Sunbury American. (Sunbury, Pa.) 1848-1879, December 03, 1864, Image 2

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m.j-ijiiLiJ.1.' I!
tfjc gimlmrg ftmrrtcan.
II. D. MAS9BR. Eiltor ft Proprietor.
B. WILVERT, Publisher.
Sl.MUIIV, 1A.
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 18U4.
NF.W COURT HOUSE.
Tlie Grand Jury havinrx twice recommend
ed tbo building of ft new Court Knnse in
Sunbury, on condition Hint the Borough
will agree to subscribe Five Thousand Dol
lars, in aid of its completion, tlie Borouglt
Councils on Tncsdny last pasacd n resolu
tion making tlie proposed subscription.
On the day following the Board of County
Commissioners, took up the subject and by
a unanimous rote passed a resolution to
build a new Court House in this place.
The Commissioners will advertise fr pro
posals to be received some time next month,
so that the contract may be awarded in Kelt- J
runry. That a new Court House is greatly
needed, will not be disputed, and by none ;
more so than citizens not residents of Suobu- j
ry, who mny have, business in the court and j
public offices. In that view it was asking
much of us in this Borough to pay $5,000 in
addition to our proper share of the expen
ses. AVe simply state this fact without in
tending to complain of the Council in their
action. It is but just to say that the pre
sent Board of Commissioners, though econ
omical in husbanding the resources and
finances of the county, having seen the im
provements of neighboring placcs,jre not
wiiling that our county, second to none in
resources and business, should remain any
longer with public buildings, not only
crumped, uncomfortable nnd unhealthy, but
insufficient for the protection of tho public
records, involving the safety of our titles to
property. This act of the board will re
dound to their credit when others ore for
gotten. The Commissioners hare not yet decided
upon the plan, nor upon tho location, and
will not do so before examining some of the
buildings of other counties. Some havo
suggested the Jail property, while others
would prefer the site of the present public
offices in Market Square.
of the sol
diers for this county, are as follows :
Lincoln,
McClellan,
229
120
340
Total
making 310 to be added to the
vote of the county. This w ill reduce Mc
C'lellair majority in tho county 100. The
vote will therefore stand as follows :
MeClellanY majority on the homo
vote (not 702 as first reported,) 800
Deduct Lincoln's majority on home
vote, 109
McClellan's majority in the county, 091
"The 22d of October was the 476th day
of the siege of Charleston. Bully for Char-
leston !"
sttPIf any one supposes tho above to have
been extracted from o Richmond or Charles
ton
n paper, he is egregiously mistaken. Wo !
- r , i i t i j
.e it from a Copperhead Journal of a
take
neighboriug county. When a man hurrahs,
for Charleston in such a contest, it is natural
to suppose he lives in Dixie, or ought to if
Lc does not. Yet thfte are the fellows who
declare that the freedom of speech has been
suppressed.
Scott's OrixioN ok Grant. Gen. Grant
paid a visit to Gen. Scott on Monday week.
When Gen. Grant was about to take his de
parture, Gen. Scott arose took a copy ot his
autobiography, which has just been pub
lished, and wrote on tho fly leaf
From tboolJeet to the ablest General in tho wOiU.
Wispieid Scott.' j
This ho presented toLient.-General Grant, j
C3FThe New York Tribune declares that j
the L nion party was cheated out of thirty i
thousand votes in that State, at the late
election, and demands an investigation, in
which all parties are invited to assist.
KfOn account of the recently-discovered
incendiarism in New York, additional
watchers and guards have been placed in
the hotels, Government buildings, and de
pots, ard other measures havo been adopted
as a precaution against similai attempts.
fS?"Tues rumored appointment of Robert
J. Walker to a seat in tho Cabinet, does not
meet tho approbation of many who were
opposed to his tree-trade policy, when Secre
tary of the Treasury under Mr. Polk. Wc
do not know what Mr. Walker's views arc
now, on the subject of the tariff. His ob.
ject. then, was revenue solely, without re
gurd to protection to our manufacturers
He li, howfiver, an able man, an'1 Lis loyalty
is unquestioned.
IdF" The Eiiu JjitMUh couUins the fol
lowing examples of the progressive spirit of
the age: "A correspondent writes us ; We
recently reud a notice in jour paper of the
marriage, ia Erie, of a mau of ck'l.ty, and
send von thn r!W! ... ...,;, u , .....
. : . .. " "
matrimonial line. A resident of Snrini?
township, this county, buried his second
wife on Tuesday, November 1, 13B4, and on
the 12th, ekrai day after, married aguin.
His first wife died Dut a year ago, and
he was then five weeks in finding a second.
But the third he makes better titno on, hav
ing had experience, aud suits himself in
eleven days."
The correspondent, however, gives a case
from Drydcn, New York, which shows that
the Empire State can leave Pennsylvania
far behind iu some matters of enterprise;
A man in that town had the misfortune to
lose his wifa on Sunday; o:i Monday he
married LU servant girl; on Tuesday they
amended the funeral of, the deceased, to
gether, the new wife wearing tho old one's
clothes; and on Wednesday tho brido gave
into a daughter. This ended the
ITRinme for the tiuwi.
pro-
"s ftr. Ei.i.fi tii. F. V. Pollock, F-sij.,
was, ou Monday elected President of the
Northunberluud County Bank for another
tKIUl.
E3TREi.tGiors. The Installation of Rev.
A. D. Uawn as paston of the Presbyterian
vnurcuot bliumokm, took place on Tues
dsy'Vry.ing. Rev'. D. J. Waller presided
nd tb eharp to the people was delivered
b. RT. 2. D. Rardon, of Jersey Bbore,
Democratic lltojnlty to Twlh.
The World has Washington letter of toe
20th, which thus states tho Issuo now pend
ing between the loyal and revolted States of
our Union : . ,
"The C. 8. A. is neither tottering to its
fall, nor is it likely to bo swallowed up sud
denly, even by the earthquake of Mr. Lin
coln'! re-election. It still -contains the only
necessarv elements of war men, food and
oowder. It has never endured one half of
the sufferings of tho colonics during our
war of the Revolution. It has never been
reduced to the straits of the colonies; its
currency is not degraded jet to the condi
tion of tho continental money ; it- form of
government is better adapted to the strain of
war than was that of the colonics ; and the
olyect of our administration is more tho
rough, wide-reiieliing, and destructive, "than
was that of the British ministry.
