JEFFERSONIAN Bzvottb to politics, jSttcratute, 2lgrtcnlture, Science, iWoraliti), aufc (General Sfittelligenci. VOL. U. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA NOVEMBER 16, 1865. NO. 37; THE Published by Theodore Schoch. TERMS Two dollars a year in ndvancc-and if no before the end of theyeaj.two dollars and fitly Ntpipcr ttscanUiiued until all nrreaiages are paid, iicept at the option of the Editor. .... ,, CT Ivcrtise nct.ts of one square of (c gl.tl nes) or one or three insertions 9 1 50. Eai-h additional i.trticn, 50 cents. Longer ones in proportion. JOB PItlffTIWG, OF ALL KINDS, xtttel in the highest style of the Art.andonthe most reasorriDie icnns. Attraction. Attraction is a curious power. That none can understand; Its influence is every where in water air and land ; It keeps the earth compact and tight, As though strong bolts were though it; And, what is more mysterous yet, It binds us mortals to it You throw a stone up in the air, And down it comes ker whack ! The centrifugal casts it up The centripetal back, jly eyes! I can't discover how One object 'tracts another; Unless they love each other, like A sister and brother. I know the compass always points Directly to the pole : Some say the North Star causes this, And some say Symtn's Hole I Perhaps it does perhaps it don't ; Perhaps some other cause; Keep on pcrha$)sing who can solve Attraction's hidden laws 3 A fly lights on a 'lasses cup Attraction bids him woo it ; And when he's in, attraction keeps The chap from paddling through it. Atiraction lures the set to drink, To all his troubles drown ; But when his legs give way, he fall?, And 'traction keeps him down. Attraction is a curious power, That none an understand ; Its influence is everywhere In water, air and land. It operates on every thing The sea, the tides, the weather , And sometimes draws the sexes up, And binds them fast together. Rules for Winter. Never go to bed with cold or damp feet. In going into the colder air. keep the mouth resolutely closed, by compelling the air to pass circuitously through the bosc and head, it may become warmed before it reaches the lungs, and thus pre vent those shocks and sudden chills which j frequently end in plurisy. penoumnia, and other serious forms of disease. Never sleep with the head iu the draft ol nn open door or window. Let more covering be on the lower limbs thau on the body. Have an extra covering within easy reach in case of a change of weather during the night. Never stand still a moment out of doors, especially at street coners, after hating walked even a short distance. Never ride near the opcu window of a vehicle for a single half-niinute, especially if it has been preceded by a walk ; valu able lives have thus been lost, or good health permanently destroyed. Never put on a new boot or shoe in beginning a journey. Never wear India-rubber in cold, dry leather. If compelled to face a bitter cold wind throw a silk handkercheif over the face, ita agencyja wonderful in modifving the cold. Those who arc easily chilled on going out of doors, should have some cotton batting attached to the vest or other gar ment, so as to protect the space between the ihoulder blades behind the lungs being attached to the body at that point. A lit tle there is worth five times the amount orer the chest in frnt, Never sit for more than five minutes at a time with the back against the fire r stove. Avoid sitting against cushions in the Wks of pews in churches ; if the un covered board feels cold, sit erect without touching it. Never begin a journey until breakfast as been eaten. After sneaking, singing or preaching in a warm room in winter, do not leave itTjOrenZ0 Drake, best 3 gr. cotz for at least ten minutes, and. even then.: close the mouth, put on the' gloves, wrap ' Bp the neck, put on the" eleak or overcoat J before passing out of the door. The ne-j glect of these has laid many a good and useful man in a premature grave. Never speak tinder a hoarseness, cs - pecially if it requires an effort or gives aj Wiog or a painful feeling, for it often results in permanent loss of voice", Or life-; Jong invalidism. -UvAYs journal ol fiealth. The new ten-cent ctfrrency note's affff 1 3 j- rru ,A Wan inch longer and a quarter of an' JVo 6-Grain, Seed and Flour. inch wider than those now in use. A g;jag jJ prake, best bushel ycl aedallion head of Washington forms the jQW CQrn amer.