 W. Barrack (oi J. D. Given,) 200 8 42 Daniel Africa, 50 1 55 Jac/ son Township. Thomas Farmer, 400 617 George Stever, 460 5 17 Jacob Illtaimer, 400 6 23 Andrew Boyd, 400 5 17 ' George or Robe) t Grazier, 400 617 George Angles, 400 6 17 Adam Striker. 400 6 17 Hillary Baker, 400 64T Thomas Rime% 400 617 Thomas Ralston, 400 0 17 Theme; Ralston, Jr , 400 517 David Ralston, 400 517 Ephraim Jonas, 300 5 17 ,Tulin Droivn, 400 - 6 17 Jonathan Priestly, 437 8 63 William Johnston, 400 617 Robert Johnston, 400 - 5 17 Charles Caldwell, 400 617 James Denn, 4211 5 47 Henry Carmon, 400 5 17 John Aflame, 400 6 17 ' Henry West, 400 617 Alexander Johnston, 400 _ 6 17 Hugh Johnston, 400 617 Thomas 31cClure, 500 617 John Russell, 409 43 27 John Balaton, 400 • 517 James West, 400 4 17 William Steel, 409 611 . Samuel Canan, 6 45 Abraham Dean, , , 95 , 69 7 James Fulton, 400 GI 17 Samuel Marshall, don 617 Robert Caldwell, 400 617 Matthew Simpson, 400 617 James 'McClure, 400 6 17 Samuel Steel, 400 6 17 John Fulton, 400 517 John GB11)1601, 400 6 17 Joseph McClure, 400 ' 517 George Wice, 400 617 Oneida Township. John Jacknon, 129 3 78 B. Brandon, 441 ' 903 E. Evans, 431 969 D. Stephens, 852 4 78 • John Light. 293 4 25. James Whitehead, 204 29 15 02 John Whitehead, 8 40 Porter Towns6sp. William Smith, 1)11. ' 150 IR 85 William Smith, DD. 100 33 24 Benjamin K. Neff, 100 7 08 Willi/1D Smith. 402 18 10 A. P. Wilma (or Shoenberger,) 275 19 25 do do 105 653 do do 224 11 76 do do 188 9 87 do do 228 15 00 Shirley Township. :fames McMullin, 456 172 Peter Wertz, 411 1 56 Agnes Gardner, 539 185 166 James Caldwell, 405 •58 168 Benjamin Brown. 493 120 168 Samuel Kennedy, 414 85 156 Daniel Shindell, 275 2 92 William & John Pritterson,, 175 66 Springfield Township. ~,, Stacy YOung, 400 660 Going, Eberts, (part) 75 277 Brice X. Blair, -123 184 Samuel Caldwell's heirs, 4 18 Tell Township. John Caldwell, 844 81 258 W. Anderson, • 100 228 rod 2 - 010nthip. Taylor's hairs, 46 81 380 Samuel Cornelius, 305 08 1818 Spoor & Martin, 06 2 68 Eliot Smith, 152 425 William Shoal; 439 611 James Witer, 400 11 20 Amos Clark, 400 7 95 Barkley & Eduardo, (IL Nob) 400 1680 do to (T. C,reelf.) 400 11 20 ATio..ll 51c51n0 trio, 200 . 75 Union Township. J,thn Bel:. 192 406 Robert 11011, 224 3 56 Sarah Elljuot, • So 274 James Pea, 429 16 42 liolgort red. 181 7 It Benjamin Elliott, 26 1 10 Join, Bromoter. 400 .1810 Samuel Caldwell, 300 12 54 do do - 10 84 Hans sforrison, 81 3 69 7Fatier num:Plc,. , . 1 . ' . • llichaid Smith, not ' 30 82 Charles Smith, 80 649 John Her, 99 5 08 John Porter, 437 10 98. Peter Mot, 85 .244 Onotgo'Cutwalt, . • 100 "930 Jacob Myers, • . 200 11 10 John Patton, 90 1 98 Samuel Findley, 110 604, Ilugh Lonrish. • 422 , 611 Rudolph Lourloh; 412 700 Trarrioromark Township. ~. . ~ J. 31ittheves,IL ()Ate. aJ. Armitage, 200 23 53 113.5 t Township. • . William tracker, . 160 .123 17 62 Woo. Reed, • 12 114 54 —••• ALSO—The following real estate upon which po.oniii property cannot he Mond saMcient to pay the taxes, re-, turned by the several collectors, is charged with the tag , en thereon assesoed for the years 1859 and.1869,."4,111 be sold aa unseated lands, in print:ante 01, the iligectlono of the forty-flout section of the net or Assemdily, bptitled "ah att to reduce the State Bey, arukto incorporate the Penn, sylvaniaCanal and Railroad Company,' aloproveoPthe 2inli of AprlllB44 : 0 • ••• . Carbon Township. - Kottermari & Martin,. 42: 230 Costner, Comings 0 Frarttnitn; 102 4 08 P. C. Reamer, 4 lota On Coalmont) . " " 44 31.. T. Martin (sto,dMill trim°, , . 200 1344 P. P. Ditwess, 70 &1108 E. Ii: Anderson, ' . . , 250 14 88 F. C. Recliner, (Shoot:nal:or tract) . 20Q 14 00 .I.rankiiit Ibuistship.•'. t " i . startin StinBt,... •-' , .12 • ';..' 70 Zell 710onsAir. .. • , t. David Thompson, 30 45 Robert Patterson, 300 21 1 3 p g . trrsere. hri , er, .139 3 36 JOHN WILSON - Ilvomit .7;pwns1 .0 . , f 4 ; .91ceirer (or slo>enherge.C.) 745' =2 87 31. Shaffer, . I 208 . 21i0 5104,, ' 99. 328 t J. Witipptenii;l , ll6hie end Ick, M J. 'Elheny, 8 lot, Mt. Tinton, nocnay's 1t Lie'' " John 37eCen, hell ' • John L. Runibet ger, ;z foundry :z 1011 . _ • R4toitinshil4. , J. Miller, 1. lot, Petefeburi,' Ituntingdon, Aptil B,lBe. Ili l'il , pENNS,YLVA.II,IA.:II,AIL RQAD, 'TIME OF,I4I,A?INCI,OF TRAINS IVES ll'A - 74 'el r- K 1 CI 3TATIQN§T 431 • -.,..i... 67 arrfontitamiiton i : '',3, : . 99 8 439 ''6 PI Olt; Union 10, 13 ..,... 9, 40 454 - - gilt Creek; .. ..-. .... ', :. - -. . 9 29 ; 608666 6 29 Iluntingdon, - • 9 50 21 8 913 5 24, Petersburg, 987 ...... 868 932 , • •,- Barree, ' ~.: - - ... ..! . , 74:50 632 ' ' 656 Sproco Crook, '9 26 •• 842 563 Ihrmingkami.;.:. .. '''' 827 604 718 Tyrena, 907 " 819 615 Tipton - -` 8 . 69 ....... 4 113 620 " Foatotin, 3 ... ;. I .... .::. ' ' .'' ,8 31 625 ' '7 36 1ic178'31111.;..... ...... 852 759 045 8 05 7 60 Altoona, _ • 8 40 1 00 7 45 . P. M. A.M. 4.34 Accommodation Train, arrives at 12:50 iipd leaves at 1120 P. Id: ' '- 1 ' ' '' , '' --' UUNTI,N,G &-BridAD.TOll RAILROAD.—CLIANON OF ecnEnutz On and after Monday, Dec, Td, 16 I , rammer Trathe will arrive and depart 841 UP RAINS, , , Lear* Nuntingtten at 7.30 A. £ M. 4.10 P. SI. Sexton " P. 30 A. M. & 0.10 P. Arrive at Ilopetrell'" 10.15 A. Si. DOWN TRAINEt • ' • ' Learn Hopewell et 10.36 A. it. - •- • ' " Emden " 11.10'A.'31. & 0.30 P. of. Arrive at Iluutingdon & 8.30 P:M. J. J. LAWEENCE, . ' • • 4 •I • BPDt• ti Doc. 5, 1861 I®c NORTH' EIO ' STREET, (Up olifts Bre .7' d d door abo rt A PIIIhADhLP 1A.,, L4DIES' D.11,Et39 The co-paltneriddr, heretofore erieting between KAT ir MAN LONNERSTALTER:having been disnolred ' ' mutant content, the undersigned respectfully informs th petrunt and friend's of the old firm, and the trade in gas:, oral, that he has taken'all the iip-e tai ti roomk ot • , • N 0.103 North Eighth at.; To eontineq the manufacturing of all kiddit of DRESS, CLOAK, • . - AND MANTILLA TRIMMINGS, ; FRINGES, BUTTONS. ,s ' TASSELS, CORD, READ-NETS, of all doecriptionN, Ac. And will offer inducements in price end tine,lity , as , lol et prompt. attendance to order! , eyetT articpinpitiji tatuing to hie line. WM. LONNERSTAPTER; No. 1,03 North'Eighth Street, abase Arch, Phile. , April 22, 1862-3 m.. , NEW ARRIVAL - !', ' 6,0;a4 ; 1 Op ASH.- MILL O? HAS JUST OPENED A PINE 4881 7 RTME N T OP DRY GOODS. • .A:r i u ; s 4 'si , ooK or •BESTiGROCERIESi' 13001 t, SHOES, HATS, "O. — &C: AND ARTICLES TOO I:II3IERCUS TO, MENTION. MY OLD CUSTOMhjii: , THE PUBLIC GENEB...4.SLT.; - ATIT. DEMISTED ID CALL AND MAIM ATBCY 01 iir AND CHEAP GOODS G. ASR. MILLER. IRDitin g don,.Apry 22, 18e2.,, H A RDWARE AND i • ' 'CUTLERY -• x mmusE S TOCK. Ada • ENDLESS v4rETy. - . : HARDWARE, NOW OPEN AND FOR SAID BY - Ms, HUNTINGDON, P'_ v • . CALL AND 'EXAMINE OUI STOCK.`'' April 16, . , . GOODS Ttoputob TO OLOPAWES is FISHER de e - SON - I~aie just and ojjer ttiB3fe F , ubhc, - • A sr-Ltiltiii) SELECTED cV W GOODS, T ! ..pp;u:oEB4 , 4ilci" THE PUBLIC • " , ~- - • Will please ca• 11 and examine April 8,1881. TH E .ST:LOU IS; CHESTNUT Street. betwo,m Third and, Fourth, ShSedrAttlelB,4.: he undersigned, having leased, far ri.tpins yents,, this popular house, have the pleasure of in.ouncit g ,ice • thq/s. isiongy .v,sl.lhe VA•vidlng community, that it is:nova open for. the reenlaid-,ef ;chests. ' The house elnoethe first of Marsh last, , hae been Seltiidiy contented 'and ted in p superlor,manner; the aptintnAnte are brge, , Srell ventilstedand furnished iii 'mlidain style., It is tentrillfr Socatetts engonient to edt the depnr.aad qtaantboat. loge, and in the hameditite tletytof ilps . p.itAnps,ls.4se rostMinstindamaiMgVoo —, ',,,o7.7,:g4 , llig! connect* Ms' rritte'floter , lirsittnitentlopt46 - 0 • conizoodntinit of those preferring the European Crises of Itoomistram Three to Strteii-Dollarspermaak, , according to location. Board $1 PO per day. Table ¬e for Merchants sad business mon from 1 to 3 P. M. - • • • • • • • HENRY NEV., ISAAC L. Loßvpo, April 8,18824 y. . . - . JEW ..GOI:PDS.. „ .1.1 • .:••-• • " ric.ll36il",' INYIT.Vg"2O CALL; AT S.'?; ••" S - SMITH'S STORE ' 0.1i.1111.1. STlttEt'llinr:l.KlDO:l4;' S li.PlS A. TkE " i .. - • ifdah 6,1 ioiLish s rA , • - •: . •- • - • PART, cf2, " 3 4 ,4llWltilrbii,•: r; 00.yentioNiattna, CI Macov• - :,131g4,E4 ay. TISE BEST, and every btlf6i 4 i%rttile inuall,yftli4 go' griogof Mttra' * • Pidata,Varnlalloat Oil. and SFEs. TdritaiOtne, IMST AVA tl' T3E PflaW PATEW „ and riiirchaz of art des taa nurnarons to snontio . r. .The publiegernirallY will please call and examine for theme.d, en and learn my pricea. ItuntinEptern, Apt it IMMO 0 1 - 4 * - LI 1 - : lea 1.84 tf, mr rs 0 t% P. M. TEIN 9. S. SiUTV
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