"The claim is indeed identical, but tho
object of the claim is differant. Great Bri
tain in-irfh'd upon the right of thinking for
the co!n:ii" upon the money question ; we
insist upon thinking for the Slave States
upon tlie Slavery question. Long after
righting commenced, Great Britain could
have retained the colonies by yielding her
e'liim. Long alter fighting had commenced,
we could have had tho Union uuder the
Constitution, by yielding our claim ; but we
haue chosen to persist, ns Great Britain
chose to persist, and therefore we have to
conquer as she did not, or to give tip as she
did, or to nml a middle course ot safety.
"Our intestine trouble we take to be this:
The inhabitants of tho Free States determin
ed in 1 Kill) to.havea voice about Slavery.
The people of the Slave States insisted that
under the Constitution, the Free States not
only had no voice, but were actually estopped,
by good faith to that instrument, from
wishing to have a voice.
"Is it not perfectly clear that such a dis
pute can only be settled by the litter pros
tration of tho South physically, or of the
Fire States financially, or by tho destruction
of tile subject of dispute '''
Is it not atrociously impudent in this
Rebel sympathizer to talk of the eaifte of
the Union as "our side," and speak of what
"ire insist" on, "ec could have had." &e ,
Ac. as if he were on the side of the Nation
and not on that ot the traitors? vOur' in
testine, trouble we take to be this," snys this
Copperhead : "The inhabitants of the Free
States determined in 1SGU to have a voice
about Slavery." W.hy, thou foolish juggler !
"the people "of the Free States" hud an un
questioned, potcutiul "voice about Slavery"
in 1783, when the vote was taken in Con
gress on Mr. Jefferson's proposition that
Slavery should bo excluded by positive ordi
anco from all the territories or embryo
States, prescut and prospective, pertaining
to our country. They had "a voice about
Slavery," in 167, when congress, by the
vote of every State then represented, decided
that Slavery should be prohibited in every
square rood of territory then belonging to
the United States. Tney W-'a voice about
Slavery" in the Convention which framed our
present Constitution, whereby it was voted
that.'apportioning representatives in Con
gress, titty thousand slaves should count as
thirty thousand freemen, and that Congress
might prohibit the African Slave Trade af
ter 1807. So they had when Indiana Terri
tory came repeatedly to Congress, asking
permission to hold slaves for a limited term,
and was sent home again w ith a Ilea in her
car, on the reports of John Randolph of Va.,
, 1 Jn c,, ',:!? u
I again in the Missouri struggle, in tlie pur
I chase of Florida, in the annexation of Texas,
i in the Nebraska contest' and forty more
uclb thf, Fre0 Statw vico about
Slavery, no- ono questioning their light,
Vou ;f ht as p,aUHJb,y aMert "hat the uni-
verse was created in 1800, as that tho Free
States then first "determined to have a voice
about slavery." a
But you falsely assert that the Free fSiatcs
"insist upon thinking for the Slave States on
tho Slavery question." We insist only on
thinking fur ourselves. We did so in 1860,
and gave fair notico that, resarding the
Slavery as an evil. would not assent to
its extension uto tho Federal Territories,
bnt should prevent such extention if we
j could. That was the sum and substance of
: the Chicago Platform of that year. That
j Platform did not go one inch beyond Mr.
i Jefferson's position in 1781 a position
j which New York (then a Sluve State) and
j nil the North unhesitatingly maintained,
j ,'t did not go beyond the position wherein
the South stood unanimously with us in pass-
in" th; I'rdiance ot J7S7. let you virtual
ly allirnl that the South is right in rebelling
, sllu(U, , oceans of blood because the
North stands where Jehi rson eisnty years
since taught her to stand, and whero the
South unanimously stood with her iu 1737.
y. '. Tribune.
Koltlier'a Orplni"i
Tho Ilarrisburg TelcyritpU stages
that ar
raiiKements are now perlccted
an, I schools
selected for the education and mcntcnanee
ot the children of those bravo nieu who .have
fallen in thetr country's service, and it is t.'ie
duty of School Directors to see that applica
tion for admission into one of these schools is
immediately made for evury needy orphan
in their respective districts. By promptly
performing this pleasing duty, they -a ill '
confer a lasting favor upon the surviving
parent or friend of these children generally
too timid to make the upplictiliou and
upon the country, by assisting in the eleva
tion of those who, if uncarcd ibr, may grow
up ignorant and worthless citizens.
Application should be corectly mado out,
attested by the President and Secretary of
the board, and forwarded to the chairman of
the proper County Committee, from whom
blunks for this puipoec cnu be obtiiim-d.
Great care should be Mkcu that nuines, dates,
Jcc, ore correctly given.
The Chairman of the Committee should
immediately add his certificate to these ap-
' Plications ii correct, ana torwurue, uiem 10
Dr. Thomas It. Uurrowes,
Superintendent
of Orphans, Lancaster, Pa.
He need not
f"J JT-
pose, us the hcliool xirectors, who live in
i the same township with the applicant, is
i the best evidence as to the necessary N facts
j iu the case he can get.
i Each member of the Committee, as well
as each public spirted citizan, should cheer
fully and promptly uid in securing to those
entitled to it ihe benefit of this just uud
beneficent measure.
Further information 'can be obtained from
the l'timnyhauia School Jvurnal. '
loin.iLi.'N .oti:n,
A letter from Berlin says: "Englishmen
visiting Berlin und taking refreshment in
any of the ordinary restaurants that abound
I in this city are extremely liable to make a
! discovery which many would esteem not
: whooly agreeable. If ibr instance, they ask
for beef, they sbind a great chance of ob
taining a dish ol horscucsh. The case ac-
j tuully occurred to the wiuter a week or two
i buck. The consumption of horseflesh is in-
1 creasing every year in UerHn. It has been
! twice as grout iu the year just elapsed as iu
j tbo previous. The olBcial returns show that
I from October 1. 1813, toi)ctober 1,1801,
! there were 1,552 horses killed in theeigth
horse slaughter-houses In Berlin. The meat
is sold at prices varving from 1 to 21 silver
groscheus (ld. to 8d. per lb., which is only
Uittlf the usual price of beef'here,
nun uie usuui price oi ueet nere. Most of
it is (iisposod ol to the keepers of public
dining-rooms cafes, gardens, and beer
houses, and is consumed by the public un
der, the impression that it is bi)j", which it
much resembles in tt "
REMARKABLE INCENDIARISM.
Kcrrral Uott-lft Jet on' Fire.