- agr centre of the viginette, while on the sitfea - . . fc nrtf: of masts Of . r 0 t. nips, warehouses, ac ; aou uu eu D1UC oftU tnoiimn in fancv lettering, the figures "10." The signatures of the Uni-, ted States Treasurer and of the Register j of the Treasury are appended to the note tue treasury are appeuueu l" The dress is printed m green-, but little LIST OF THE PREMIUMS Awarded by the Monroe County Agricultural Society AT THE 6TH ANNUAL FAIR, HELD OCTOBER 3d, 4th, 5th and 6th, 1865. JYb fl Horses and .Mules Cs8 1 Draught Horses, George L, Drehcr, best 2 year old horse colt $3 00 Reuben Smith, best 2 year old mare colt 'Jennings' Jocobllendershot, best draught team 4 00 John Hanna, 2nd best do 'Jennings' Chas. Yeisley, best yearling stallion 2 00 Joseph Fenner best brood mare 4 00 Wm. S. Dreher, best yearling marc colt Jennings' Joseph Fenner best sucking colt 150 JVo. 2. Horses and Mules Class 2 Ho ad iters Peter Kunklo, best team. 5 00 H. CrStnll, 2nd best team am. agr. 2 00 Wm. Smith, 2nd best team do 2 00 Joseph Fenner brood mare do 2 00 Dan. Peters, brood mar do 2 00 Martin Smith, best 3 year eld stallion ' 3 00 James Overfield, best 2 year old stallion amer. agr. John Mosier, best single road ster 6 00 William ST. Peters 2nd best roadster 'Jennings' 2 00 Jerome Fenner, best 2 year old colt amer. agr. Dan'l, Peters best sucking colt 1 00 -V 2. -Horses and Mules Clasi 3 Speed Division A. Wm. Smith beat trotting horse year old 4 00 3" 00 10 00 5 00 10 00 4 00 20 00 5 00 8 00 3 00 5 00 Thoo. Adams, 2nd best Wm. Hanna best trotting stal lion J. Wearer, 2nd best Div. B.Cixijined to County. M- B. Postens, best trotting horse Erast. Eilenbcrger 2nd best atner. agr, Rob't R. Depuy, best trotting stallion M. B. Postens, 2nd best Josiah Fenner, best pacing horse John T. Williams, 2nd best Reuben Rrcsge, best pair hor ses John Palmer jr., 2nd best arnr.agr 2 00 Div. C. Open to All. Mr. Irwin, best trotting horse 150 00 James Decker, 2nd best 50 000 jXo 3 Horned Cattle Class 1 Thoroughbred A. Shafer, best yearling Oys- tiian bull A Shafer, best 2 year old dur- hnm Heifer M. Shafer, best durham bull 2 00 4" 00 4 00 Yo 3 Horned Cattle Class 2 Grades and Jratives. Enoch Flagler, best grade de- von heiier John Conner, 2nd best C. D. Baodhead," best native cow Enoch Flagler, beat grade de von cow 3 2 5 4 00 00 00 00 jVb 3 Homed Cattle Class 3 Steers and Ozena. John Edinger, best pair work ing oxen NO. 4.-SWINE. Joseph Feimer, best thorough bred boar Joseph Fenner, boar pigs dip Wm. Frankenfield best fat hog 4 00 5 1 3 00 00 00 Wm. Frankenfield 2nd best am. agr 1 00 NO. 5. SHEEP. Enoch Flagler, best gr. south devon buck 3 00 3 Otf 'Youatt' 4 00 2 00 4 00 'Youatt' w0 iamh3 Matttjas Shafer, best exford Williams, best bake- ,ou" x ' well buck JohnT. Williams, best native buck J0hn S. Rinehart, best 8gr. bakewell ewes John S. Rinehart, 2nd best James 11. Kerr, best gr. cotz- wnld hun.k 2 00 'Youatt' T TT rr0,.r onfj ilftRi: uauiuo xx. v. -, ,JI,as u. xiud. r Rfip.d. I 00 ---- Jacob T.Keller, best cwt. buck wheat flour amer. agr. jiTo 7 farming Implements. J a Bowers best horse power " V ,. idip. -2.00 Geo. Shafer, best mower and reaper dip 2 00 Geo. Shafer best mower dip 200 No 8 Manufactured Articles. James A Pauli, best hats, caps and furs dip. N, Ruster, best display cloth ing din. 2 2 Flory & Bro-, best lot of stoves dip 3 If. Ruster, best display of wcol len goods dip. Miss E. Knipe, best cogars dip. Henry Hes'or, best carriage dip. 2 -4 X uu roo NO, 9 VEGETABLES Chas. B. Staples, best 6 heads cabbage amr agr Silas L. Drake, best 6 pump kins Silas L. Drake, bsst 6 egg plants Silas L. Drake, best sweet po tatoes Silau L. Drake, best peck to matoes 1 1 1 00 I 00 C. Becker, box nungoes Mfcrd Drake, best 6 squash amer. agr. amer. agr. Daniel Poters, best prince al bert potatoes amer. agr. Robert Pitts, best peach blew potatoes amer. agr. Robert Pitts, best peck unions 1 00 James H. Kerr, best peck lima beans amer. agr. James II. Kerr, best half peck pole beans James H. Kerr, best bushel field beans 1 00 1 00 NO. 10 POULTRY. Alferd Drake, best lot of chickens am ag R. R Cress, bost brahma poot ros amr. agr NO. ll-JMIRY & HONEY. James II. Kerr, best 5 pounds butter James Teel, 2nd best Mrs. C. D.Brodhead, best dutch cheese dip NO. 12 