Independent Republican. (Montrose, Pa.) 1855-1926, February 14, 1865, Image 2

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XXVIII 00110328-21608 D MEM
Bastsra, Feb. & —The credentials of Mr. lane,
Senator from Esotsas, and those of Mr. Farwell, Sen
ator from Maine, were presented. An act, for-the
benefit of army officers In the field, regulating the
commutatiop price of rations, was reported. - 4t rot.
elution wasadopted calling upon the President far
Information%) regard to permits to trade ins . :otton.
A resolution was offered and will be taken up tet
day, tailing for Information Inregard to the btte
peace MISSIMI. Mr. Wilson then called .up the hill
In relation to the enrollment, as report by the
Military Committee. Section fifty, providing that
State and local bounties to volunteers be paid 11:1 in-
Stailtaenla, was strleketz, out. An amendment
to repeal that section of the Enrollment hill - which
Permits °orators of States to send agents to States
In retellkot to tee:nit' and - fill quotas was proposed
and adopted. Further consideration of the hid was
defamed till to day. A jointressatntion propming an
amendment to tee Constitution, in relation to the
apportinnmvat ortepresentatices among the several
States. Mc Wade made a report In relation to the
attark on Fetersburgh In Jowled. "Five thousand
efiPitak of the ,report were ordered to bo printed. .
Rotrar..—A revolution was adopted calling for In
formation In regard to privileges said to have been
greeted to clergymen of avertaln denomination. A
resolution Instructing the Committee on Public
Lands to Inquire into the expedieney of so amending
the Homestead. _Law _that Lands occupied under its
provisions may be taxed for county and other par-
PAW Via alio &Oyes, to., Mr. Rollins, of Missouri,
offered a resolution to recompense loyal slaveholders
whose slaves were freed by the amendment A res
olution was adopted instructing the Committee on
the Conduct of the War to examine Into the cam
lift= ° o f t ( t l g L nk n s ci to the s Freti r d r en . t f l or a ht end red e reao
avors
tosecure peace. It lies over. Mr. Fernando Wood's
Union resolution was taken up and agreed to. The
Navy Appropriation Bill was taken up, and the
amendment crating a Board of Admiralty was' disa
greed to. The bill was then passed. The Rouse
then parted the &cabs resolution loran amendment
of the rules; so as to provide speedily for the &mut
leg of , the . electoral votes for President and Vice
President of the United States.
Eigasas. Feb. 4.—A resolution was introduced to
advance Paul S. Forbes, of New York, the sum of
Si:00,000 on the contract for building the steam
5100p , 4-war Idaho. Mr. Sherman asked unanimous
consent to call up the bill to encourage emigration,
which was not Remittal. Mr. Wilson introdneqd a
hill for tee protection of travelers, which provides,
among other things, that no person shall be excluded
from hard upon any railroad or navigable water of
the United States on account of color. or by reason
of any State law or muincipal ordinances, or of any
rule, regulation, or of any corporation, company or
SLUM whatever. Mr. Wilson also introduced, a
which was ordered-to be printed, to prevent the
e of notes, script, bonds, or other evidence of
debt, issued by the rebel authorities, Ate. A resolu
tion was introduced, and laid over till to-day, de
claring that the President's approval is not necessary
to give validity to the Article of Amendment to the
Constitution proposed by Congress. Mr. Sumner
introducers series of resolutions, which were order
ed to be printed, declaring that the rebel States
should not be allowed to participate in the ratifica
tion of the Constitutional Amendment. Considera
tion of the joint resolution declaring certain States
not entitled to representation in the Electoral Col
lege. was then renewed. After the rejection of
several amendments, the resolution was passed.
Horse.—A bill was passed providing for another
term of court for the district of Arkson. and for
other purposes. A resolution was adopted instruct
leg the Committee on Military Affairs to Juanita into
a case ofialleged cruelty to wounded soldiers at
Fort Schuyler. The Rouse then assumed consider
ation of the Navy Appropriation bill, the. amend
ment pending being the creation of a Brd of Ad
miralty. After a somewhat personal debate, in
which Mr Fernando Wood, of 'New York; Pike, of
Maine; Rice, of Massachusetts; Stevens, of Penn
sylvania, and several other gentlemen participated,
the amendment was lost TO*, 'Louse then con
curred In the Senate'. amendment to the joint resce
lotion declaring certain States not entitled to repre
sentation In the Electoral College.
fittrava, Feb. 7.—Mr. Harris presented the peti
tion of Peter Cooper and others, of New-York, in
favor of a ship eatsl from fake Erie to Lake Ontario.
A resolution was adopted declaring that the action
of the Secretary of the Senate, In submitting the
Conatitntional Amendment to the President for his
approval, was unnecessary, and should not be taken
as a precedent for the future. Mr. Sumner's rude
ton, calling on the President for information In re ,
curd to the late peace conterence was not taken up.
The enrollment bill was then taken up. The peed
ing question was the adoption of the amendment to
make the third section mad so that substitute-brok
ers, recruiting agents, or 'other persons who shall,
for pay or profit, enlist insane persons, or persona In
a state of intoxication, shall be punished. This
amendment was adopted. Mr. Clark moved to
amend the first section so as to make it read that
any person drafted may furnish as a attbstitnt:raer
son liable to draft in the same town, city or
This amendment was also adopted. Several of the
amendments wens rejeeted, when the Mil was pass
ed. Mr. Powell moved the postponement of all pri
or orders for the purpose of considering the bill to
authorize the construction of a bridge over the Ohio.
River at Zanesville. Pending the consideration of
this question the Senate adjourned.
Borne.—A rees-lution was offered directing the
Speaker to issue his warrant for the arrest of . A. P.
Yield, for his assault upon Mr. Kelley of the Bonne.
The House then went into 'Committee on the For
tiecation Bill. Mr. Brooks moved to strike out the
appropriation of half a million dollars for the de
fences around Washington. The amendment was
relected. The Army Approprlation bill was then
taker up and passed. The House, at 4 o'clock, took
a recess till 7 o'clock, The evening session was at,
tended by only Boyce members, and was entirely de
voted to speech-making.
Eimer% 'Feb. B.—Took no a bill relating to postal
laws. The bill contains seventeen sections, a full
summary of which will be found in the p
of Congress. It is said to have the approva rc r e rg:
PostmasterGetteral. At 1 o'clock the Senate re
ceived a Gramme from the House, that the bony was
ready to proceed with the counting of the Prmient
lai vote. The Renate then repaired to the House of
Representatives and assisted at this ceremony. retie
Ing at 2 o'clock to their own room. Mr. Sumner's
resolution requesting the President to length infor
mation In ?chattels. to thepeace conference was taken
up and passed, after a sottiewhat protracted debate.
The bill to establish a bridge over the Ohio at Louis
ville. was taken up and paseed. Pending the con
sideration of a bill to define the boundaries , of the
State of Nevada, the Senate adjourned.
Horse.—fn the Houses resolution was adopted re
questing the President to communicate Information
in regard to the late peace conference. A bill was
introdnced and referred to the Committee on COm
requiring ship owners to make annual re
turns of Hp , tonage of every vessel held by them.
A resolution was adopted to appoint a select com
mittee to investigate the charges of fraud and cor
ruption which have been made against the Commis
sioner!, of Patents. A thousand dollar' was appro
priated to procure a marble bust of the late Chief
Justice. A bill was passed melding for the confine
ment of juvenile offenders against the laws of the
United States in houses of refuge. At 1 o'clock a
message was sent to the Sena% atoonmeitig that
the House was ready to receive that body. for the
purpose of counting the electoral vote, Soon after
- the Senators entered, and were assigned sesie In the
body of the hall, on the right of the presiding ogee,.
-After a few preliminary remarks, the 'Vlee-Prealdent
proceeded to opeq the emtitlestes of election, and
announce the vote of each State. The votes having
all been opened and counted, the tellers through
Senator Trumbull, announced the election Of MIRA. ,
NAM Loccout, President of the United State., and
ANDSUOIS JOHNSON Vice-President of the United
Staten, for four years from the 4th of March !Mt
The announcement was I ecelved with applause from
the galleries and floor. The Scooters then returned
to their own chamber and the Hone adjourned-
The Peace Question.
Wasum - Grrox, Monday; Feb. 41.1),
The peace mania has almost subsided, and the
credulous who ',cyst:sled In seeing Some hidden my's.
-tery in the °theist denials that any result was ob.
Lined at the conference In Hampton Rinds, have
been hared to abandon their theory. It Is now ful
ly realized that an ew.rgolc prosecution of the war
opens the only path through which peace can be ob
tained. The savoys have returned to Richmond;
with the ultimatum of the Resident, and Masts RV
dontrtthatthey will veil to dud in it feel to fire
-the Southem.twart, or at least to excite an expiring
kulow int% trying - embers. If we are wise we will
'meet this effort by- corresponding, preparations on
"bar Own part; abd there Is every prospect that the
climax of the war In the spring campaign will see its
Mgtlt stupendous and convulsive efforts.
is reported and believed that sines the Presi
dent's return from the tiouth he has related to the
tenet the par of the conference' wi th the
mmissioners, and that tbey all indorse ids
:coax in the
premises. No otheW action has hOW
,tlTtr, been taken ruins that subject.