A concentrated and skillful attempt was
nmcle last night by secessionist thieves, con
spirators and incendiaries to set on fire our
principal hotels, though, fortunately at
this time of writing, 18: 13 a. m. without
success In any instaucc, the efforts of the
conspirators being In each case foiled by the
early discovery of tho fires and -before tho
flames had gathered any dangerous strength
Bo fur as our present Information goes, tho
plan of operations seems to have been for
the incendiury to pile together in some one
of the upper rooms of n hotel bed clothes
and other combustible materials and having
soaked them with turpentine or sprinkled
them with a phosphorus to set them on fire ,
then, having locked the door, to disappear
taking thu key with him. That the com
munity has been saved from the terrible loss
of property and life which might have been
expected to attend such a plot, by its fortu
nate discovery, is a mutter for profound
thankfulness.
At 8: 43 last evening the news was tele
graphed to the different police stations that,
a 11 ro had been discovered on the third floor
of the St. James Hotel, Twenty-sixth st. and
Broadway. The room in which wn discov
ered was locked, and on the door being
forced, the bed was found sprinkled with
phosphorus, the bed clothes ami other ar
ticles in the rooui piled together on t he floor,
with a number ot lueiler matches nligin.
Happily the tiro was extinguished, the diim
nge done being trilling.
At 8: 45 p. m. Barnum's Museum was
found to be on tire on the stairs leading to
lie third floor. That was, after a little
trouble, extinguished.
At 8: 53 p. m. news came across the city
that rooms Nos. 139 and 140 of the St.
Nicholas Hotel ore on fire. The same diffi
culty with the doors is here experienced,
and on forcing an entrance, when the flames
are extinguished similar traces of an attempt
ed arson are found to exist. Both the rooms
were badly burnt, the damage done amount
ing to nearly $2,500. The fire was extin
guished by the lire-biigadc of the establish
ment, under the directions ot the proprie
tor. At 0: 20 fire was discovered in one of tho
rooms of the Lafarge House; a fire evi
dently planned in exactly the same man
ner, and attempted through thu same
agencies of phosphorus and turpentine, but
being early discovered was put out with a
trifling damage.
At 10:13 the Metropolitan Hotel was
found on fire; the tire again being on one
of the upper floors, but lieing early discov
ered was easily put out, the damage in this
case being but small.
At lO.iiO p. m. a room on the fifth floor of
Lovojoy's Hotel, with door locked, was
lountl in Humes, to the
great consternation
ol the guests, many ol whom had retired to
rest ; but by the energetic, courageous, and
persistent efl'orts of tlie domestics and Mr.
Iluggins, the proprietor, tho fire was got
under before it had spread to any other of
the rooms.
At 12 o'clock an alarm of fire was a second
time raised iu Lovejoy's Hotel, when a room
on the fourth floor was found on fire, flames
issuing from the bed. Alarm was K'ven at
once, and by the efforts of the people of the
house, assisted by Buch of the guests as were
on the spot, the tire was subdued.
At . t . i '. . ir... , ,
At me .'leinqjuuutii iiuii'i, v:tlise v:is
discovered in the room which had been on
gaiters soaked in some solution ot phospho
rus, a solution so strong that when the va
lise was taken to police headquarter, open,
cd, and the gaiters thrown bn the floor
they burst into a flame.
Two nrrests were made last night by the
police. One was that of a woman who was
seen to leavo the St. Nicholas shortly before
the fire was discovered, and was .next seen
to leave tho Lafarge House, when almost
imnuiiediately after her departure a lire was
discovered there also, - The woman is know".
lint up nrp ro!-t.l not iu ulvo any pirr-
j nculurs respecting her nt present. The other
person was a man, at present unknown, who
was arrested at the Metropolitan.
During the evening Chief Engineer Deck
el1 telegraphed to all thu principal hotels in
tlie city to have twelve or fifteen pails of
water on each floor ready for any emergency,
advice which'was in most instances follow
ed. The damage of the Metropolitan Hotel
will amount to more tljun $1,000. The lire
was in room No. !302.
About midnight a lire was discovered in
room No. 23 of the Belmont Hotel. Fuiton
! St., but was soon extinguished. The dam- j
ose will not exceed SW. The usual bottle
of phosphorus was discovered in between
the two beds when the flames had been put
out.
At 12.30 a. m. tho firemen, returning from
the Belmont House, discovered flames in one
ot the rooms on the lourth floor ot the Taw
many Hotel, i in entering, the fire found to
! be in room No. 108.
The door was locked, and the flame3 on
entering wero found to proceed from the
bed as in the other cases, the means of igni
tion being again a bottle of phosphorus.
'i"he damage will perhaps equal $100 from
tiro find water. '
StriV t watch was kept at all the hotels
during U'st night , the doors of most of them I
being kept locked and guarded, so as to pre
vent the adn. ission ot uny persons not 1 hume bw puLliuhhi' tltia uutice rtht-ir pa
lontiiiij' to the house, while many of the ! 1)L.rj '
ouests preferred u-" sit up all niht in prefer
ence to taking thoi-bance of being caught
asleep should an alurui be given during the
night.
Tho detective forco under Chief John S.
Young were of course on tho alert, and it
was through their instrumentality that the
i two uiTf&ts before referred to were made.
The prisoners were detained 'during last
night at the Police Headquarters, pri'par:t
tory to their examination this morning.
Tho state of the finances of tlio rebel
!ii-i'iilii mun t iiiuii Ia i.iu il ...-. ; . .t . . I t'
! falTu.; gou. WaS T hmond
last week at the rate ot ojie dollar for twen
ty-su in rebel notes, Biid silver ut ono for
twenty-tour. UcUel notes are thus worth
& rZZSJtJ
the Coulcderucy is typical of its sinking
course, and has only a parallel in the old
Continental money of the Revolution. The
Erst three millions of this was issued, by the
authority of Congress, in 1775, to which was
added twenty millions in 1776, and twenty-
iits millions tour hundred and twenty-six
thousand in 1777 Vet four dollucs in notes,
after these issues wero made, were still
worth one in silver, liut in the fourth year
of their existence the deprcciatiou became
a rapid as that of rebel' notes has been
during the last year, and the future course
of the latter is like to be a repetition of their
history. In 1778 Congress issued $00,U(J3,.
201) more of this inconvertible paper money,
and iu Decemlier that year one silver dollar
was equivalent to forty-five paper dollars.
In 1780 f 83,000,000 additional was issued,
aud after that silver sold at the rate of one
dollar to one hundred in paper. In 1781
113,587,000 was added, and ic June that
year tho market value of one silver dollur
was equal to that of ono thousand in notes.
The total issue amounted to 1302,546,822,
and tho population at that time was only
four millions. Their dowuward course was
even more rapid than that of the French
assignats during the revolution which fol
lowed ten years afterwards, and both be
came equally worthless and repudiated by
the people.