FRUIT. A. R. Jackson, best peck squin ces C. Becker, best delawaro grapes J. S. Rinehart best flennsh beauty peas 2 1 1 00 1 I 00 00 1 I 1 1 00 00 00 00 Robt. Pitts, best black hamburg grapes Robt Pitts best Isabella grapes J. II. Kerr, best display of fruit amr. agr. J"o 13 Home. Manufacturers. Henry Fenner, best flax Mrs. Geo. Knipe, best pair sheets Mrs. G. Knipe, best table cloths Miss Eliza Depu', best quilt Miss -Oath. Wilson, besi silk quilt Ao. 1 1 Ladits Work. Sarah Jackson, shell work frames Mrs. Susan Labar, embroidery Miss Ally Edinger, best tidy Mrs. Susan Labar, 2nd best Miss Emma Trock, 2 crochet tidies 1 00 1 1 1 1 1 00 1 00 dip. 1 00 dip, 1 00 dip. I 00 1 00 dip. 1 00 1 00 dip. 1 00 1 00 dip. Mr3. Chas Shafer, chair cushion Mrs. Chas Shafer, d emise Mrs C. Becker, best quilt Mrs C. D. Brodhead, 2nd bert Mrs. C. Becker, linnen table cloths Mrs, C. D. Brodhead, b9st lamp mat Mrs. C. D. Brodhead, 2nd bost Peter Williams, counterpane Miss Sally Kerr, best leather work Miss Carrie Drake, 2d best Hanna Giatten tatting Mrs. -Darius Dreher, best wor sted work 1 1 1 1 Mrs. J, S. Rinehart, bun bas ket Mrs. J. S. Rinehart, hair flowers NO'. 15 NOT, tc ART FLOWERS. Miss Carrie Drake, 1 1 1 dip 00 dip. eo Miw Sally Ker? moss vase & dried flowers iiiss Sally Kerr, hanging basket Mrs. C. D. Brodhead, fuschia, no, 15 h'o"me department. Mrs. A. R Jackson, jar peaches. dip NO. 17 -M1SCBL1.ANEDS ARTI'CLE., Miss Hattie Brown, mc-tio'chrom- atic paintings 1 00 C. Warnock, display cold, en gravings - X 00 NO. 18. NON-ENUMERATED ARTICLES. John Hensberger, patent beehive 1 00 M. Walrath, best turned work 1 00 James H. Kerr, best sewing M- chino m 1 00 The foregoing is a true list of the pre tmiums ava)rded;at the 6th annual fair of 1 the Monfoe (Jo., Agr., Society,- and . t 1. 1 Treasurer is Hereby autnonzea to pay the same, and this receipt of the pafties on the margin shall be his sufficient order fur the same. JOSEPH FENNER, Pres'fe. A. R. JACKSON Sec'y From the IT. Y. Tribune. MID-AIR MATRIMONY. Bridal Balloon Voyage The Partiti Concerned Pleasures of "Windy Wed lock The Voyage Poetical Incident on the Way. The announcement that a bona fide marriage was to take place above the clouds in Professor Thos. S. C. Lowe's balloon United States, yesterday, -at 2 o' clock in the afternoon, caused a great crowd to assemble in the large enclosure whence the bridal party were to take the departure from this terrestrial sphere. About 3,000 persons, nearly one-half of whom were women, were congregated a round the balloon, at the corner of Sixth ave. and Fifth-ninth st., while probably as many more occupied positions on the 00 00! 00 j 00 f roofs of buildings and lofty rocks over looking the enclosure. 00 00 THE BRIDAL CAR. At one end of the raised platform, over which the partially distended balloon os cillated fitfully in the strong gale, was c rected a pretty gate of woven evergreen, bearing the motto, "Ever Thus," through which the bridal party were to pass to the balloon. The bridal car was very hand some, the outside being covered with gold and crimson damask, and the inside cush ioned round with pale green silk, with a capacity for four voyagers. It was also elegantly tented with pink silks, border ed round with drooping festoons of lace of bridal white. TIIE PARTIES CONCERNED. Miss Mary West Jenkins, late of St. Louis, Mo., was the blushing bride ; Pro fessor John W. Boynton, M. D., of Syra cuse, N. Y., was the happy arid eccentric man. They had been engaged for some time, and, according to advertisement, it was expected that they would be cebmpa nied by the Rev. F. Dewitt Talmadge of Philadelphia, to the pure, uutrammeled realms of space, and there united in the holy bands of wedlock, with the eternal stars for witnesses, the sun and moon for groomsman and bridesmaid, the fires of sunset for their hymenial torch, and the blue empyrean for their jlomestic sphere. Of course, here was poetical novelty e nough to attract, throngs of sight seeers, who, however, were compelled to wait two dreary hours in the cold open air, keep ing their feet and hands from faeezing by incessant applause, and clamering for the spectacle to commence, as they had paid their admission fee in good faith. ARRIVAL OF TIIE BRIDAL PARTY. Owiug to the accident which had taken place at the Manhattan Gas Works, Prof. Lowe