The 011 Business.
But few persona realize the extent of the business
carded on In the Pennsylvania On BritiOM unless
they visit here and judge for themselves. The num
ber of tatutsrequired for the trans dation of Po-
Volettm from Vhe wells to the event shipping
na v iga tion easons When both &grand creek are low.
and iga onapezded, Is immense. For several.
days during the recent good order tin. roads. there
'have been an almost _continuous of 11 20 306
loaded with ell. traveling on the road (Om smilTY
Ran to 'Franklin, a diataece of over twelve .
Just OM& of it, reader. train of wagons loaded
with the product of onesingletownebilt In this Biers
,over twelve miles In (mum. And thlabatt only from
_a portions": theprodueinglocality of this sametowo-
Aship. For it is remarkable o ammo that the
amount of oil being gypped to the ilhafferrimitAnd
:other railroad points, is equally as men, The load
-for these wagons Is generally aevezteii. dud the
weight of a hernia 01l to about I= rounds. -In
.this Immense daily tulle arzbad on by
,meson of wheeled veMeles, is It any wander Ormolu
. Folds here soon hemsn.,Mtpaartable I t o roadeould
long staadeach'wear, and tear. without comma er , '
teve repairs. /f, therefore, our roar* ant .even
the male street of Oil City, Whiett is the than.
oughfilreOtould *PPM: almost le 'td the
..druisetta of other places, they must take Into you.
siderationtiat a good reason mists for Its-sOli Llrp
'2itwister. _
,
=-111441koleuumber of ?on *her re,
ceived atlaw,Ara up to ttlit& L A ill* are
W ton
[A-zwawm,ziwmgMffllLt.,g
foitspedent gepublican.
a. A Union of lakes and a Union of lands,
A Union °fillets none can sever;
A Union of hearts, and a Union of hands,
And the Flag of our Union forever."
CIRCULATION 3,100.
H. R. FRAZIER EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
bioutuse,Pa., Tuesday, Feb. 14, 1865.
raKThe conspiracy is stow known. Armin hare been
war 3leviedioeccomplithit. There arc only tow
irides to the portion. Beery man must tefor the Mated
gala, or against it. There can be no neutrals in : his
etzer—onty patriots or traifors.--STEMIEIi A. DOUGLAb w
"'Chicago, April U. 1881.
rilir What right has the North assailed 7 What pcs
lift has been dental And what claim, founded in jus
tice and tight, has been withheld/ Can either of you to
day name one single ad of wrong, deliberately and puc
pixel!, done by the Gonernment at Waxhington, y' which
the South has a right to complain / I challenge the an
cacr.-419a. A. IL BTarusss, 1861.
I=
Le Temps, a leading and influential French
mural published In Paris, in closing a review
of the events of the year 1804, makes the follow
ing candid admissions in reference to our great
civil war: "In this rapid review the war in
,America must only appear for form's sake.—
'Europe can do nothing in the matter, and the
most chimerical minds have ceased to speak
of intervention. For the old world this unpre
cedented straggle is a spectacle rich in lessons.
at the same time fnrmldable and consolatory.
By the cost now imposed upon the United
States to extirpate slavery, it displays the tern
ble justice of its history, and shows by what
fearful sacrifices nations expiate the prolonged
tolerance of wrong. It also exhibits,bv those sac
eiflces, that abundance of material and moral
resources arf which no Idea existed,and above all
shows, by the little loss of liberty they have in
volved, that liberty is not fatally designed to
perish in the .tempests of civil wars, On thi'
point all European ideas, including our own, arc
completely bewildered. The re-election of Mr.
Lincoln, and the manner in which It was ac
cemplished, are the pledge of an indestructible
liberty, and will remain in history as an imper
fishable pledge of political and moral greatness."
ttICLIBIL DIIPLACTTIr
Ono of the singular and instructive facts con
nected with the peace negotiations on the part
of the rebel leaders, is presented in the informs
tion which just reaches us by Southern ex-thong
es, that while the conference was In progress o,
the James river, the people of Richmond mere en
g4ged in holding a war meeting ,at which it was re
soloed to "die in the last ditch' rather than vie?,
lathe accursed Yankees. This looks very mud
like treating for peace. But we take it that thi.
part of the programme of rebel tactics was de
literately designed for the justification of some
act yet to be attempted by certain European
powers. The rebels still cling to the hope o'
European recognition, or at least to the ides
that certain of the European powers will only
recognize Mr. Lincoln, after the 4th of March
President of such of the States as participated in
the proceedings of his re-election. Time must
prove this. But the fact, that while certair ,
prominent rebels were engaged in negollating
for peace, others should be holding a war meet
ing, still deserves serious consideration and can
not fail to impress all true men that peace will
only be established by the force of arms.
r“}f-leyv
Two more States, Maine and Itissouri, have
Willed the Constitutional Amendment whicl•
abolishes Slavery throughout the United States
The record of the States now stand as follows:
States that have ratified the Amendment :
L Illinois, G Missouri,
2. Maine, 7. New-York,
3. Maryland, & Pennsylvania,
4. Massachusetts, 9. Rhode island,
5. Michigan, 10. West Virginia.
States which will undoubtedly ratify tht
amendment within a few days:
11. California, 14. Minnesota,
18. Indiana, 15. Nevada,
18. Kansas, la. Ohio,
17. Wisconsin.
Li SOUTH CAROLINA
The rebels are quaking again. Sherman is In
the heart of South Candies, marching two hes
•y columns direct upon Charleston. At last ae
connts,vhefew rebel troops that opposed hi
march Were steadily driven back by his advan
cing army, and General Foster's troops were ie
active co-operation with him.
Forage and antsisnince were found in larg
quantities by OW" soldiers, as they followed the
retreating steps of the rebels.
Privilege and the People
Bishop Simpson told a capital story on Wednes
day evening. hi illustration of the avendon of aria
tocracy
when to give up its privileges. He was in Nor
way the question was before parliament of
abolishing the nonility. The champion of the ex•
thardve c lass described the culture, the refinemen , .
the scientific and literary attainments and lofty
pride of the nobility, and declared that If their right,
were wrested from them May were reduced to the
lerel of the common people, that they would leap•
the land that , bad sought to bumble them, and with
them would go much that Norway could 11l afford
to spare. ,Re concluded with "Farrel, you noble
streams, yon familiar rocky. You green bills and
lofty mountains, forfeit fano'!" and took his seal,
Conscious of having made a imofonnd Impression
Nothuor dhleoneerted, a man of the people arm
and said, "And the rocks and the bills and th
mountains catch up the cry and return it In rePpon
sire echoes. • rel. vet.' audit was well." Seandinorlo
has not been injured by its abolition of titular dis
tinction. On the contrary, men are plied more
on their awn limit. * great dreg has been removed
Gram the ear of progress. A new impulse has bean
Oran to free - thought, and a more Intense actlril
to every department of effort. What took place
o+7i:will-happen here. With the abolition of slave
ry and the overthrow of a morn evelnsive ariatoeract
hams tountitanywhPre in Europe, a new era alit
dawn upon the South—on the whole country, in fact
Men will no more Stifle their moral convictions be
came appealtxl to In beimif of stares; they wilt no
longer explain sway the grand doctrine of human
brotherhood because it is sought to be appall to the
blank man. They will not degrade labor by the
curie of marpowning. They will not chill toe as•
okations of free thought of one-half the laborers of
the South by the benumbing limitations of carillon!,
Inn limit the ambition of another to the ownership
of a negro. The genius of emancipation will to
•Meate the South, will inspire its poor whites, will
Sandie Into action the dull - brain and slumbering en
ergies at thecolored nun, will line its streams with
factories and busy cities, will dot Its hill-fides with
schools lad churches, will dig out its rich mineral
tteliatitercAndnsake ita countless fertile acres blossom
as a garden, and men from the South will Join their
brethren from the East and the Wept in high debate
over measures of a common public utility, not in
angry contentions over a conflicting social organiza-
BOO; will concert schemes for making Ibis land more
and more the asylum of the oppressed. the inspire-
Ilion and the example of the down-trodden and meg
lected Coaaata of every clime. We are to become the
beral da of popular ithettYt the grand exemplars of
tlin divine dachineof human brotherhood, at once
the terror of aristocincy, end the hope of men every.
wiesett sapid% to be free.- Chnrick,
.