A Kew Army Corps lo Ik) ICecrnlt
!. "WasiiinotoS Nov. U8, 2.80 r. M.
The following order has just been issuet',:
, WAH DlCrAHTMENT,
Adjutant General's Office,
Vasiuntoj. Nov. 28.
General order, No. 287, for raising and or
gntningo new volunteer army corps:
First that au army corps to consiit of
not less than 20,000 infantry, and enlisted
for not less than one year, to be desigtated
the 1st Corps, shall be organized in; the
District of Columbia, commencing the or
ganization on the first ot December, .804,
and continuing until the first day of Jut lory
1805. j
Tho privates to consist only of nbltbo-
died men who have served honorably not
less than two year, ami therefore not sub
ject to draft, and the officers to be con mis
sioned from such as have honorably strved
not less than two years. t
Second. Recruits will be furnished t-fcns'
portation to Washington, and will be credit
ed to tho districts in which lliey orthcir
families are domiciled, and will be Paid
a special bounty of $300 from the substitute
lunrl, upon be in it mustered into servec.
Kaeli recruit, who preserves his arms the
end ol Ins term, may retain them us his own
upon honoraUlv discharged from th ser
vice.
Third Details of tho organization will
be presented bv the Adjutant (Jrheral. The
heads of bureau will detail compctcnt'olli
cers or the prompt examination and orjunl
z.-ition, arming, equipping and suppfing
the corps.
Fourth Major General Wintield S Han
cock is assigned to the command if t,hc
corps Headquarters at Washington. "
ltem-ilor nl'tlio Korri-t-irv- rif W'nr
Signed K. I). TOW'NSENHJ
Assistant Adjutant Geneil
Till: I l.Oltli V 'AITUBtI.
Wasiiisoton, Nov.Ji
The eleven officers of the pirate Fliridn,
taken Irom the Old Capitol prison several
days since and sent to General Banes, at
Point Lookout, have been torwardid by
that olHwr to Rear AAiiral I). D. lorter,
cnmmiMidinir the North Atlantic BNckad
ing Squadron, whojias been direclel that
they be turned over to Captain Collits, of
the Wachusett, which vessel is uowlyin
in Hampton Roads. ;
It is understood here that Comnnder
Napoleon Collins, tho captor of tin rebel
pirutu Florida, has been ordered to ret u en
,..!!..,;., i. , ,:i i,. T
i" u.nii.., iMti'.u, nun uia ycto. 11 l.i:,ler 111-
ncers ami crew.
This decision of Mr. Seward ha been
fully canvassed in Cabinet council, and is
believed to have been opposed by Mi Hates
he deeming an apology to Brazil for the
l seizure an ample reputation. As it in. the
case will be put at rest ut once by aBaziliah
legal decision, this course ot ou- State
Department gains friends. i
Tho friends ol Commander Coitus say
that he is much mortified at the wsult of
his exploit, and maintain that he wll resign
if ordered to take tho Florida bick. fie
will have to return with her, as a wfcness in
the case, which will be a verygreat lumilia
tion to him and his ofiicers.
Ai'i-ivnl orr.-liiiiicl IriuarM nt
AiinupolU Tlifir Wretched l'oi
tlllion. Bai.timokk, Jov. 20.
The Annapolis correspondent ot'lhe Amer
ican, writing on Friday evening, ys: "Two
of the first vessels composing CooneL Mul
ford's fleet of transports arrived lero to-day
with paroled men from Savatliah. The
steamers were tho Atlantic, Captain Gray
and Bluckstunc, Captain Barry;, tho former
having on board 040 living sd-lctons and
eight dead bodies. Nine otherswtrc buried
on the passage. Such waa tl' wretched
statu of these poor men Wir "uruenua
were tin""- i'l,n"t'd st tlieowruisiglil.
ot a single man of the whole number but
had to be sent to the hospitals, many to
leave them only for the gtaw-yard. The 550
on tho llltickstone were in better condition
and made W;c welkin ring as tbcylanded on
tho free shores of Maryland. Surjcons Van
derkief and Parker, aud their assistants,
evinced the deepest interest in tb poor fel
lows, are doing all iu their por to miti
gate their sufferings."
Import mil to I lie l'rioixk of tol.
(lit-rx.
Post Ot KiCK, Washington Cit, D. C, )
November 1USU4. f
A large number ol packages, itended for
the army, arrive at this ollic, with the
! wrappers destroyed or the addris so multi-
laied that they cannot bo forurded, and
arc, therefore, necessarily scut t the Dead
I Letter Ollice. '
j If person-) sending would ike the pro
' caution to write out on a card r a slip of
VlH l''' of the ollici or soldier
ibr whom the package ia intenwl, thenum
i bt-f of the regiment and corps 3 which he
is attached, as well as the nao and post
J office add iv? s of the person I whom it is
j sent, anil fasten tho card .or lp thus ad
dressed securely to the contcnti-ni'tho puck
! age inside the trnipjir, it wilibi all cases
j insure lhcir safe delivery or tiir prompt
return to the owner,
Editors in the loyal States ill confer a
favor on our soldiers and the! friends at
S. J. BO WEN, Plmaster.
liunlt-c nnl ltVuurt'K'iirdt Jlnron
VI'lio 1 II front orMM'niiu.
'Vih the Mticinioif()ltrate,fio. 20.
Lieutenant General Hardee arced in tho
citv this morning.
General lleauragard will prubly be in
town to-morrow afternoon, .ic clarion
voice of this gallant Louisiani like the
j blast of Ilodcrick's bugal, wilt- worth u
j thousand men.
I t'iuce thu date mentioned it ill bo ob
! sei veil that communication wit the East
has, teen interrupted by Shernifund the
- ! afore .ncntioned gallant Loitisiam and the
; Georgla-i Hardee ure left far in le rear of '
Sherman
W CitutionuH.Xo, 22.j
Gov. Brown is at Macon. Sot Generals
Beauregard und Dick Taylor.
Everybody about Macon in in ttrenches.
The members of the Legislature ping put
them in the ranks, but all cil'ortsilcd, und
they managed to get otC f .
....
The Cliriatluu Com.mlin,
PiTTsucno, Nov. 1881.
The Christuin Commission siSubsist
euce Committee provided a Thisgiving
dinner for the solaiers in all thaospitals
and camps in this vicinity. Thlso gent
money to Nashville to purchase 4ceys for
the soldiers there, besides nce-meat
enough for six thousand pies, twouudrcd
barrels' of apples, ten barrels of coed fruit
and other things towarfl providi dinner
for all there.