was compelled to make his own gas, which occasioned considerable delay, but at about 4 o'clock the balloon was ready for her voyage, and soon after the carria ges containing the bridal party drove in to the deep inclosure from the Fifth-ave. side amid roars of laughter and deafening cries of "Hi ! hi I" "Here they come !" "I se'e the bride !" "Look at the old man!" 00 00 00- 00 00 00 and similar expressions. A moment af ter two little girls, half clad in white mus lin and cheap spangles, and shivering with the cold, sprang from the foremost coach and scattered flowers along the plutform, which was now densely crow ded with spectators, whom the policemen with all their efforts, were hardly able to keep back from the narrow path which had been cleared for the passage of the bridal party, consisting of the bride and bridegroom, the two daughters of the lat ter and the sister of the former, with a few other frieuds. THE BRIDE AND BRIDEGROOM. Soon after the arrival of the party it was given out that the marriage ceremo ny had taken place a few hours before, at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, and that the on ly legal ceremony to be performed on high would be the singing of the marriage contract. The reason given for this change of the programme was that the clergyman of the occasion had to return to Phila 00 delphia by the next train ; but the actu al reason probably was that the reverend gentleman, accustomed to operate solely in muudaee matrimony, had backed out at the eleventh hour, and tied the knot in the manner with which we groveling mortals are usually -contented. "Which is the gal what's to be yoked?" asked a vulgar fellow at our elbow. "That is the bride," we replied, instinct ively indicating a beautiful woman of a bout five and twenty, who had just alight ed from the carriage. Site was fair atfd comely, with bright dark eyes, pale checks, and a somewhat nervous smile about her pretty lips, as she pirssed through the throngs with a step-daughter, hardly younger than her self, on either side. She was dressed in a plain, but elegant traveling dress of dove colored silk ; her rich dark naif was' modestly disposed beneath an elegant bonnet of the latest style, and she kept her eyes cast down as if sad and dejected. The "happy man" was a large, portly gen tleman, about double the age of his new wile. The latter looked pretty and sweet as she was lifted iuto the gay cabin of the air-ship,- but as the husband stepped over the edge of the car there was a pitiful laugh from the crowd as though he had made that one step from the sublime ,to. ,th ridiculqus of wTrierr th'e poet speaks. Owing to the scarcity of gas, it was found impossible for Miss Lula Boynton to ac company her father and step-mother, as was originally intended. Her place Was therefore occupied by a little sister of the bride. Prof. Lowe then stepped in, and all was in readiness. 00 00 00 the TIIE START. The ballast was on board. A dozen men was clinging to the unsteady car to keep it down. nn:.. j : 1 .T , L .,, . , f, ,.ttV ' m. teachers to believe that the American the let us sail I" cried Prof. Lowe. The . next moment there was a strong puff a civi1 war 9 over- lhe two great armies flapping sound, like that of wings in mo-of the North were said to be ruined.- tion ; the crowds below caught one more General Grant, without a plan, but with glimpse of the pale-cheeked bride, with a demoralized mob 5f armed mec wajr nervous mile Upon her lips, and then the ictured ag flounderi in the mud of tho' air ship was afloat and rising slowly on ' . , 0 , her heavenward way. She rose but slow-;James nver, whence he would find it ly, however. The Professor emptied a hard to escape Lee, even with the loss sand-bag just in time to clear the eaves' of his stores and artillery. Genei&t of the little house at one corner of the Sherman having been drawn away from enclosure. As it was, the car came square- his base by Johnson, and being unable ly in contact with the flagstaff on the to hold Atlanta in the face of Hood, was' roof ; but the slender mast bent like a described as breaking up his camp and willow wand, and the next moment they 'flying toward the. sea, in hope, unlikely to were clear aud rising rapidly, with the J be fulfilled, of finding shelter from tho Professor waving his hat triumphantly .enemy in his ships. over the side of the car, TIIE BRIDAL VOYAGE was a happy success, and is thus describ ed by one of the voyagers, who is evident ly of a poetic turn : It was not near so cold as we thought it would be mmediately after c earing the walls of the enclosure, the balloon , . , p .i . , jicrs who paid a fair attention to evi ed to become perfectly motionless,!.. 