--Rocti..W. Beecher recently se as a none
VOW fist be
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OrePkWAstAitigelgatAtzbo
Peace to be Had Alone by Union•
However Some of the friends of theladiernmeht•
may have doubted the policy or the propriety of the
Visit of President Lincoln; and his veteran Secretary
Of Slate. toincet the Rebel Commissioners, there are
two facts 'which cannot be overlooked as we read
the history and study the result of their so-called
-negotiations. First, the President 'could not have
stood Justified to his countrymen and to the world,
if be bad refused to met these commlmioners. And
secondly, baring now met them, and listened to
their demands, be can go before his countrymen of
both sections, end before all the nations, upon the
record of the case. W e have ot lv to go back to the
initial and recent efforts of Mr. Greeley, Mr.-Weed,
Mr.ltaymond, and of he's equally eminent, to see bow
essential the ripest wisdout Is to the adjustment ofour
notional and international complicationa. Th e .,
gentlemen, through their three great newspapers,
however opposed on personal issues, were too con
scious of their relations to the American people and
responsibility to their Government, to hesitate at
are occasion to secure an hondrable peace. Anther
did not fear to act on this high motive, could the
President be Indifferent to the public opinion they
aided to cultivate? They are neither brave nor
sagacious statesmen who, in a crisis so terrible and
so unparsilel , d us this, can stand upon permed
ideas, and refuse to move from narrow pedestals.
Ours is the period for large thought and sublime
magnanimity. Hence, when Abodtam Lincoln and
Wm. H. Seward proceeded to meet the Southern
Commissioners, we honored them for their meal'-
and their liberality. Although they did not
futtli the full expectation, of the friends of the lin
ion, they nevertheless aelthoied a substantial
ry. Messrs. St. towns, Hunter and ex-Justice Camp
hell, Ac., have before this laid their case before the
Southern people; and these pimple hate heard, or
must soon hear, that their leaders would consent to
nothing but the recognition of the rebellion. We
are of roans linable and unauthorized to Baky hoW
much Mr. iducein was n Haug to concede, Snake
t the only ronahlon to honorable tw.dre 13,e01118 to
hare been nrclima by the n•het cOcutui.6lottert--tint
rendition twine the I,torat , on of the Federal Cuton
and obedlonee to all the lota of Consretek. Coeli
better picture be Inid hefore the deluded and dee
peirine. Souther. Could they bee the fiend
ishnees of 'heir denote and tee eager marnantml , y
.d President Lincoln ill e brichter mirror! We ne-
'eft that then: ok not a man or Woman in the South
who has ever really belie% ed. that the people of the
Free States would agree to tnake peace on the basis
an separation of the dmcrl."u Republic. What,
then, must they, the. lighliust Southern men aud
starvina Southern men and women, think of loaders
who refuse to compose our crest troubles unless
Mr. Lincoln act,.to .amender the .ktueriain Un
ion? The first effect ,f this d•clsioo odd be to unite tiler
North and divide the Foutlt. We observe that on
Saturday, Mr. Fernando Wood, or NeW York, the
•ry bead and front of the P.1(11 party, said in the
II use, alter hearing that the rebels had insisted on
rscinnallion as a pr'lltuiaary to a close of the war,
"Rumor aaidlthe oeizotlatloll has failed. It Wan to be
re:retied. But if it failed in consequence of the in
lispasition of the ren.•t burl 1,, to return to u1,%14111.11
,%14111.11 and to ditty on till' bails of the common
Coast it al don, they latfil,t no 0-47 know, ~.far as he rep-
eYltted ptare 8. raiment, brat h. wo.hi not vatnin
lulu in thcirpo4ol4l/ Ile W. OrpilSed to Oa IMT, be.
ere. oppastd 1/LcAohdi.rti ; arid it bud 'icon
,ne of his roatplahtt. ogninst the Administration
that 0) far from making overtures It had prevented
',roped' lon-i of peace by deny:ntir the admittance of
from the Sent hem Government But
if the door had now twee thrown open by the Free'.
lent, and if the answer to that, wait that they [wield
everts rrnxmiliwr tot ,nn Manse,, end nothing der, Oen
I/ tinalde tfjoet,l 4 t would aid
The eonattoi.l oroti. s ~o.a.try to obtain by force
sepal ,! hurl l yes rolothir to 014 , 101 by pence.•'
We take thane , hurds an they are apoltien, anti be
let eht [lent. Thu• Ifeni , enal of the Free States,
whether of the War or party, however they
have felt (as Indeed Borne of the Republicans them
•r•wes tiler fret 1 on the aubjeet of separation at the
fir.t of ttai great revolt, are now for noting this
hrht to the end, whether tlatt end be bitter or sweet.
They now h.lho.e that the only salvation of the na
il:in I. in renidoo In fart Mr. Lincoln's frank ac
ceptance of the oleo; to ncgoi late for peace has
dis
trmed all party aid:no:4lles It. the free States; and
,then it is tienfe entirely clear that the only Imperil
'tient to peace tr. "a demand for recognition,"
. jxtrefinn a•at on the part of the
rebel envoy's• the• min-,scs of It, loyal States will unite
is one in in, and straggle t o the Mat for the Govern-
merit n( oar common fathers. We do not envy A. R.
.ati.Dhens R. M. T. }Lanier, and ex-Justive Cifrop
mil when they Co back to Richmond with their re.
oort to JetTereon They decline what Abrm
tarn Lincoln was wiliina to accede—not for their
,eopie. but from their own ioemonal pride. We will
•ot call them twit; -11, for we ere dispopeci to eon-
laer their 13... k the. ruo,t conselennous, becAnew
mo-I rt•lm.timt of t•rredrtn. litypheret flattened
llongltot to Knoll firm aualn•t the Intolerance or , he
Calhmnites. 11 , •re wan the Old Line Union Whitt
0. - nixlng the mint 11.tilcrat of his age to fi ght
t and vet he deheryd We will not
ntnylv, but with tut a decent apology. Hunter
ft th•• Senate inn tremor of terror and of team and
'nmpb - II re,hmed his rel% et posit ion in the Supreme
Court at a lute and entnewhat craven hour And
:et they, are the men put forward by Jefferson Davis
. 0 f o rth to oppo, the re.toration of tha
ty fore the Prvaid• nt or the United States!
It *as announced that wit to these same Commter
.4m,,, ri I l‘r.,zh the Rebel line.. on their way
nertre... Monroe. they were loudly cheered. and
wr know they 'scum kindly weleomed by the heroea
th e ilephli ie tA , all we a-k why? Because both
ides rnard• d the ro uc rni—iorturiey rend) to chow
• hetr devotion to the old Flan and to the old Gov
ernment, and to neeept eve-f prr.on.al of foreire
u-na Ile. p aloe of the North, their army' their
Govern meat. and their Prtatdent How will they Gr
rerritvd velum (hey ret4ra!
The etTeet of Mr. I.nonln'n visit to the front, and
• h•• rrfa,d to ary•ede to the (Auction demand of the
commte.tionei-u, will he whol,lrae.
plrat : it a 11l t.how that the President of the United
States of Ante:et, th.• attverttlew bond of the greatest
CiOrfrtllTl , (l , on earth. voluntarily treated with the
=
&rand: It will show that tie was reade to yield
Von thirqz for the r.,toration of the old Culon but
the aholitlon of slavery, now conentlitionally me
et:m.4.
On tht< etronnri we &an ha« a nnifod tinrth, Irne
-re-rtive of former opinion or party.— Waahington
Chronicle.
Compensation for Slaves
To the F.ll.'ors qj the Re,. ing Post hard-work
.), lamer in one of our rural districts take. each an
intelligent view of the inatfrr nt compen.atinn, that
T semi an f :tract from his letter for publication. be
lievirZlllll Ton ,. rea•lere eette m ile %sift, on reflection,
coincide with him. Cotnpensulion Ina natural and
divinely f mistiest result of riebt dning. In the
of the siarehol-ier no t• ems '.o require that
compensatlon titould he mad., to the slave rather
than to the mastet hilt. not to enter upon that .ttb
ii-et at present. the question arise•. It compensation
is doe to the master, how many times shall he be
eon:pen-eV-Ai ? When his slaves are freed he is coin•
Pensmed : 1. fly n•lierin,r himself from the crime
and In of holdinz his fellowmen In bondage: 2. In
fierivirm more profit from the voluntary, cheerful
and compensated labor of the emancipated than
mold hare bet•n derived while their labor was forced
Foto th.-ta ; it, In the• ifs-nen: l thrift and prosperity
of ell around him, wherever slavery is nbolished : 4.
lu the prosperity of a free Stale over Atatee cursed
with Involuntary and forced labor: 5. In the in
creased value of 11A estate. Wit,, then, should there
tat added a peothiary compensation over and above
the ample compensation enumerated ? lint I give
place to the letter of the Yankee. farmer:
" By n .New York puper, I nee that Governor Brad
ford, of Maryland. In bin mentinate congratulatine the
Liitrloature on the " connummation of emnitelps
thru." nnenntrite the rlnho of the Bf ate nr . on the na
tional tlio,-rnment for compensation. Yet be says
Mutt the main hitherto to the prosperity of
Maryland been nisi - err. Why, then, should a
,tare be c•ompe,,,t,d for doing' that which Is a gain
to it Indichinals lone, the State, which can af-
ford to enruper,rate them out of tbe Increase of Its
productions under a ~ iitteni of free labor, la the pro.
pet quarter to look to for Indemnity.
"Suppose the State of Maryland ehould pay the
rdaveholdera In not e s. pavable at a future day. with
interest to he paid out of the taxca accruing from in
couse of productions—a fund being resented, out of
the aanitt raturce, whiclt would Increase with each
year, If Governor anticlitatlnna of the
prosperity of the State art correct, In a compound
ratio, until antticient to pay off the principal. In
this way justice wonl2. Ira done to all (except to the
"la - sej; and the national Govnlimetit, the State, and
the alaveltolder—and, above all, the beauty or the
example ,bown of emancipation paying tor Itself."
Governor Itradford'a attention is sepptxtrully so.
kited to the above mnimon finnan view of the mat
er from a Taukce yeoman. L T.
TPMPERANCE anon DI.BAtIE.—Dr. Jewett In a sec
tore on temperance delivered at Utica, Jae. Irsth,
unnie statements to the following effect:
God has been pleased to give Ili an agent in the
human systrtu which is alwajs at work to throw off
what Is injurious., 1: is the self-pn serving power of
the constitution. and acts Independent of the will—
la In an idiot as a sane mini; in a child as
in nn adult. It to important that we preserve this
power or pri , elide, v.ldeb is is•lea'illeally . termed
rho ris rnedieuirix vudrirar as we owe more to it than
to all the doctors in ,obtaining restoration Iron dis
ease. It is this which throws off alcohol trout the
system of tint 114111. m-drinker, and it is thus worn out
by having too much. to do. This Is the trouhle with
intemperate men when attacked by distma..
hcfta•ri nwrer ta•*rl toe .au hard drinker from
fever ta a nuditaiprarlice if tr. you's, and never End
bet on. pliant where lae .lice owe was in a tssalihp cosn
slit.taay. Ile mate similar statements with regard
to surface eryeipelas and the cholera. In closing he
appealed to ids audience for their own sake, for the
sake of their Wallies and flick common country, to
abstain frorn the use of intoxicating drinks, and
wake their hOhenee fell for temperance.
REBEL Patent:Ens AT EuttnA.—The Adterfiser
says that the entire number brought therefrom the
begionincto the pftment time has been 10,733. Of
these i^2lit have been TS:doled, one hundred bare ta
ken the 'oath nYattegiinee and bare ; been relersed,
Una 1374 hare merle application to take the oath, 16
escaped by pit !Aging oral sculled the fence. and 1559
have died. Thee are now ali comfortably housed in
wooden barrack;, and ore kept warm and have an
abundance to mt. Nothing but the Wham et con
ilnement can prevent them frdro the usnal enYvyp.
robot and comilnla or the most of Imasklud. The
sick-aro well - takenscart. of, a wellOtgantaed bledloal
department under elnirim of tiktillettiliPOU24
Inttlidttn* °WOW* to all tlittr Meat
ARMY Or THE POTOMAC
Lw Importantjlove#Sesstßsgww-,-The Second
sad Plithetawratioralottow—A.tiiiiiirD. mon
sisettlloW osi, agar Isetitfisteerratol Attieliner or
haTroupw.:-Ttiw Second Corps Aitsteititt by
the lietatenay.....trhe sub.'s Itaputsed—Parther
"lightish IC:petted.
headtpueteri of the Army of the tiottmnac, I
Sunda's , . Feb. - 3, 1565.
The Atmv of the Poteman is once more In motion,
and erethbi dispatch reaches yon the object inieruted
to bescembplishml will have been ;not only
ed. but the de,eme of suce,o resulting will also, no
.doubt, be known by that time.
At 3 o'clock this mon log, the Pilth Corps, pre•
retied by Gregg's cavalry, started on the road to
Ream's Station.
hlo tome of the enemy Wed met , on tile 'rants, hut
the roads at various poluta were pi e k e t e d by cavalry,
all of whom retreated ns the column advanced.
About noon the column reached Rno , anity Creek,
over will& a bridge: of con•lderable feu tit had to be
constructed, Occupying several bourn. -
About 3 P. Id. the Third l'ennsylvania Cavalry,
tinder Major Hese, were grid out to Make connec
tion betweco them and the Second Corps, the See
and and Thiel Divisions of whirl, out on
the Vetighan road es fur as IlatYher's Run, in rtrt..-
°vanity In that direction
On reaching the run, the First kneads or the Third
Dioision of the Second Corps charged and took t ,
line of title-pita ou the west ride, losing but a kw
men: They advanced about a mile accuse the run,
drtvilig the enemy's pickets before them. lion a
short ot breastworks was erected in a short time,
making the position prwicetiv Sancure.
The Third Penosyleanit C tvalry, after crossing
short !Random south of the Vaughan road, advanced
entttflOistd, and soon met. a small forzo in ambush,
*bleb poured a sharp voile). Into our men. Linine•
two, it Is said, and wounding a number ot horses.—
A part of the Third Divhdon of Vie S..eotel Corte;
here came to the edpport 01 the Third Pennsylvania
Cavalry, null drove the rebels off. and soon after in
MbtleCtian with the right fit the FM, limps was re
ported made.
Up to this time very little fighting had taken
place, the Firth Corps being eeareely engaged at ail.
The Second Division of the Sceond Corte, water
Gen. Smith, before reaelnitz Hatcher's Hon, tortne.l
to the right, advanced inn a northwestethi dircennon
toward Armstrong's ]tail, nut before going more
.thavi three-quarters of nt mile the enemy were tibeov
ewe. to a strong position and in considerable tome,
four divisions Of lien. Gordon's being reported is
the vicinity.
Here some of mkt men erected temporary breast
workn.i On part of the line. while the balance had only
time to throw np small French ntle pits.
Skit-robbing was going,ten all this time between
the enemy and our ahnri:d.onters.
Abont4 4' o'clock the rebel batteries ape nen!, for the
purpose 01 developing our position and strength, bun
nn reply was made.
Tile rebels at length appeared, advancing In line of
battle, with a strong skit mien line thrown out in ad
vance. Our men were all ready for them, and on
they charged in handsome eta le across au open field
they received such a wahine iirti as to cause them to
fall hack in disorder, leaving. many dead and wound
ed oh the field.
After repeal iug tine attempt in dislodge (Mr men
and tailing each limo, a re not forc e w as s e n t round
to Mitt the right dank of the divit•ittn. urph).
of the Silty-ninth Veer Yo l k, c o innian di e , n . Ik e
oud Brithule, was posted here, a it l his right resting
act a swamp, and wan thily prepan d for en Ina luny,
went. Here again the rebel.; suffered severe lon's no.
they attempted to break our plied. They We re heal
ly forced to give it up, and soon atter dark firing
cussed, the rebels failing hack to their rank,
(Sur loss during the day ants quite Ineint, probably
not even a handl-, d altogether, tillbough the no, o t
number is not known.
The enemy's loss must have been very heavy as
they repeatedly charged our lines, each thne suffer
lug severely.
We took about twenty prisoners, some of whom
report having received orders In the morning to ken p
a sharp lookout, as they believed that our army wan
on the move
We expect a great battle to morrow, a ith mono
decisive results than wen- obtained to-day.
The weather to-night i• clear and cold, anal id just
suitable for a movement in rids country.
Second Day's Oneration
A SOM.. Irigkk.-OsAr Line Broken but Br
forrned—Tbo Advanced Poellion Main-
talaasd.
The:Fee:hi correspondent of the Philadelphia In
quire,. wee the follow partieulara of the opera
Clone o our forces below Petersi.urg on Monda3 :
" Taken as a whole, the dot has not been utiapie
ion., although our live against the delenees of tin
Rojdtown road his born perfreltd. the vie ore
Smyth, lost night, has sever, d our right from fur
they molestation, and toot artily la in much better
position for offentiNe optrations that. it was }ester
day._
"Daring the most oft Ilk morning 11 , ,brnary rah ,
Gregg, In common wits, the nit of Ito army do!
cotoparatirely little: lot in the afternoon two of ha
brigades, those of Cot. ( vo - _C:Ool G. , It .vi , . Wvr ,
dismounted; and adAatieeri iseaht-t the tolenly'. in
Tantry skirmish which they those In
,gallant
Idyl. , far .moo distance.
" ODfirming gratin:try to the right, maintaining all
the time a total: light., (he brigades at Gngg ono
Davis we finally relieved by the Fifth Corp.. Du.
ring this gallant action Brevet Brigadier (ten. Irwin
Gregg, commanding one of the I , riff:nl.•.,wn, aevere.
ly wounded, and rumor say. tien'l Davis also, hot
the truth or falsity of the report has not been tower
rained. Major TretouMe. of the t•infl i.".
Gregg, was wounded lnolly in the foot, told moot
(quay ralneble officers of the field and line hoot
been lost. The cashlry have every othaon to It
proud of their action to cloy. Ti' Floe coil. a r
rived in position to this, slier a tedious and circuit.
Mat march, but one in which it encoonterrn
stubborn resletance (tom the enemy, until uearig!
the Boydtown road, the only serious re.rbtuuee yes.
terday being overcool. b Gellert; Li crones hit
undo of Ayres's divirion, at the crossing or the Isola.
slat
"All had proceeded favorably until Shoal ball
past Ike, p. m., when the udechonce of the day sod
denly deranged our programme and compelled Gen
Meade to sustid the few remaining moments of doe
light in reforming his 'me. 'lbis medal, can be told
in a very few words : An 0(11,1 by the en, my ea Oh
a heavy volley of mu-ketrv, accompanied by the to
variable 'Tel, yet, of the rebel ri',o nom I red i re
the giving wsy of the right brigade of Craw ford's di
vision.