' -
Array of the Potoraa
WAsnisoioN, . )9.
The rebel ex-General, Roger ,Pryor,
now a private soldier iu the Cvde'rate
army, was captured on Friday If by the
Fifth Corps pickets of the army lie Po
tomac, while attempting to eicge, p.
per with our pickets as a retaliry act
for the recent canturs of Cant, jfcridire.
ay iu rouei pickets uocwr simitftrcvm-
The Terrible Cyclone nt Cnlcntta.
The English papers teceived by the Mora
vian's mails to-day bring full accounts of
the tcrriblo cyclone at Calcutta, previously
reported briefly by telegraph.
This cyclone was unequalled within the
experience of persons who have resided in
India tor torty years, it burst over aicuua
on the 5th of October, ai d desolated a tract
of country one hundred and twenty-five
miles long. Out of more than two hundred
vessels in the Hooghly river, only eight or
nine escaped serious damage, and a great
many lives wero lost, it appears uini tiunug
the whole night of Tuesday, October 4, the
the weather ut Calcutta was marked by a
succession of squalls and heavy 'rain from.
me nuriii-noriiietisi, mill lb iiiniiiiuiuuu
same character till about half past ten on
Wednesday morning, gradually increasing
in violence. The wind then Veered to the
east, and began to blow more steadily and
Willi increasing tury, I lie weaker trees
wero uprooted or broken short, but for the
first hour or so no greater danuicc was done.
Between 11 and 12o'clotk a noise like that
of distant thunder gave warning, as it gradu
ally increased, that something worso was
coining. In about two minutes from this
time the true cyclone was upon the town.
Wherever there were tress they were either
uprooted and fell, carrying with them, in
many cases, walls, railing and buildings, or
their brunches wero snapped off like reeds
and hurled away with tho wind. Carriages
pulkccs were upset, and strewed Iho roads,
mingled with the rfw i!iol roots, vcrnandahs,
gates, and fallen trees ; corrugated iron roof
ings were torn, doubled up, and blown
away like sheets of paper. By two o'clock
the eastern and southern suburbs ot the city,
and those parts of it to the westward which
from their proximnity to the maidan and
the river were the most exposed, were more
or less a wreck. Excepting cocoanut and
other pulms, scarcely a tree was nnywhere
to be found standing. Tho beautiful aven
ues in Fort William were entirely destroyed ;
the Eden gardens turned into a wilderness.
In Tank Square tho trees and shrubs were
blown vvay, and in many parts the iron
railings torn up and overthrown. In Gar
den Reach the roads were blocked up and
rendered impassable from trees that fell
across them. The splendid avenue of iimth
trees in the compound of the school oppo
site St. James' Church, some of which must
have been four or five feet in circumference,
was entirely destroyed, the trees being snap
ped off above the level of the wall which
protected them, but which is no longer
standing.
The scene presented by the shipping (says
the Cahmtta Fnytihman of the 10th) ' is in
describable. There must be at least one
hundred ships ashore, all huddled together
in tangled masses in inextricable confusion-, j
Yards and masts are hanging about in every
conceivable lorm ot wreck, and the scene is
one of the utmost desolutiou and ruin. The
loss of boats of every description is also
enormous; probably nine out of ten were
capsi.od and sunk by the storm-wave which
followed the change of the wind from east
to south, and many of the remainder have
been cast on shore. The utmost dill'ciiltv is
from this cause experienced in communica
ting with the shipping.
The Lady Frai.klin, ono of tho wrecked
vessels, is supposed to have foundered with
all her crew on board, and the Govindpore,
off the Bankshull, also went down. There
were nine men on board the latter vessel,
including the captain, and, were it not for
the singular gallantry and courage display
ed by a seamen uamed Edward t'leary. they
probably might have all nut with a watery
grave. Mr. .1. H. Roberts was at the ghat
with some of the police, endeavouring to
pas3 on a rope to the ship, which w us nar
the middle ot the stream, but could not f;et
a single man amonir thu hr-re irjmUr llwl
were there to venture out into tl o. 'i-r, i
though ho offered a rewur.Vf one hundred
rtint-t-4 to jinv n
WHO WOill'l 0. BO. I O I
o'fli shin in ' sm-li n ivna
Itnjwi L i' - j-v
next to Ix'pcloss. Despite the danger.
I deary , who had just then enmu up, and
without even knnwini; anything about a re
ward having len ottered, voluntei.re I to
swim ovei o tho ship with the cable Heti d
the rope round Iiih waist, dashed Into the
water, like a true Briton, and succeeded in
reaching the ship ai)d fastening i.ia of fh.i
ends to her how, and returned, ninid tre-
memious cneering, iisnore. I lie ninu men
safely came aslw re by means of tho rope
the captain being the last man who bft her.
Cleary has had his hundred rupeis and will,
no doubt, get many more for his exemplary
condct.
A'arrow l'!fii;;e ot . tlutlcr anil
ui Mint;;
Foi!TKi:s8 Monhor, Xov. 27.
Tho mail bteamcr Webster, from City
Point, reports that the atcamer Greyhound,
while crossing the .lames river, caught lire
rind was totally destroyed.
General flutter and s'tatfand Rear Admir
al Porter wero on board at the lime, but all
escaped "without inj u ry ,
A I'rcst-ul lo tlie ITt-frlflrnt.
President Lincoln was yesterday present
ed by a California hunter' with a chair made
of elk horns, four largo un tiers forming the
back and arms, which are set on thu feet of
the animal.
PEACE A MONO TIIK lNPIANS.
From information received at tho Indian
Bureau it appears that peaei prevails in un
unusual degree with all the Indian tribes.
The lronIdeut'a Letter to u Widow,
Boston, Nov. 2-V Mrs. Bixby, the re
cipient of the following letter from Presi
dent Lincoln, is a poor widow living in the
Eleventh ward of this city. Her sixth son,
who was severely wounded in a recent bat-
tic, is now lying in the Headvillo hospita
Executive Mansion
" ASIIIKGTO.N, NOV. 21. 1801. .
''Dkah Madam : I have been shown on
the tile of the War Department a statement
of the Adjutant General of Massachusetts,
that you are the mother of rive sons who
have died gloriously on the field of battle.
"I feel how weak Hnd fruitless must be
any word of mine which should attempt to
beguile you from the grief of a loss so over
whelming; but I cannot refrain from tender
ing to you the consolation that may bo
found in the thanks of the Republic they
died to rave.
"I pray that our Heavenly Farthor may
assuago the anguish of your bcroavments,
and leave only the cherished mcmorv of the
loved and lost, and tho solemn pride thutj
mist ue yours, to nave una so cobtly a sac
rifice upon the alter of freedom.
"Yours, very sincerely and respectfully,
"A. LINCOLN.
"To Mrs. Bixbt, Boston, Mass."
neiivy Ilebel Attack at Franklin.
Nashville, fov. 80, Midnight,
The enemy at i p. m mado Jioavy at
tack at Franklin with two corps, but u?r
persistent fighting was repulsed at all points
with the Ioks of 0.000 killed and wounded.
Our loss is about 500. A rebel Brigadier
and 1,000 prisoners were taken,
LATER.
Frakklin, 1ess Nov, 80.
to Major Goneral Thotnat : The enemy
made a heavy, persistant attack with about
two corps, commencing about 4 o'clock in
the afternoon, and lasting until after dark.
He was repulsed at all points with very
heavy loss, probably fi.OflO to -6,000 men.
Our loss is probably pot more thai; one
tenth of that number. We captured abont
l.ooo men, including a Kngamer General,
"IIoip Wlnaer."
The New York Eeening Pott, under this
caption, prints a scathing article In relation
to the brute winder, who has had tn charge
the Federal prisoners in and about Rich
mond. When the sufferings of our poor
fellows, confined in the Libby Prison and
on Belle Isle near Richmond, because known
aery of. horror was raised here and in
Europe o.vcr the barbarity of th'e rebels.
What then did Davis and the other rebel
leaders dot Did they order the refitting of
the Libby prl ton? Did they court-martial
and punish Winder and his subordinates,
who propctrated this long serious of cruel
outrages? Did they explain that these
things occurred without their knowledge,
and were disapproved by them? Not at all
but when the evidence grew too clear for
them: when they found that if these cruel
ties continued to be perpetrated under their
eyes in and near Kiclunond, they, the rebel
leaders, would be every where- held responsi
ble for them, they removed the p'risonera.
They sent them from Belle Isle and the Lib
by to Andersonville; from a place where
their cries could be heard and their suffer
ings kn)wn, to ono sobscnre, so remote,
that no inhumanity practiced there could
be Immediately known: a place whero tho
prisoners wero in a tenfold degree more
at the 'mercy of their jailors. And whom
did they send to bo the jailor? The same
infamous wretch, Winder whose cold-blooded
and systematic cruelties had made the
prisons of Belle Isle and the Libby a scandle
no longer endurable so near to Davis; the
same who known from his early youth at
West Point as "Hog Winder,' notorious ever
since in the old army for his meanness his
abominable cruelty, and shunned as thu pos
sessor of every shameful vice, completed his
infainy'by the systematic maltreatment of
of helpless prisoners of war in Richmond
this person was continued in his place, anil
was sent by Davis, with his victims to An
dersonville. Would this huvo been done
had not the intention been to starve and
every way ill-treat our men? Would not
Davis have s-j'ected some other person to
rule over the sufferings of the prisoners ? is
not this selections of Winder proof positive
that he and his confederates intentionally
commit these atrocities?
A C'am'ektek was recently scared by a
cassowary at the Sydenham Crystal I'alare,
near London. Hu was repairing its house,
and left a large basket of tools while he
went in doors to fetch someth;ng. On bis
return be missed a cl.is.-l, and supposing
some one from the house had ti.ken it, ho
was going buck, when tl.e c.is-owary np-
proai 'hc(lniil af one fiu'p bolted a senw
driver ami gimlet, while ti:e terrified artist
in wood bulled liiiu-e!f.
An unusual abumhinre of birds of pre-,
j S,M:1, ns iatt kt winter falcons. Ac!, of
large
: sr.e. lias been remarked tins tail llirouj.
rhout
j various ptrts of the country,
j On;: of the Middfctovvn, ('nun., Ch-rgy-i
tin u, at a recent torchlight display, cxhilut
j ed a transparency over his door, with a quo
tation from Gl-m-.-h xxii: "The angle of
the Lord called until Abraham' out of Hea
i von a second time.''
I A pretty young woman at Jai kson, Mich'.
j gn, has l-etn currying on the recruiting ;
business iu a novel manner. She marries a i
man on couditinu that hu nil! en-i-t and
give her his bounty. She being strikingly j
handsome, the.man con.-ents After he is
gone she marries amjlu.r. Four men has '
she married and seiit to the army. On tl.e
riiurtli occasion she was ditei.tcd. j
The Concord (X. .b'.-o'Vr harr.j t'iat '
in some of the tow ns in tiiul cihui'.j.v sr.mv i
drilled iu )iie of six and i-igl;t leel (l-e;i on '
Sunday-last, uii-l (hat persons in giuing up '
tiii-ir poling cattle from outlying pa-tnre?
l.i-t S c '.iu-.-ilay had to I rink paths iu some '
places to j.4-1 llir-oiigh. . TIil- m,ow U now i
l wo iret dee;i on.a level on tim White Mono
tains. S'une of t:iu itrii't
are temy n.;
i
'
It is Mil. I that -The P.u nx bv Three S:. -
ters," I.Uelv puliiislu-d in London, are by the
lb ret- liauglilers ot .uarten F. flipper.
Tl.e Iota
amount of Nation,.! Bank Cur-
reiiey i)n-.v in iiculatioii is ?IM,.)U,-17!).
Thu amount hsnx-d hu-t week was S'i.U'J.-
There are oTS National Hanks now tiding
business throughout tl.e coiiiltry, with u lo
,lal capital of ijlUl.'.MM.luO.
Flom Svdiu-v. Australia, we learn that n
new gold held has been tliseo en il in oi-
Kocklmnjpton.
The rebels have advertised 'for sale M,.n
ticelo, the home ofj.lelleison, and Kock In
laud, formerly belonging to President Mon-rot-,
as the property of alien i-neiuie ol the
Couli-dracy. Montieilo) was gieu ihi.
will ol the late Captain Levy to thu United
States for a homo lor the widows and or
phans of stamen.
Miamokin Coal Trade.
SlIAHOKI"!, Xov. 2s, 1541.
Ivtn. Cict.
Kent for wilt en ling Xov. 21.
Per liut rejrl.
f.fi.ll IU
2-iJ.l.i-i U'J
2tOi US
I).-.o-ja K
J'i711 U
To tauiatitua last year,
Anothkii Novr.i.TV iv tiik Pii.-to;k un
to Art. A photographer has recently in
troduced. a novelty in the nioile of tailing
cartes-de-visite photographs with the signo
turesof the sitters appended. This givis
but little extra trouble. The sitter winply
signs his name to a slip of paper, nnd Minis
its fac simile, diminished in size, transferred
(o the portraits, if the sitter thinks proper
he can also add to his signature a recom
mendation to all persons to imitate his ex-'
ample, and "sit" in suits procured at tin
Brown Si OHO flotliTnrr IT, ,11 !' l?.,M.;il (.
!N llson, Nos. 003 and 005 Chestnut at l-oit
above Sixth.
A Good Timk Coming. For dispeptics
and those who have been suffering for years
with a disordered liver, or weakness of the
digestive organs. You will believe this af
ter giving Uooft.ind' German Bi'teri a trial.
This remedy will cause a permanent euro,
and enable you to enjoy life.
Ladies' Furs.
Purchaser! maf rely uion getting the best Furs at
CHAKI.LS OAivt'OIvD A aO.N'S, Continental UoUil,
Phila-lclpbia.
Xov. 1.', ISoj. 3 m
Colds and Cocons. Sudden changes of
climate are sources of Fulmonary and Dron
chitd affections. Experience having proved
that simple remedies act speedily and cer
tainlg when taken in tho early stage of dis
ease, recourse should at once be had to
"Broien't Bronchial Troche," or Lozenges,
let the Cold, Cough or Irritation of the
Throat bo cverso slight, as by this precau
tion a more serious attack may be effectually
warfed off. Soldiers should havo them, as
they can be uTjried iu the pocket and taken
as occasion requires.'
MADAME PORTER'S CURATIVE BALSAM
bu loon iwted iba truth that there are firat principle
In Medioiu u there I in EHiieoee, knd tbU MeUicing
ia compounded on rrinolniet auitaJ lo tha n.i.,Jr.-.ia
1 nature of Mao ! Ihe cure of Coldi I In kaeping open
; lbs porw, and oreatuig a gentla internal warmth
, sod this oiuud by tha uaa of CsU Medieiqo. Ji rs
i madial (jualitiea arc baaed on iu power to aailat tha
healthy and vtgoroua olroulatiou of blood through the
lungi, It enllveni ibe uiuaole and imiii tb akla Ic
parform it duu.tof regulating tha heal of tha iy
1 Uva, and in gently throwing off tbs wai auUtAUM
ftouithasurfaoaofthsbody. It U col violent rem
j y, but tht molUaet, wtrmbig, Matching and tffoe
I tl. trM br all 4n,rct ,?u .od ,f 0u
Tnn Mummies of Thrbfs. Mtssm. Ayef
& Co. have reeeiveil from Alexandria car
go of rags to pay for their medicines, which
are largely sold in Egvpt. The arc evident
ly gathered from all classes wid quarters ot
" ""liiiniofis we cast ou gar
ments of Hajis and Hownjis wl,fte linncn
turbans, loose breeches and flowing robes.
Not tho least part of their bulk is cloth In
which bodies were embalmed for preserva
tion three thousand years ago. They aro
now too be made into paper for AyerV At- .
manses, and thus, for having . wtapped tho '.
dead for thirty centuries, are used to warn
the living from the narrow house which they
have so lorn; Inhabited, and to which, in
spite of all our guards and cautions, wo
must so surely .-Di!,j Keening Journal.
EDITOR OF AMERICAN
Dbar Sin : With vour nrm;.,:, t .
to Iho readers of your r-ain-r that I will ,eml bv re
turn mail, to all wwliing t( (h-co), a Kecipo. with full
directions for Biakmg and using B simple Vegetable
B."'lni, hfl.wil' l:ff00,"aly, "'""ve, iu Ven day, Pirn.
plo. Blotohw.laii. irenklc,nd all hnpuritiei of
beauUfui "S h" au"' olew- ooth u4
I will alrotnall free to thoo having BnVi Ileada,
or Bare iet', urniplo direction, and inforinMiou
that will enable Ihein to start a full growth of Lu
uriant llnir, Wbukcru, or a Moustache, in lest tbaa
thirty days. ,
Alt spplicationt answered by return mail withent
charge. ltenpectlullv yours,
TlIOd.F. CHAPMAN', Chemist,
831 Jiruadway, New York.
Bept. 10, 1561. Sm
Iiiilbritmf ion 1 ' t
TO NEIlVOl's SlFFEl'.EUS.
A Onntleman.curiHl cf Xervono Uotiilitv, Ineoir. -r-etoney,
I'ri-inntnro Iccay. ami Youthful Krror. ao
tunteil by a dn?lre to benefit othcri'. will he hajipv to
furnish tn all wliinoeit it (freonf i-liar-i) the n-eipi
anil diroftinn iiinkinalho aiinplo reinrilv ne-l in h'u
eaffl. Sufferers widiinK to protit by tho Hdrertirra
had experience, and p-iwess a sure and valuable re
medy, ean do so by addrewinu bim at once at bin
plane of busim-M. T he Ki-i-ipe and full intormntinn
of vital importance will be cheerfully tent by
return mail.
Addrc-M JOHN D. (K1DKX.
N'o. 0 Nn wini utrcct, Xuw York.
P.?. Nervous Sufferers of both sexes will finl
this information iuvaluabln
Dee. :t, iHtSi. :in
i:vi: nml i:.tit. rmrwor j. isa.m s
M. 1.. Oi cmiMT and Ai hist. fonuc-rlv l.ej-duii,
idillniiil. is now located at ,o. 511 l'hie Mrect.
Philndrlphia. where persons aiHii.tel with diseases of
the KY !-.' and KAit will be st-ientilb:utly ireiitcd and
eared, if vurable. .If 'Artificial Byes imcrlisl wish
but pain.
X.il. Xo charici-s niiirio for llxuniiiuition. Th
Mi-dical fai-iillv if invited, ns IkUho no sceruti in his
Ulodi, of Ircatiheiit.
July 2,lsM. ly
to simi ivi s.
I fVin-.inip!ivo jufTcrerf w ill rcm-ivn a viilunblo pru
crii'ioii fur the cure ol t niitanuplion. Athma. Ilron-
, chilis, nn l nil throat and lain;' atns.-i.ioni!. (free of .
chnrjt".) bv iii n-linjlhi.il- u-Mrei- to
I Ucv i;pVaki A. Wll,Mi,
I Williauil an.
I hi)rii Co.,
j Scpt .25, tSlii.tm xJVork
ii nt-,,, i in.
EUKBUlty MARKET.
I'lour,
12 "a i:-..-. 'j
2 50 a 2 76 lli-U..r, .in
b- T.iil.-vr, 1 1
V liir.f, ;t.i
7' I'ork, 2.'
100 Lu-oii, n
J2 Oil "inui. 2s
7 im ; iK,l-I.T. v.-,
2ra3m.vi.v..-i.. .i-wsnrn-.,,,
Wheal,
V.yc,
I'olll,
I las.
Ktickwhi-nt,
Flavn'c-l.
Ciovi-rse-d,
XKW ADVERTISEMEXTS.
.tO-KCE-:-.Si.
rpi!Esuwcrih.T offers Iho nl-.vc r.-war-l for tho
I li.:ovi-?y nf ih,.p,. i:,,.,i.rc. his .iHXilill
in l.iHh toni:-hip. nc:irlv uppo.ii,. INoni l ur-
ii-,cc . ah-iit the loih o1Ai--i-i l i-t. mid robbed him
ol Clothin r im. I iiicr nilu l,-; t?, the vuluu of abi-ul
one huu-ire-l -lultnrs.
t'Mr.'t th suijA-riis-r at I!i "It-.. - (i
Kurh tuw:!.ip, !).--. 3, ...
Uko. IV. Smith.
M.irlivt ilrMi. oi,-l.H.r ens- ,.f Mr-.. Kult..n i- Iloti
i SXJNSTJRY,
I Huvo Di,eiw.l
' I V t 7 'VI v T I n t
: ' li 1 1 ' " H ,i U h.
SI--l I fO!l iltlrf SfllK-SlKl'l-.
turiu- n, ..Xrl, . "i," ?. " ?,Z""- '
! l mi.nl L-n.. . ... .
I '
!
II X X I. SI1KIJT I U l.V-WA 1! 1- ..fall di-?cri tioin
A I. r;-e ?'.wk of took' .Stovesofihc MluMiutt I!rimJf
WH.L2&IVI PI3NN i
: "lid on !he fo!!oin-- tn0 Ur-ii-ls wo
defy cotnpt'ti
! "-"'
, it"n tliinu-r. il.
l-iHfriioi- CViMi-M'ooii.
unnirpimseil for hwuity of I'u.i.-li. fiin-lii-ilv of a
rnnio-nii-iit. eonihininj i-Iii-.-i.iks nn-l ilnnihi'litv. no
eio:h siove wurrunleU to -erloriu what they lire r,
prraellteil .
AL.OJ. P.Mtl.UK an-1 OlTIfi: STOVKS. in Krt-i.
viiiu-lv.eiiihraeinK all the bct uiHiiufneluns.au-
Ulo-I fl,.lli,,u.il,lu dlri'-ns
Alfo, The etli-hrnte-l
OEM for heating up an
now a etmi-.
Also ih- cili hratoil VI I.CAN" llEATt'lt.
( iiLl4il, Coul Oil 1 .11 m p, MiiuN-s
4'liiiiiiii, ntnl till iirti-l-N
iinii.'iiiilly kt-r t in an e-itiiMidmieiil of Ihi.- kind AV
I Hie also pri'i.iiii-, toiloull kin-Is ! Spouting. ItiK.fio,
; Itnn-e i.n-l l-urnisi Work, lias fitting, Jto. Iteiuii
; in,! i heiiply an t neatly ee.-ti(i-,l.
t.'ouutry jiroJuce tiikcu in cx-hango at murk
price.
SMITH & GKXTHKR.
ilave the AReney for lUlili'S CKI.K11H ATI'P Hit
PLACE SluVtS, lor thu Cutiutii-s of Northuiuhe
liiful. isiiydir. I uion un-l Montour.
Ai -lare al.--o f.rn for tho I'ipher A Willow
l.in 'Truiiipriation. '
Hun. uiy .lee. 3, lsdl.
1 tic t'uiitl-t, loiil,l.Af-tii ki-l
ruling'
CORN SHKLLER !
rATENTLIi, Altil T2nd. l-.H.
rplIIS t-heller in the only one that .hi lis the r ,
1 perfectly clean from (lie Cob nlu-n green, nu.
el or dry. It gin-.-tho Kara doulili- op,rati..a
Iho tlhelliiig Wheel as it pne through, anil -
rates tbo Cob from the Corn completely, reiulei inr
ut onec tit for market without thu u.-e of tho laiiii
mill. 'Ibis Liaoluue sholU a
Half Jhuh, I O) ' Finn to the Minute by Or
ininj Jlund J'uieer.
and can be used, hIhi. by Ili-rae, .!-. on or Va
l'oer by attaching a Pulley ou tho Crank Hbn
1'or iJurahility, Clcanlim.".., .Vtaiii,-- Cheaon
and Kapiility in Shelling, this Machine ciimn.i
e'tualled by uny other.
SIATL A.NL COfXTV KIU.I1TS 1011 SALK 1
' KEASOXAliLE TElt.MS.
Ge-itlemes : If you waut vour corn Slid!
clean ; it vou tavo oceat-ion to tbell green or .la;
corn; il JOu want your corn and c.b separate!
you want u durable machiiio ; if you want a eh,
heller, buy Ibe Complete, Doublu-Actin -, Self-,
aruliuij 'urn thelicr.
KEl'EltE.NCES :
II. B. MaMer. Dr. J. W. peulo Sunl-,,
Charles Hun, Miller, hainuel Li-N-i, Kcu-lh
t. U. Morgan &, Co., tieo. Weifcr. L. Au-u-Millern.
CuuljurT. s.,1 t...,. i.-
Henry Euiseuring. fJear Gap. C. Albei t, Ucorg.-t.
Munulactured u-l lor Sale at tbo Euuu.lrv '
ROllltUACH A CU.il'EU, W.J'i '
Sunbury, iJee, 3; ISU4 Om
I. K- 8TAUPFER.
WATCHMAKER & JEWELRY.
So. 1W North PKCOMi trect, erner of yai
l'iiila-lelphia.
.iu nsaoi tmcut of Unli-lu-M, .!
rlrj , Ml r A; IMiiK tl M in e eons-tai
on liiuid, Suiublo for HOLIDAY PRESENT.-'.
Ijp-Repairing of M'stchu and Jcwulre pronn
Stlended to.
December 3, 1651 ly
TK yon want a goo-1 CK,kinj;.Ktov, go to SM
X. a ul uitn B f,vm S-Uoo. dr
IF you" want a pood handi.-.roa Parlor Stova, i
bMUil GE.M UtiCb .Saw ebon. d.
shop.
want gmd Tin
Wax, go o bMm
f.VTHKR-A .V.tw fh-..
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