1 j 1 i . cfi, ,, , K. J .. t ,., ' i it was already clear that the couth the warld sank from our feet like a , . . J... D,tk n;ot, seem and the peopled dream. The city was spread be low us like a map, with its hundred spires and myriad casements gleaming in the last flash of sunset, which flooded the west with pallid gold, with here and there an island of white cloud. ForrC moment we seemed to be perfectly motionless,and then, by watching the Central Park, di rectly beneath us' we saw that we were moving rapidly toward the North. "Then as the wind began to weep A music out of sheet and shroud, .We steered her toward the crimson cloud. That land-like slept along the deep. Our nervousness was quietly gone, and we were soon chatting merrily. Lesser and dimmer grew the world as we soared and swept along, over Harlem and along East River, with its hundred isles, with the wide, glittering waters of the' Sound beyond, like a dazzling shield, and ham lets, hills and woods, the latter flushed with Autumnal purple and gold, fleeting far beneath us like the vistas of an en chanted realm. It all seemed strange and fairy like. It brought to mind the "Day-Bream" of Tennyson By but a slight stretch of the fancy, the bride became the sleeping beauty, newly awakened by her true love's kiss ; by another stretch quite a stretch, it is true Professor Boynton became the fairy prince, "lighter footed than the fox," who bore her to his fath er's halls. It w3 the sweet Day-Dream of youth and love. And on her lover's arm she leant, And round her waist she felt it fold, And far across the hills they went, In that new world which is the old Across the hills, and far away, Beyond their utmost purple rim, And deep into the dying day The happy princes followed bimv Even as in the sweet Day-Dream, the happy couple in the air ship lefS the world behind, and mounted stanvard as though to make their bridal home in some bright bower beyond the clouds. And o'er them many a sliding star And many a merry wind was borne, And, streamed through many a golden bar, The twilight melted into morn. j,. And o'er them many a flowing range Of vapor buoyed the cresent-bark, And, rapt through many a rosy change The twilight died into the dark. We understand that the newly wedded pair will remain some days in New-York before seeking their home in Syracuse. May their days be of silver and their nights of gold ! Treatntent of Crotfp, Croup is an inflammation of the inner surface of the windpipe. Inflammation implies heat, and that heat must be sub dued, or the patient will inevitable die. Tf nromnt efforts are made to cool the parts in case of an attack of the croup, ! ing U rant. J.ne captain nnew un uu relief will be as prompt as it is surprising1 jeet and the means by whieh he could and delightful. All known that cold ap-!gain it. Richmond without Lee would I - . plied to a hot skin, cools it, but all do not! as well know and understand that hot water applied to an inflamed skin will ccr- tainly cool it off. Hence the. application of iced-water with linen cloths, or ahnost'plans were crowned with a magnificent- hot-water with woolen flanneT, or two success. The war was nnisneu at a un folds large enough to cover the whole 'and the surrender of Pemburton was throat arid upper part of the chest ; put justified in the surrender of Lee; these in a pail of water as hot as the hand Sherman, when we came to know him can bear, and keep it thus hoi by adding at all, was iu some respects better com-; water from a boiling tea-kettle at hand. prehended by the critics than Grant had Let two or three of the flannels be in been. After Savannah fell into his.pow hotwaterall the time,and oneon the throat er all nonsense about his' being drawn all the time, with a dry flannel1 covering from his base and flying to his ships died the wet one, so as to keep the heat in to out among us. The Horse Guards began some extent p the flannels should not be to study this remarkable march ; and tho