" In a mom , -nt's tiuo the whole aspect of titian,
was temporarily changed. The brigades of Butt,
and Bragg were also biotic hack of necessity by this
detection on their riztit, hut they came in good t.r
der, with their faces to tug. par, :inti it way well they
did, for the rebels, secieg the liight of our right,
idently imagined they bad worktd our utter
More, and pressed ue with vigor. Tin it oft le
prated yells were not calculated to iodinate the fun
dyes who already crowded the V.oitriii row!, and
who were only stopped by lines of ravalry :tents,-
the road. Other and , "re efficient ttiveor wt, pt
band In Wheatun's divbi , tll of thi Si V.lll coript,w bit.l,
had just crossed Hateliera run LA a t-upitort, uric
with its Sid our hook, hire Wan 1111(111,1i:1h by is
formed and again pushed futw,ird, the rebels on
coming aware of ttis state of ALIN beitiud
their works.
"The -cause of this st:tupede is undeveloped Th.
brigade hat always had a good reputation; and no
sudden collapse this evenirg is hence utaccontita
tile. There are many rumors afloat of no moot; at
ell, of flanking, of tusesim:. of overwhelming 1;t 1 / 1 1
been upOn them ; but hat lug un time to bight to m
cu•itate these rumors, and Ming entirely tree of
any desire to do inJuotice In the brigade, time is to
ken for consideration of the striir.
"Our losses so tar have um been heavy. Tester
day they were under one hundred, ttni,t I t leo. tie
lug only r. 5; to-day it will probable lit.l under br I
being confined priucliy to tue cavalry a n d th,
Fifth corps. What was lost in prisoners when th.
line broke, Is thought to be email. The rebel le,
yesterday was somewhut ovrrestimat-d ; it
thought to-day that it did not cxeetd tic ur serve
hundred.
"Generally, while a crowning victory cannot be
chronicled to-night, we hate met with uo bcrl.lll2l re
pulse. :Our line is still maintained, and In better
position than In the morning.
' Whether a determined attempt for the Royd
town road and the Southolde itallrinsd I. tntetoteo
yet is s matter for conjecture. But in this to. ill II
is suffic;lently plain that to. morrow or cc - II Ci,' 11114-1
bring oh a general en_uutt went, the rebels still hold
ing with their old tenacity to their lilts, delendisg
those shade."
Arrival of Henry S. Foote
Watittusinos, Tneaday, Feb.l.
The rebel Senator, Henry S. r.„1„, down
last night under guard. lie bas been at tieni-rst
Deviee head-quarters at Los ettevlllc, Loudon Coun
t)'. for a week yeaterday..ceOlupituleci by en other
He crossed the river and took the train at &rill,
The train was several hours behind time, and he
was detained during the long stop He did not stem
Inclined to enter Into conversation stilt the power
gene at the elation, other tbsa ticeasiunally to make
a common-place remark. Ile 'p u ke t ouch w o n.
physitsilly since be wan in the United Staten Senate,
and as he has discarded hl nod we.are tbegiayesi
of hair and whleken , , course he looks old. In
dress there is a marked change from Ms natty up
peorance of olden time. lie has discardtd natirs,
and from the isnrplusaae of ruugh lookinif clOttileg
upon his person, if would seem time had taken
his wardrobe on his hark and legs. 11e had on him
at the station, three coats and taro vests, all the
worse for wear, as • also, nu old soldier's cap at the
rebel style of shitbblemis, the band of which bad
clipped to the back Of his bead. It is reporicd that
he declines to taker- the oath of allegiance 1,0 Ibis
Government but to , ks permission to Join MS wife at
Nashville, with a view of emigrating to denote. it
is not known whether he Is bell:luau prisoner Or not.
WESTERN Tr4VELLINO. We have little Wit, say
the Elmiraalderrthar of Saturday, of the obstrnm
times and lueourebiences of treading lust week in
the western part of the Slate and along the western
lines of railway to Chicago Persons leaven" here
were detained three days and three nights %afore
reaching Buffalo, amid the ,raw drlftathat slopped
the engine. Upon reaching Buffalo the snow was
plied pile on pile, more snow than W.A care wit
nessed in this region. Persons making the Journey
from here to Chicago, uverug,, d, including stop
pope and detentions, about two miles an hour.—
Twins on moat of the western roads were snowed
in,rind passengers in many instances put to great in
convenience end sneering. The great quantities of
avow made II quite Impossible, to prucerd, until the
=UM, vlleamir Atilla4to-Otlirltded ,anti: and
News Items.
The Portland Preanntionnees that there will be
at: eclipse* this year, two of the sun, two of the
moon, one of Jeff Dacia, and one of the Rebellion.
Robert aotiof the President, and
fnmhlarlS , known as the "Prince or fulls," la about
tett:ring the arms , az one of Gen. Grant's Staff.
'Richmond men of the 9h say that' n large
amount of supplies for Union pritiOnent 'ot DrtirlUe
uud 16.11kbtio. •unld leave na Ibme Matt* on that
d ,y.. The supplies came by flag of truce from the
.tivrth.
The Quincy Whig says Prot W. 8. Quinn, of N.
V. city, who is out West on a lecturing tent, =itch
ed that plach nn Tuesdaylast, direct from St. Paul,
An skates. The distance is nearly 850 miles, sshich
he skated in just two weeka, stopping, m"antlme,to
lecture at many pointa on the way.
Tpc total earnaltles in General Terry's army In
the ngnt id Fart loner were siahandred and nine
tymne: Of these eleven omeer►.attd soveuty4iva
men were killed. thirty-nine officers and lour hnn•
Bred and serentytwo men wounded, and ntaetytwo
men thleator.
Elmira Gazelle eaya there are In the Con
federate priaunery,' camp at Ehnlra 1,511 prisonon*,
who make a profe.sion of religion ; these are chiefly
Viraluhro. and North Carollniane-542 are Math*.
dints, 517 Baptists, 110 Presbyterians, and 212 Roma
ni: Cut holies.
The Mayor of St. Catharines, Canada, recently
received the following suggestive letter from New
York : " Wilt your worship please Inform me by
n•torn post what !room are now stationed In your
city, and about the number. You might also please
lufwrtn me what the average deposits In the different
Woks RN, and oblige."
Holland rapers, so the London Journals say,
claim General Shatnau as a native of that country,
who enllzrated to America after a commercial fail
ure In Ahtf.terdam It Is sufficient todlsposo of that
claim to tar find. (ien.mt Sherman is a 'lineal de.
seendant of Roger Sherman, one of the signers-of the
IJeclaralion a Independence.
The adtnisalon of John S. Rock. a colored law
vrr of Boston. a a practitioner In the United States
'Sqprento Court, trap Been already chronicled. Irn
-111.11:duly aftet his admission he desired to return
Flame, and wan ohltred to hunt UP a Provost Mar
shal for pertuis.ion to do so, a colored man not be
im; allosvrd to leave Washington without &rasa.
The great 4 importance of the port of Wl'mkg.
ton to the eoli(.derates may be ltideed or from the
-I.itement of
it if.i•AiMond Journal, that from Pet.-
t.cr h, to the end of the year, the following
ith others, were imported into Wilming
ton : ~11:t1,000 pounds of meat, 1,507.000 pounds of
lest! 1 0,V,,000 ponatis of saltpetre, G 9,000 rifles, and
616 ILI) pair of shoes.
Twelve refastens who left Mobile on the liith
and arrived at New-Orleans, stated that the evacu
ation of the former city commenced the day before
their departure, that the guns and ordnance stores
were awing. to Selina by rail and water simultaneous
ly. With this movement a erweeplng conscription
was awing on among the et tuns of Mobile, to es
tape uhit•h the people were !Irving from the '•lty
~1 1 Lide. It w.ts the general lunprwslon In Mobile
+nut no defense of the city would be attempted,—
Its garrison was small, and coinpused of within un
der counitund of (ices. Taylor and Maury.
In New York it appears fo be taken (or granted
that Senator 3lorgait's malt la to be vacated, by the
AppoMtrricitt of that gentleman to the head of the
treasury Department. The canvass for the Renato' ,
ship has become unite animated, and, according to a
t erre,. nontli ut of the Chicago lemma, Henry .1. Ray
owed, Repn tentative elect from the Sixth District,
lea the It ,ide track. Ile Is said to be supported by
Nt r beward'A Iriemig, while the opposition, or radl
,als, will, It Is supposed, unite on kiorace Greeley or
l're.Oun King.. Mr. Raymond, it Is said, l nut a
willing candidate, but prefers his malt in the Rouse.
—South Carolina seems determined to come to an
i•etie w lit Da. is upon the slavery question. The
Charleston .IPrrury in opposition to the Richmond
that slavery bas the cans° of the
ear, as it was an encroachment undo upon this In
ut ion that provoked the rebellion. After losing
t Iprty thot+arl of Its best people, South Carolina
ill not cull'-r slavery to be bartered away by Davis
or the rebel Congress. It says grandly " we want
no ConfAcrate government without our Institu
tions." To "talk or emancipation is to disband
our f , he re l, el) sr:mks." This looks as if South Car
olina meant to sag up a confederacy of her own,
nee ing the other rebel States out In the cold. Sher
man's el'ilee in that State may modify this inten
tin.. lie sill probably be in Charleston in time to
take part in that discussion.
Speaking of Fort Caswell, at the mouth of Cape
Fear IPeer, which mounted 10(1 guns, and was blown
up by the rebels abler Fisher had fallen, an eyewit
ness says of it : " The guns had all been spiked and
the car: i ezes all destroyed before its evacuation by
the envoi,' The blowing up of the fort completely
strop, ti the river face work. The buildings on the
inelde are all tic stroyed by tire, and In the carpenter
and blael,nottu shops not a tool was felt which
euld be of An) use to the " Yankees." The cattle
and the boon in the vicinity were all shot, and de
,truetlon reigned supreme. Numbers of torpedoes
.ere found planted In and about the fort, It 164 mat
ter of gre.,t surto Inc to all that the work, stronger
than Fort Feint, should have been given up with
out strnirgle."
The Treasury Building was the scene of a de
e murder Monday by a woman. Miss Louise
F. Develin, as she rave bee name to the police, from
Jane-epic, Wisconsin, waited in the hall for a
Rank Bureau clerk teamed Burroughs, and on his ap
pearance at the expiration of his nouns of work, ac
,,ml,-(1 hire, reproached him furiously, drew a revol
ver, and ti-rd at him twice with a deliberate interval
of aim. Ito was shot through and through, and died
u few minuits. 'Twos the old story of wrong,
dent-TM. and festering wrath.. S'ue came here once
hefure a year ago for her revenge or Justice, was put
off temporarily and was afterward put off permanent-
It Lir marrying another woman. She came on
ag_ia and squared her aceounts with the pistol.
A Washington correspondent tells the follow
ing. "Six years ago, one of tho leading men in the
Laird States Senate, was James Green. of MIEPOU
rt. Erect observer of passing events in the politl
eat history of the country, will remember his signal
titiouph in a had canoe, during the debate on the
1.-cOmpton oneation. Ile was, the only man who,
by COIIIIOOI3 consent, got the upper hand of Douglas
hu that memorable discussion, and but for him the
Southerners would have made a poor showing Just
iiirn. There see tried to be a bright future opening
for him, hut, like too many others similarly situat
ed. he t tonight no man could raise in the world 01
politics 'without parsing a good deal of time in the
h e r mono, of Washington. To-day, ate I was walk
leg Pennsylvania avenue, I panned a wretched
look ir g mAn. stupidly drunk, his face horribly dishg
tired, bath ilk eves blackened and swollen, Ws cloth
ing covered with mud and dirt—the cynosure of all
rt ems, and the laughing stock of shoe.blacks. I ask.
ca who it was, and was told It was 'Jim Green, of
Nineouri.' "
AEW Advertiumento.
Sheriff's Sales.
DT virtue of a writ Vaned by the Court of
0001111/01e Pia as id Snsonetuanna County, and to me
directed, I will ccposo to rale, by public vendor, at
he Court H01t.% in Montrose, on Saturday, March
all o'clock p tn., the following described
p.ree o• parcel 0 1 land to wit :
A Li. that certain plecw or parcel of land situate In
he to terc,i,i p of Rash, County of Susquehanna, bound
• d sud deacribed a• follows to it : Beginning at a
netsto. k stump clouding near the old road, thence
u,, , d 31 perche, to a po+l, thenne north 40' east 32
tenths perches to a poet at thorned, thencealong
the rat north 80' west 11 perches to a post, thence
in.rti. 00' east 31 percian., thence cant 61 mottles to
a post, thence Aotith 52 perches to a post, thence
cat Di perches to the b. ginnin. Being the same
land and pn-tohme, which Wm. 1) Cope and wife by
decal dated lilt of 7th month 11150, for the conelder
atiou thurein expreaset granted and confirmed unto
Era•do+ Ma) nurd as In and by the in part recited
deed n corded in the office for recording deeds Book
Nat. 20, page 83. relation being therenuto bad will
luny appear. And the add Brest Ur Maynard by his
deed of the 224 of March, 1800, granted and convey.
i. 4.1 the tattle 10 the said George W. Maynard record
ed In carne office In Book 28, page 222, as by refer
ence to Cite said last mentioned deed will fully ap
p....ar. executiOu at the suit or M. 8. Wit
vs. G. W. Maynard.
DAVID BUMMERS, Sheriff.
Sheriff's Office, Montrone, Pa. , Feb. 13,11, 18135.
FOR SALE OR RENT.
AEITOR 7.. In South Auburn. Ine.sled IA A / I .AI Inrolnannlllol ,
re.e.e e.ry Inv r. , rW er tleues.
Fur p.m...lace ..nuo to .1. I'. BENNWGZEt.
.oath Auburn. Feb I.UII.
Admini%trator's Notice.
XToTIeE 15 Il LI t E BY GIVEN Co all parsons havtimderoalV23
against tat mate of Ell EL flood lch.fate of Fir.ktlyt. tom.
IMO MUM pres..tded 10 tl.llll4o.l(tUre for
nakerment. and all penal. Indebted to mad no-aeon requested
mats trucutrr. pal Mc.. Z. A. Mik.SION. .1153'r.
Lrn ktln, Yet.
NOTICE TO SCROOL TEACHERS.
BlTcalatZ;Vry.yL
t d r . rfto OL muu U L or
arupuith y ted ,, ti;
vetiL4,lEl;.ll4 hove h..e. Ltd their thlittlatetiehOet.itlMlalt,
Qy unitr o the board. tales. iiravUL tkostay.
Feb. NIL IS,Z,-,111
s•rit..A.N7 T>Cl.O-.
,NE to the hose of the enhectibte, In Jesens, on the sled cf
C
F.,hr,ary ob. a Lute P... , PaNdlualpap. to be tress
,ix to one %et chi, lens s vldn leather iteap. Wale-map
and backs around the nese ; filar body tat. - -0. bee& sta. txtly,
100. 0.1 I'. et whit:. a %lam spot on the left Me, sods Nut spot
rtelee oar. will. , rttsll black dote c voting hu head nod esn.
Tbr WM, is.tyae.eted It, pap the mit at this nalecrtl-ement and
tale hits welly, DAVE:Spain P. MILLSII.
Jessup. February MUGS.
. •
Dissolution.
f E Cutartoembly of IRA & A INE b bats d 3 illubrred. bt ,
mum. enutua. 'I be &oda It.‘d orcovutalos left 'Mb X&
Ward hille, tut can't:lto& In Itmm, tu. m bryd h R etutb's atm.
. It wh,.. up. liidattd to asld Vim IN quoted to coil and s gle
Without . font., 'Notice. M 11..-1401 144
Ituouo., Fcb 24. 1.45.41 p IDW Mitt MU
CRAVILERS ;
rill, Soda; 'OO their ocideattio
Kaiiwom - 4 .,1MPF1L,111 IMP
OIISIPPI. IMLIIIb.
EMS
SINGER'S SEWING MACHINE
inaaaialaitifect m qie Kaalet
If is 4 Siltriiie
Tliasiii.bo hare ;sad
-
11;103/101:4010n*14144,iTiligo!kzir*1
LEM
COMPETENT TO JUDGE,
I.4tMatas4thera.ftr al Ueda of
AR SUPERIOR TO ANY OTHER INVENTED. .
They .1;11 do
ALL KINDS OF WORK, _
From the ranoln; at s luck In thOte Wooed. Ttuloton, to =Simi so
ero:oat.
DO NOT reActiker wrinotrr orma A FAIR.
IZEEEZZI33
NAOHBES OONIITANTLY ON RAND,
And COI he maim In operstlon any day, by WM= ha the Agent.
READ, WATROUS & FOSTER
I=l
A WOlio TO THE WISE.
Wheeler & Wilson's Sewing Machine
I;irlS NOT A SHUTTLE MACHINE,- .e
But maketo the Loek Stitch.
THE VERDICT OF THE PEOPLE
IS DECIDATLY IN ITS FAVOR
The fact of than bolos mon of elm Machlues sold THAN OF
ANI OTILVIL
ATTESTS ITS SUPERIORITY
Putts that have Midi alb , as and Standard uschrups ha,
thrown tarsi unto and glee th•l- l. 10ty In hvor
Of thne, betns Ute
BEST FAMILY SEWING MACHINES
For lurther panic tan all two Ilas Arent, where the different
styles of mzehlees ore cm sexelkitfos.
EVERY MACHINE WARRANTED TO GIVE ENTIRE
13=3
LATHROP, TYLER & RILEY
31 aslr.!, February 13, WS.
•
•
A Chance to Make Money.
. A . 14 , 2 Nr60 2= w. Iva* 13V.Idteg sad all.—
g. U. DIIIMORL
Ma:amis. nh. 141, 16110.
Administrator's nonce.
llaffTfll It Is bormtr &tato on perms bottog demonds amino
J,l
the Maio of WAIeJ Mate. late of t , tt Uultod .tato. Proof,
pod foruorrly of Pitt CON__ , &cowed, that the who Most be pre
routed to the under.* ed for 'nutmeat, sod 111 perm>. Indebt
ed to told mato tat mooned to toots Ppm. dote pormept.
Great Deod, Feb. ttlt. 1M3.-6ot JOS. Dttfloltt. Adair
FOR SALE.
0./117.111LL, F.blnale.Machlne. and Lah.lllll. rvwcHlrt Amor
.75 and bon, int darr r laud. In F..reg
=CID& 5q . c...144C., &c. For term. Inintre t.f
J. H. Qt 03.
Tint. Lake. Feb. 4.186&.-1 w. p.
PUBLIC SALE.
THE underVgne.l .111 offs for tale , et bb Pau. ln Fprbatrillr,
on Same ay, Fehr.ar; 11th. MS, at ID o'clock. a. to. the to)
lowing pnrwer 7: Stahl Cows, 1 an. rams bone. 1 two tear nl.•
.
tot; I dble hottolill. light alenan Ito hah to of cat,
4=40 of C 're ht, the ear. mere.' tote el bay. straw, 1 two.borre
Item. 1 op Int market v.'. 0. 1 alelet, tuning hull ton.altri.
ter. atm plow*, tarroora, cruerbata, yoke.. than*, and
vartnno ..btr &Wee,
Timm: all nuns under ark ooh; 6y or non, one Irey's entrllk
*nigh totems/ and apnr v.ql recurtty. 130fIaCE W. bALL.
Sprlngelile, Feb, C. 1013.-1 w.
Oman. Goon ' Auctioneer.
FOR BALE,
ryes ,o.atbe. 'would ..ftr for male bls PVT,. known a• Um Jo.
reph WaAbburn Vann, uni Want OW orot hundred and tool
teen wren with Apo mists boactlnga. For jtart.culnr% tnq , Ire of
ontnierin, °nine arm. JAS. 11. ORMO.
(Mown. Ya.... Tan.
A dissitilstralor's
wolica is be mily glen to all bermes basil* demands steno
IN the eaten nt Truman Lambe, late of Jr bon townsbir,
died. that the tam. must be gnomon cl to the ondenbened for RN
=rMs and all pram Wel s Indebted is range are swegrid 1 0
;', rultnedutnr payment- Ullfalltiot FRICACIII. rtdcrer.
Jaeasem, Vela stn. )..aa 4•
igiteentriz's Notice.
WilltlititB letters testamentary to the estate or Mlllama
V V Pena: has of Jessup tremolo. demean; have been rude
ed to the tinders/nod, ell persons Indebted to the call estate
are requested k, make immediate payment, and these daring claim.
or demands stale= the state of Lire sed &cede:lit will make
known Lb. rainevrahout dela* to LYDIA FIII.LLR. ken.
kwearn. Von alt lama
FOR SALE CHEAP
A FINKLE & LYON P. ZWINO MACEIII4 IL Enquire 11.1112•
Ilicbgrxmom tocrearacmg
Elrdnlzose.S.A. Zath,
FOR SALE!
A rod wroWOloh Cow. &quire the twostutozw? Itworw
SfimtVo t iwo. 50tb.1855.-tt
HORSE THIEVES!
fIIFIZ Horan f' Prketlar, arid !ammo) roomy. of Yeti
X 'PX.wilthlwra Xmli a for 6 or 10_7ran, mg dna thieves. to
V 0 7,0 1 . 0 Ml:Mum 061166 F.ll. VilAtibLES, Appl.
A LIP and Ire 16wrance AC666 ,
Monlanst, Jan: 6:61.166A
LOST,'
Jkr In ILI I New Sthrord end Bloonlgn. tragerday, Jruantri
!This. • QM% can Olen penal tmi.i • 0. 1 •11.•
or sayer colOred lace. 7ba ander wril h• liberally regraded rlg
egitur . onticorto the tulneriter es Rath Orreell, Bradford en. Its
Jan ;We 16a.-*e'd JA.. L. AMR
TO WHOM IT 'MAY CONCERN.
Ll4entone see n•rehy farbki heztewleg or trueUng rue
ciii. Ate Penmen on my nonellant. I will n t_ pey eal
de or her centracthen. JAMES PARNAiI.
Lend oleo. dem, 1.0.:4 1 ep
. $
60008 FALLING. -
00.isitoamitzwwwetzt asn'wo
__ ~. , . ~:
k..t. , S. Jfifoa?: .ah,
MONTROSE
GRADED SCHOOL I
s pa lav io was wll etommeace Mantlay, Feb.
Prot ro . D. lITINT, Principal,
i&4 by
• -
It /NW Corrua of }experienced Tenolairre.
F. nt . Dort.
rrattromi. FeuttlaW.ty
GRAPE YONESI
T ltzt r ErH , Ea. P 4 1 3. COOZ Irv!.
ros tau!" pot. II VL ialefatZlean,==
but Nolan,* anIA•110 . 4114. • •
Orces envb. whh H. P. FRAZIER. Isrowimilro 111.
rmano.a Mee, Aloaquees O. L Pl!ue a; LVEAI.
DER SPENCER. Ere% tferptebsznA Co. p.
.treeprll IFZ3. M. CLAY.
eiselee Orem I.llzErAteo.., P.y 11b. IW. 1043.-10Irp
- PUBLIC VENDUE: -
nyutv to lbt a
t t r i e r l=
Montrose Thlstaa. rebtual'o44.2ses.siiseeticit A. a.
the fo,lneri. •trolna previ.s3y Ml 4 a. Ovate ROO _
Uts live4ur.Od bay t wtme. onitiy 1100 MS
tzlit L i tlzz le tl b=e u tas, c4 r u al: :l 2 . Tas dull;
Montrose, Feb. Etb, 1.466 4.
REAL ESTATE AGENCY.
puILLIPs, formerly of Bewseolisins Conti,. Ps.. ha,
, „
opened•
LAUD .416 9 22161",,
Ia Wtztivine. St. Chides COuntrOlio. Us tat us bud. aP4 for
rule, o number of
FINE IMPROVED FARMS
Thaw wishing to 1,111,441 re 'nil eta a pilliteatardeiceptrot , 4 1 14
ewiretry, gag a nOtlare of WELL DI applying It the tuttatmutir
Usgstrsurot Wks, lionwrose kta., or gage...ling the .wettitwe.
U U. PH.L.LAYS.
Wentzville. St.Oltuelre 00.. Ite....Ftb. Gth,/%5.-tt
VALUABLE BEAL ESTATE
FOR SALE.
A salvable tombs and wood lot In Lathrop toweship. Steen%
Pa., emtalnlng about POO sew sortth vs* dwell g
home nod tem rn I h•reno sad anon% 100aieres It grams. On dm pm.
01 ty m Cud sawmi ll ono teltaidli, eatable Of =digit VW 000 fret
lumber per rear. T..e • onsall to Width; two mils of l'OthOliot
Soo lon, or. the D. L.e W Raltmnd, A red WO 11110/1 Itmegb
the *bele vomit There is wood and Italbete130(10 0 UlO my
for iwlre ono% A rare oho go—WM be cold Inv, With any Ur.,
oLgth the Pam Imrwn im the' qC oln Robere num.: h. had.
oil .0, Wyoming condi, telltalulne Snot eOO KM, IM
from let Aston Motor tho Tamthsonocit tires% ; *boa
be eu ea of tat land ; the W.W.11 U 0 beld—a err y desirable prep:arty.
A I.tO. s valuable 11(11 vuteTty. creel wile from Meetrose at (to
001110 ofP gee L.dte. v.:Waive of • Edda:lll tad sawmal. aid
sbera 10 bere...f land. with the waterpower ?ho sit.inall. tae
doingg vo mean bneurwrow. d bred edared /Of 19eltet on“euk.
A Ltd% a wadable farm ma wale from atontroserintallilt g w%:et
. 413 , wbrew allty eons of are *OOO3 Land: thy balance trrprowe.
Tbia farm Is wan fenced with good Wade wad, veil watered. media
Web state of euhlvatlon ( la enable of Intiediag foe 10,07
1111 y enws—s. very desirable blopeetv.
AUtO a bob. and lot t 0 tee •IS•rough orator:frame trandsges
the Po. one "vase The col:LW:as about IX mew Of Lea, .12
barn and cede) frolt end studs twos.
.-. . .. .. ._ . _
The attentlon of those et tehl-g to) teazle reel estate le caned b "
these peop,ti t s, its they ara sll aond at,d4ealestilis leirtatmtots SI
the {irk s est,l for Mere. Litorrs , terms .111 he item. Foe testa :
a.k.q and o , trey latoasetton. cal sa. or Wane. Damn flees e,
Pllll4Oll, Luz•me Co„ ra..or Y.B. SEARLE. II grut, '
Montos. rittacteetieraus Co. P." Jae- axh. less. -ti
•
WHEEL HMS !
WrEELS AND REELS.
AT 'Pawl ter pu rchase
bragl f rrno .agotif
stunJ B.syro). Fouhdry, or art 8. B. tape d Biotherr, -La
8,..4121n IlLatrose. Atuul
Flax Wheels. Wool Wheel*, Clock ;, , Vg °°d
Reels and W heel-Woad. I,or
'A at tb
Wholesale and Retail
• Bent
P&4 'Wheels and Heads that as poulbly be made, sod mem OM
dole werr..otta properly used . C. Id. CILeabiDALL. F Iltia ,
Ifaatrom. January I. lead. L,t MR I
N. B.—Raw/eft done on short roll= C/051
WOODEN HENS' EGOS,
TOR
BEST. I
WELL ententa4 d t &Mat the HYNB. Ttne eco• gm
11 arurntatU tot t nun. or Nam and anti be eautund
for theme that arttl—..muu up." Per do at I.:studa.ra WWI
Fuetvra, blotter e, Pa.
atottrw. /an. A 0 ,12. 15.13,-.• •
14a oT ME to hereby f 1 en 'bat in borsistoce or are/amity eotti
LN .1 to the tart vrl.l and tottslooos og S.OkyT E. Tanta. I
nee to fondle istle. by aeo.due..e. the t,Lee. Wedneacay.d.a.
:/d dos of February ne• 1., at I o'clock to the +Ammo, all tad kt•
or peter' of land, eltuate to tiro Atlyo tow.hip to the Cs.,,ty
lanWorlanna mad Mate of Peenaylvabla t.oci.m on the Dont ty
ds of the vente of the late Pete/tab Tiffany m she cm, wall
sod west by hood. or ES•.Y. A. U. iverrf. mould= IA oicrass magi
r tore. with houaltand ham. and MI Unmoved- lata the route or:
Betray Tony. ILn:us of bele coeds known on the day of We.
1t. ,, b1141e INGeLI
.mentor of the out .111 and testament of Muer K. Term..
Gamma J.. to, 110.—
ANOTHER NEW Fr
COX 81 MEEKER
tfaVeECt?l .1
. tend I ' 4 's"
tlea . ""dr:t
and bh.174.:`4, taine=ricl tat douldles. mks, -
can anil or. than.
Repairing Promptly Done. •I
-
Teankful to many tamer= a kind ;midi; me hop. to tea .Z- -
th-ir &nem. pal.nto to to the Mate. IN a *New the shop j
merly occupl.l by W. I. • Oi
W. L. VOL 11. O. um.=
January a. 19=J.-Am.
MSIONS ARO BUIIIRTYa
TH:teal t2.1"41
Al I della carefully prepared end remedy thrwareed to the
pent:wet.
Three mouths:dr me:ahead:4lll,2e tootabilbeil unapt emnfleOr
ectutty. but If bled(th er the) die In ILO eteette.tlwy that ele
tlereare entithd penstest. 1.4 tee es le the calla MOWS
WAN:Ito peoahnts under the teem nage end Ryas/1m so as.
1.4 foram emu:deemed efthela AM twitted to Natio. Wee:
to Needy.
It Lin tad Mt generally known that the Wee De7erthteet mint
rate o. long protracted otcltltrol •Soldie2 Or Whet , he Lail ale
led mere I. re - deremler4 nr tam or rappott. • r famll
Avant r cksolorraoct‘ dlt h axe modetre fnqa the; e-telea,
:Mettle hde t ie . l . o o , lp . segr tot and tha t tia-• pler
el , Into In.. Au tertrrs vain; tot .nt=tt 'ci mlly th a r.
To Mathes f whiter, who die rata traill.ttl. ' Vl and Mel
al
logeuudsred are entitled to 1'1241. , U th. DIEM al If ova alCe
ud d m 1 to the •.rwlee
•
•
N. - Ira latch wing alarm bacap oat."
wess,Allontry at Law.
&USW Tames fen.
=I
SOLDIERS' PENSIONS, BOUNTY
AND BACK PAY.
ied.L
TRS'''ImirDICE:NSIM OILNT n? TEM any=
alvekrompt atteallott Wall china eatniX.4 til
Cu ore. Charers Low. and Inlomitle, MEV.
ilMirow. orember O. 10i1.41 L. T. FITCIL
Administrator's ?fence.
NOTlOZlsherebyclvan to all on Wing demands wed.
the &mat, of .i.orto n. Evertor". tau of Lathrop tors
ado, deorseed. that thee.. moat be presented to the oudodp
ed for trrugemeat,atol all persona Indebted to amid Eat/teen -«
reqtutsted to mad laustedllt• payment.
W. TINGLEY.
Hophottoto. Jan. 11. toab -SwF aidada.W=
AT
WILSON GRIFFIS dc WARNER'S:
4 014. 114 R
THE LiTEST STYLES.',Y
JOHN SAIII7ER
ESPITTFULL I =mama' tb Itt las puny pmuredc sf l,
LI, all kir...l garments, oft e 12.11 hationable order. sa4 ll, - '
nu.ten to et site ekvitcr Lid 0 .136. f
L DI E»' I.)l,o4Ke—the Wax 1 1 :41, Tort / I +l*.
121r14130p
ORITISTI PaRllOOlOlll.3
The London Quarterly Review (Consercatirs)
Theldinbrug Review (: ).
The Westminster Review (Rodientl '
The North British &mew (Fros - Ohurel) .4,
40,
Blackwood's Edinburg Magazine Torr)
The pom.befoomptune to ?quint the abate rePrr:
;PTV/bats, but tut tto outs plumb* bee o recto. Uter=l
Per Dearly revetatP, ord taus, do lee. Iltr,res Ito" .. 11
Moot tbel en tom utlkd ekt Arir awe ttmlr terms ea Mina:
. ..
TERMS FOR 1805.
For any cale. of the It crlera .400 pairat.-o.'
Yor any rem of the Keelaw• '7.08 " 0
Palmy Wee alba Herr.., 10.00 ' -A'
VT alitam of the itrvulea Mve ' y,
tor Illarloanoira Ili pain , 4.00 " . '
/or tdark , koA and vac Hertel ".00 , '
F n . Illarternod .10 any woof the Iteviews.,... loW f
For klaOrevad and an, tame 4 the tlreeleeia...
tear taackarood and the oar Haitely..., 13.00 ' ~
The welts .111 be telst. hi on itreittlyttnprond cinentYo4 , ll
noaly eh American Ye4noksh ale Otter , u: •
brke or reduord In stv—atel very grbentlly botb--.enbai
Ise to etre falthtolc - ales f nll the to .'lrr e nlnlned 'tithe
e,btl n.. Ilteee. 007 preens prces .111 Ne lotted unlyno, ".•
watts turtshre— to those Of 04) of the a tenheUbg 714
odlcals In the cannily.
Cbmnsted wan the sort • f the Ottawa lelt ban. which al lb , P.
cut premium on NM wt. , id be 0001 VP year. owe:
excerdlanly low. Add to i t out
et pommy (be hlatt POI IoY early reeeta t at4l
1101 tb tiosp—sl ooribly neat le tlete Oen • is.at
furtmly.—and we I.lst that Is tb• • ebe ere hue ; •
dial' the entirely .1 Addled by oar rtedelt POO&
Ib e , e teren thaw le el. to I. co don tevlent b.
ere ...7 Stan fllmUstitd by the ankle, ih y conteht m bur tY:
le sr, =A, though het:l..ll.es tinged erith • - rel WC% R. ,
tre.b.rloll their itnel Oltltyslol the dltrirett stami VOW ,
which they ire On ts-11., be (tad anti ittrikd wab %dr/AMP Wt
perkle of 1.10.• couctl7.o! ern. and
THE FOUIVREV.IONSIOR 186&
• thy copies of the aborts rrtreeln on tuottch wad .111 be was , q
ter the 'Floe* tom or $: ter =llona.
. We also put.tett the
FAIRMEit'S (WIDE.
'ay nen", Iltepbens, otmil the M. .1. P. w<_ ,, t_t,
.Yale Tv/a v.?ls.. &la ye4vo, rano
i l l a i rein 17 Ibr Ms two eskturotat =V. poll Pa
-- LEONARD IiCQTT co.,Pubtwo
Ito. 88 4
,Wallier SOO, New r
Executor's Notice.
N°2"1"bolo, to Iron. tenter deeseede 0., -
the eatate el Ualiva en* was; taloa( Carbone ,- •
OM the tams mast be Maud loth. taeeeniehee Itv•nw% •-•
WU= to OK MA@ ape awned to top_ ,
ISAialtelk -
home" telltlllol64, v.? Ara/ , •
iiiiii=4 ,7 4164111114
Tonna. Cash
A. U. stmoordwass
EX CCUTOWS 144 LE.
NEW GOODS Y'
as
to
Ea
11
=
thee
•*eU
ttlA. 1
plleal
A
Boas
of
let t
apply
es tto
Ze.
ta
put 11
peuti
sash
Mr. 411
Cm
daria
dy Mu
RP
1n
the
In tb
to th
the si
dote
last
i!il
C. 81. O.
bold
vlsk
tbat
. WI
tabl
'Of
0.:1
IX
and
°bid
of C
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bit,
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I