til the phlegm is loose, the child easier and begins to fall, asleep, then gently wrap a dry Sunn el over the wet one which is on, so as to" cover it up entirely, and! lrt fliild i? snvful. When it wakfs im - -ri both flannels well be dry. Hall's Jour-, nal of Health. A married man was recently at a party, ! and when ho proposed to go home, was asked to remain a littic longer. "Well," he said : "Perhaps I may as well, my wife 18 probably already as madias she can' be." A Retrospect. A year a fittlo year ago, a part of tlin "Rrltisli Tnihlic wm Tnt-Jforl hv 7J r J Men who felt no objection to the nso of a slave empire, and women who admired the chivalr' of Preston Brooks, were in cited by their teachers to kill the fatted! calf, and subscribe to" the Confederate loan. Some people did as they were told. ! AInnntf nnnrilil 1 ti o n 1 1 tlia TimanOota fF ;thc cJtn loan iinpr0ved. Yet to sold- fair attention to events,- was Was but a question 01 details and ot days. Juoo was locked fast in Richmond, just as Floyd had been closed in Fort Donelson and Pemberton in Vicksburg, with no avenue of escape left open to him but such as led to capture and defeat. Sher man had spilt the Confederacy into two' halves, separating Lee trom his supplies and paralyzing Hood. K Of course the critics who prated about" Grant being without a plan, and of Sher man being drawn into a trap, knew little of these great captains ; not even lie facts of their campaigns during the current war. A Soldier whe had studied the strat egy which led to the capture of Donelson and Yicksburg would have found noth ing to perplex him in Grant's approaches' towards Kichmond. Ulysses Gaant is a matf of genius ; a soldier of new ideas j one who will be found to have contributed fresh materials to the art of war. With him a siege is a campaign. Instead. ot driving off the covering army from a fort or city, as old rules insisted must be done,: before commencing operations against it, Grant raanuvers to keep the covering ar my near him, to throw it within the lines, to compel it to take a part in the defense and to fall when the beleagured fortress; falls. This plan has the disadvantage of making a siege appear long, perplexing, critics who cannot see that the close of the siege is to be, under this new system, the close of the campaign. At Donelson, at Yicksburg, Grant's7 plan- was carried out. In each the cover iug army fell with the fortress, and in each the blow was final. The fall of Fort? Donelson aud its covering army put an end to the war in Kentucky and western Tennessee ; the fall of Yicksburg and its covering army opened the river Mississip pi, never to be closed again by the south ern guns. Each campaign was final, notr only sweeping away the army in the field, together with the stores, guns, clothingy ammuntion, but crushing in the catastro phe all sparks of rebellious fire. Where Grant had offeff been it was found impos sible to raise a second rebel corps. Thcr fighting spirit was subdued. And that which had been done by Grant in the States of Tennessee and Mississippi was now being done by him on a larger scale and with a stronger enemy in Virginia y was being done in precisely the same' manner and with precisely the same ob ject. Grant had to weaken the Confed erate army, shut it up within the lines of ltiehniond and Petersburg, and compel it tc surrender when the capital fell. Hence the battles which he fought on his way to York river j hence his refusal to assault the lines on his first approach. He was making a campaign, not simply conducting a siege. Davis had boasted1 that the war could be maintained in Vir ginia alone for twenty years after Rich mond fell ; but like many other critics hft made the mistake of misuuderstand- mi .1 J .- 1 1- t- have., given him little j Eichmond an Lee fallinsr tosrether would give him every thing he wanted victory, Union, peace, In snite of military and naval critics' his day forward, simply uccause wu m iu know him, Sherman became our hero of tho war. London Althenrcum. z I . . & Lowell has added 6500 persons to her. population iu less than six months'. Bus iness thrives there". There arc. 160,000 skeletons of Wrscs and cattle killed during the war in the Shenandoah Valley collected ata bone factory near Winchester.' - ,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers