Pennsylvania daily telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1857-1862, November 19, 1860, Image 2

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    led oak, tulip and chesnut, presented different
colors. Mingled among sere and yellow were
the evergreens, laurel and spruce pine. The
everlasting hills pressed• down on either side;
now sloping back, and now jutting so upon the
river as to leave barely room for a single road
track. If, in these par7ses we had met any of
the numerous emigrant wagons going West, or
drovers going East, there must have been back
ing done, straight hindward. Winding with
the laughing waters, the road presents long
vistas, with distant mountains clothed in their
azure hue, and then again seems to be closed
up quite, a little distance ahead, as the river
Turns or a hill projects itself upon the river.—
Throw over all this the mild atmosphere and
soft light of Indian Summer.—Letters of Dr.
NeTyesre.
cetegra#44
HARRISBURG, PA
'Monday Afternoon, November 19. 1560
Difficulties in the Way of Secession.
The "World" predicts that one great
difficulty in the way of the secession
movement would be the incompetency of
the vapory and hot-headed politicians who
now occupy the car and eye of the nation,
to arrange those practical details which,
in the case of a State setting up for itself,
require the patient and intelligent super
vision of men possessing a thorough know
ledge of the business of the world and of
affairs of state—men of executive capaci•
ty, with more fondness for the figures of
mathematics than the figures of speech.
This is a class who are now in the back
ground, biding their time, but without
whose help the men now conspicuous can
not so much as get into secession nor get
out of it. A more monstrous•and absurd
doctrine than that of the right of any
State at its pleasure to secede from the
Union has never been put forth. The
Government in such case would indeed be
a mere rope of sand. According to this
dogma, Cuba, after we shall have paid
$200,000,000 for her purchase, as a State
may at once secede, and leave the United
States Treasury to place that small item
to the account of "profit and loss." Texas,
when she came into the Union, after we
had paid many millions to discharge her
debts, and other millions to go into her
coffers, was and is entirely at liberty to
secede with the booty. Each and all the
States carved out of the Louisiana pur
chase, for which we also paid an immense
sum, may do the like. So, too, States in
which the largest amounts of public prop
erty may be situated may at any time se-
- -
cific Railroad shall be construeta3,_%E.._ l l
expense of countless millions, paid from
the common treasure, the two or three
States through which it will run may de
camp with the plunder and plant a custom
house on the site of our store houses.—
Vermont, New Hampshire, Indiana, Illi
nois, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, and the
other inland States, which will have con
tributed to these great disbursements, and
in which States hardly a dollar of the
public treasure is even expended, are to
look quietly and approvingly on the exo
dus of those which have been thus pur
chased and enriched at their expense, and
to recognize the right of each of them to
secede and take the property with them.
Now, this right of secession, if it exist at
all, is an absolute one, and a State has as
much right to exercise it at one time as at
another. If she may secede at will, she
may do so in anticipation of war or in
time of war. If she can secede when she
chooses, she owes no allegiance to the Gov
ernment an hour after she decides to se
cede, but will then be just as independ
ent of the Government as she is of
any other nation. In the midst of war,
then, it will be the right of any State not
only to desert our own Government, but
at the same time to ally herself to the
enemy. The Government, under such a
principle, could not have twenty-four hours
of assured existence. Neither other na
tions, nor its own citizens, could have
confidence in its permanence. It would
lack the vital principle of existence, be
cause it would wholly lack credit. No
body would lend it a dollar, for nobody
could be sure that it would hold together
long enough to pay a six months' loan,
to say nothing of loans for long terms of
years. The public faith, on Which alone
all who deal with Governments can repose,
would be utterly lacking. Business could
have no security or stability, for men
would not embark either their industry or
their capital, unless under the shelter of
laws and institutions not liable to change.
Nothing can be plainer, it would seem,
than that secession can never be peaceable
el3eession, or mean less than revolution;
and when the subject gets into the hands
of the practical business men and states
men of the South, as it may at the Decem
ber Convention, these arguments will have
their proper weight.
nALICING Min BARIUI9.—TWO Gatnat6
Detroit drank lager beer on a wager the other
day. One drank eighty-four &ages, and the
other ninety-aix.
A "Democratic" Leader.
One of the fiercest of the fire-eaters
just now is Senator Toombs, of Georgia,
who is always slightly crazed, but who at
this time is in a peculiar phrenzy. He
denounces the Union with all the vocifer
ation and logic of a bedlamite. But, for
tunately, Toombs is pretty well under
stood, even at the South, and the disease
he has is not likely to spread. A South
ern paper, which belongs to his own par
ty, has the following description of him :
Mr. Toombs, intellectually, is no ordinary
man ; politically he astonishes his most -inti
mate friends, and astonishes the world with his
remarkable and wonderful feats of hocus vacua._
Unfortunately for the country, Mr. Toombs is
wholly devoid of moral firmness. He is purely
a man of impulse and passion. By nature he is
opposed to law and order, and to everything
that tends to restrain and compass the passions,
whims and prejudices of men. He becomes
reckless by disappointment, and fanatical from
opposition. He is governed by the present, and
not by the effects of existing causes or future
results. He is not, nor never can be, a states
man, in the true sense of the term, (not from
the want of ability,) for the reason that he is
lacking in judgment, discretion, and that moral
stamina which is so necessary to attain and
maintain, intact, the great substrata of princi
ples which underlie all government, whether
republican in form, or of a limited monarchy.
Mr. Toombs is an unsafe and unreliable party
1 1 leader, unless it is to lead over a precipice, and
he in the rear. He is a gentleman who takes
remarkable good care of himself. He speaks
largely and lustily, but harms no one. Mr.
Toombs is not nor never can be a Democrat.—
Democracy, in any nature or form, is revolting
to one who, by- nature, is endowed with so
much refinement and susceptibility. Mr.
Toombs is much better suited to represent a
constituency of Great Britain, in the House of
Lords, than a Georgia constituency in the Con
gress of the United States. It would be much
more congenial to his feelings and tastes. Mr.
Toombs has a very poor opinion of the people.
He would prefer to look upon them as subjects
and tenants, to that of co-equals or sovereigns.
Yet this man, whose own friends admit
him to be utterly devoid of Democratic
sympathies and convictions, is one of the
great leaders of the so-called Democratic
party. It is no wonder that such a man
is opposed to the Union. His notions of
government must be perpetually offended
by the success of our political experiment,
so that he desires to put an end to it as
soon as possible. It would be more eon- .
genial to the feelings of this "Democratic"
chief to live under the rule of the Czar of
Russia or the late King Bombalina.
THE BANKRUPT BANKS OF SOUTH
CAROLINA propose, in consideration of
the decree of the Legislature legalizing
the suspension of specie payment, to loan
the magnificent government of that sover
eign State the prodigious sum of four
hundred thousand dollars with which to
weraril , ititur - or — it. The na
tion ot SOuttruaronna wanouv---tcr-nave
rout numrreamousinid - dollariin broken
bank paper, with which to purchase the
munitions of war requisite:to bringing the
Federal G-overument to a realizing sense
of the tremendous nature of the difficulties
it will have to contend with in coercing
that sovereign and awful State 1
DISUNION was threatened in various
quarters at the first election of President
Jefferson in 1801. He thus referred to
the subject in his inaugural address in
1801: "If there be any among us who
would wish to dissolve this Union, or to
change its republican form, let them
stand, undisturbed, as monuments of the
safety with which error of opinion may
be tolerated, where reason is left free to
combat it."
Future of the North and South.
Many persons do not seem to understand why
the South attaches such importance to the late
election. A few facts and figures will easily
explain this. The election for the next House
of Representatives, and, of course, the next
President will be under the census of DM.
The South now has
Senators 80
Representatives
...90
Her electoral vote
The North now has
Senators
Representatives
Her electoral vote.
During the next four years, the probabilities
are that five organized Territories will be ad
mitted as free States. That, at the lowest fig
ures, would give ten Senators, and certaiuly
five members of the House, and, of course
would modify the new Congress and Presiden
tial election. The new census and the admis
sion of those States would largely add to the
political power of the North. In the Presiden
tial election of 1864, the North will have votes
based on 23 States :
Senators 46
Present House of Representatives....l47
Add under new census 18
Five new States at one each 6-170
The slaveholding States as at present :
Senators 80
Loss of 18 on the new census . 72
The leading minds of the Southern States
have fully pondered on these pregnant statis
tics, and with them the struggle has been
" now, or never." But seceding from the
Union would only he out of the frying pan in
to the fire. They want to sell us their cotton,
sugar, tobacco, din, and to buy our grain, cat
tle, and manufactured products. Our undoubt
ed policy now is to allow the friends of the
Union in the South to fight the batte of
the South on Southern soil, and they can
and will triumph. Nine -tenths of all the
fire-eating speeches and resolutions that may
be passed will be harmless. These are admira
ble safety valves to let off the superfluous steam
that might otherwise burst the boiler. Friends
of the Union and Constitution remain quiet and
firm ; the Union will be stable and enduring
when the present smoke clears away.—initsburg
Commorcial Journal.
Pcmtewlyania flaitp (11.elegrapt), alonbap 'afternoon, Nonanba 19, 16611.
A Rich Secession Case--Coney Island
Every New Yorker knows Coney Island. It
is a barren island of sand contiguous to the
city, and sufficiently distant to command a
- view of the ocean. It is exclusively patronized
by excursion parties during the summer.. A
New York correspondent says :
One immediate effect of the election of Lin
coln, and a stations result it is, you will admit,
is the secession of Coney Island. Governor Da
vis, the ruler of that extensive and fertile pro
vince, made his appearance in the office of the
Evening Post, and then and there fulminated his
proclamation. The Governor says he will re-
Eist all encroachments upon his 'domain, and
will submit to no dictation. By the kind assist
ance of the editorial' statrof the Post, (not lining
himself a "Schallard,") he was enabled to ex
press his views upon the important question, in
a document of which the following is a perora
tion : .
.
"I further order all bridges connecting these
free dominions with the territory of the United
States to be cut down and destroyed ; and I for
bid any of my subjects, under penalty,of death,
to trade, deal or barter with the inhabitants of
the United States. And I further declare, that
all laws and statutes of the United" States are null
and void in these dominions of free and inde
pendent Coney Island. The sons of Coney Island
will stand upon their arms, and vindicate in
blood, if they must, their natural and consti
tutional rights. Let our watchwords be : 'No
more clam-bakes fot thebenefit of the insolent
foreigners no more promiscuous bathing on
the beach in the summer season ; the Papal Al
liance and Coney Island forever I'
Given under the hand and seal of
THE GOVERNOR.
"P. S. Hereafter the standard of the new
empire will consist of two clam shells; ram
pant on a vast expanse of sea-green.field."
Oar readers will be gratified to see the foL
lowing letter from Victor Emanuel's Premier
to the Secretary of the Universal Israelitish
Alliance, of London :
"Sue :—I have received the letter which you
have addressed to me, in the name of the So
ciety of the Universal Israelitish Alliance, so
bolting the aid of the King's Government in
the steps which the father of the young Mor
tara is taking in order to recover his child from
the convent in which be is at present retained.
Persuaded of the justice of M. Mortara's de
mands, I have the honor to assure you, sir,
that the King's Government will do all in its
power that this child, in whom the public opin
ion is so strongly interested, May be returned
to his family. Be good enough, I beg you, to
acquaint the members of the Jewish Society of
these intentions of the Government of the
Kiug, and receive, &c. CAvons."
The Mortara case will be readily recalled as
one of the most abominable outrages ever per
petrated on an oppressed people, as well as the
most bigoted defiance of the free spirit of the
age. The Mortara boy was the son of Jewish
parents, and the Roman Catholic Church got
possession of him some two years ago ' by
fraud, and have since held him, in order that
ho might be brought up in the true faith, and
saved from the deadly. teresies.of Jewry. The
child wished to return to his parents ; they
were almost distracted at his separation from
them; but neither their intercession nor that of
all liberal European Courts, availed any thing.
At last, it appears, the glorious revolution
which encircles Rome like a wall of - fire, will
smoke out the monkish child-stealers, And re
store this poor boy to his parents. Viva Gari
baldi ! -Viva Niotor Emanuel !_____.
It is pleasant to turn from; ,the - disunion
stories that reach us from South Carolina, Geor
gia, Alabama and Mississippi, to such reports as
the following from North Carolina, which
breathe the strongest devotion to the Union.—
A. letter dated at Raleigh, says
Our city is excited to-day by dispatches from
South Carolina, telling us of secession Move.
meats. and inquiring what we will do. Our peo
ple have but one response to make. They affirm
unitedly their determination to remain in the
Union until the Constitution is violated, and un
til they have tested the result of Mr. Lincoln's
election. They will not be coaxed or driven
into an overt act themselves, nor will they
conntenance it in other States. In a con
versation I had to-day with Governor Ellis,
he expressed the most calm and conservative
views. He sees no cause for excitement; any
more than there has existed for the past four
years. The Legislature meets on the 19th.—
The Governor's Message will counsel modera
tion and devotion to the Union. It will be
firm in its declaration of State Rights, but will
express the conviction that the North will be
just and true to the South. Our State Treasu
rer, Hon. D. W. Courts, warmly protests
against the disunion movement. He will take
prompt measures to assure your capitalists and
others interested in our. State securities, that
they will be promptly met, and' that North
Carolina will not avail herself of the excite
ment now prevailing in the extreme South to
repudiate her public or private obligations,
How rr Womrs.—As no vessel can lawfully
leave a port of the United States without haV
ing first obtained a proper clearance, the present
position of the. Federal authorities of Charles
ton is extremely awkard. The collector of
Port has resigned, but probably the Deputies
still perform the duties of the of f ice, so that
the resignation does, not effect anything' after
all. But supposing - the Custom House is clos
ed, to please the secessionists, what then? If
a vessel desires to proceed to sea, there is no
body to give a clearance, and if a clearance can
not be had, why the vessel must rot .in port
till one can be had, or if sent to sea;withbut it,
is virtually without protection from any. re
sponsible government. It won't take long to
remedy this thing ; the Custom House will be
resuscitated, and Charleston will continue a
port of the United States, for a few years lon
ger at all events.. Thereure.trio haanyinterests
at stake , in the South to permit dissolution.
120
. 36
-147
A STATES RIGHT DEMOCRAT ON SECESSION,-
That veteran defender of States rights, old'fa
ther Ritchie, who had such an influence upon
the opinion of Virginia politicians of his time,
and, we may add, upon the Democratic party
of his time, wrote as follows in the Richmond
Enquirer of November 1, 1814
"No man, no association of men, no State
or set of States, has a right to withdraw itself
from this Union of its own account." The same
power which knit us together can 'unknit.—
The same formality which formed the linka of
the Union is necessary to dissolve it. The ma
jority of the States which formed the Union
must consent to the 'withdrawal of any one
branch of it. Until that consent has been ob
tained any attempt to dissolve the Union or
distract the efficacy of its constitutionol laws is
treason—treason to all intents and purposes.'!
NEW PA= IN CANADA.—A new party has
been organized in Canada, with J. E. Cameron
at its head, which seeks the support, of the
Orangemen by taking as its first principle,
"Protestant union at the polls and in Parlia
ment, without compromise," to which are ad
ded suffrage extension, the restriction of re
ciprocity with the United States, unsectarian
education, by which Catholic public schools
"would be abolished, and other measures unpopu
lar among the Canadian Protean:do. a.
out of the Union.
Case of the Mortara Boy.
" TURIN, Oct. 8, 1860
gym= North Carolina.
=1
BIEIIOP DOANE, lately deceased, of the Epis
copal Church, was a divine of much ability,
and a fine writer, both in prose and verse. He
had some bitter enemies, as men of his energy
and force of will usually have,- and often de
serve to have, but had also many devoted ad
mirers and friends. His son, Wm. Crosswell
Doane, has just issued from the press of D. Ap
pleton St Co., a beautiful eddition of his life
and writings. He is presented as an earnest
writer and deep thinker. One of his admirers
gives the following from the Bishop's earliest
poems, with the remark that it brings, to mind
his own career
Anti ig that, Mother ?
The Eagle boy !
Proudly oa.reering his cum , e orjr , y7
Firm, on his own mountat! , rr i . ;
Breasting the dark stsrmltt... :jd ‘,., dotying,
His win on the wind, and hi.; ear on the, gum
He awerves not La ,hair, but bears mutant Kight on ;
Hay; rhay ihe'Eaglets flight ever be thine.
Onward and upward, and true to the Ine.
VOTES OF Tile SOUTHERN Crtuts —The voting '
in thy principal Southern cities was of a whole
seine character, The vote of New Orleans
shows that the disunionists can have but little
hope of obtaining the control of the Lower Mis
sissippi, without which a Southern Confederacy
would be worthless. The following votes are
reported in several of these cities :
Bell. Doha- tp• Breck. Lincoln.
Baltimore, 12 : 519 1,562 64,850 1,082
Alexandria, 1,008 139 563 16
Petersburg, 970 615 223 0
Norfolk, 986 230 438 0
Portsmouth, 676 210 558 4
Richmond, 2,359 758 1.170 0
Louisville, ' 8,823 2.633 859 100
St. Louis, 4,192 8,177 701 8,962
New Orleans, 5,215 2,998 2,605
Cuasas Comm Homm.—Some of the fusion
journals;
which-liave been trying for three
months to convince the South, that as soon as
Lincoln is inaugurated he will cross Mason and
Dixon's line. With fire and sword and liberate
all the slaves ' are now beseeching him to come
addressout with an and assure the South that
they have been lying. It doesn't appear, how
ever,-„thatle thinks it necessary to do any
so superfluous.
Naitst bp Etttgra,p4
SPECIAL DISPATCHES
TO THR
DAILY TELEGRAPH
Burning of a Steamer.
The steamer Pacific, hence to Orleans, was
burned at Uniontown last night. Captain Lam
was lost. The remaining officers, crew and
passengers were saved.
A Southern Congressman Resigns.
COLUMBIA, S. C., November 18
The Hon. Milledge L. - Bonham has resigned
hie position as member of the House of Repre
sentatives from this State.
Monetary Affairs in New York.
NEW Yourc, Nov. 19th
The money market is tight and unsettled,
and stocks are lower , and there is, quite a panic
at the Board.
New airriertistmentz.
- I
WILL be sold at pubic out,cry, - at the
Y Y EUROPEAN HOTEL; in tlie city of Harrisburg,
on WEDNESDAY EVENLND, the 6th day of December,
at haltpast six o'clock, the following described proper
ty, situate 'on the north , side of Second street, between
Locust and Pine streets, to wit : Two Two -
Story BRICK DWELLING/==
HOUSES, with back buildings and LOT OF H I N
GROUND to each. The one Lot extends back s. .
one hundred and fifty-seven feet six inches; ---,c
am other one Btindred and forty-seven feet six inches to
a ten feet wide alley. Said property owned by Mrs.
Black, and occupied by James R. Black and Mrs. Car
berry will be sold, the whole together, or separately.—
For further information enquire of the undersigned.
Terms made known the evening of the sale.
.nol9-ts BERRYRILL & ECB.ELS, Attorneys.
• BUCKWHEAT FLOUR. -
0A SACKS of Extra New Hulled
4
BUCKWHEAT FLOUR, from Wyoming Val
ley, for eale, wholesale and retail, by
nl9 Bi* EBY di KUNKEL.
FURS!
To select from a large stock of Furs.
GO TO CATHCART'S
To see and buy nice•new Furs,
GO TO CATHCART'S.
To get any kind of Furs you may wish,
GO TO CATHCART'S.
To purehtise Furs without any risk,
GO TO CATHCART'S.
To have Furs guaranteed to be what they are repre
sented; GO TO CATHCART'S'.
To find the largest, best and cheapest lot of Furs of
every kind,
CALL ON CATHCART Si BROTHERS,
N 0.14 Market Square,
n 79 Next door to the Harrisburg Sauk.
1860. 1860.
THIRD OPENING
OF FALL AND WINTER
3:r m=r6,lZ - 4c3r cot:3) 3CO I
A DAM STOCK OF GOODS OF ALL KINDS TO SRL= FRON.
Bargains in Delaines at 12 cents.
Bargains in. Prints at 6 and 10 cents.
Bargains in Muslims at 6 cents.
A large assortment of Fine Goods- of every
description.
A heavy stock of Doniestic Goods of every kind,
NOW OPENING AT
CATHCART'S,
No. 14 'Market Square
nl9 Next to the Harrisburg Bank.
NOTICE TO STOCKHOLDERS.
THE holders of stock in the Harrisburg
Building Assoclaticn are hereby requested to pre
sent their original certllcates of stock to the undersigned,
when the same will be cancelled; and the new certifi
cates, with the dividend thereon, will be issued, as di
rected by a resolution of the Directors.
nol7-d3t ROB'T. L. DIIBNCH, Secretary.
L'DUNS' VALLEY NUT COAL!--For
sale at 412 00 per toe.
fear ALL COAL DELIVERED BY PATENT
W.EIOH CARTS.
JA.bIESI M. WHEELER.
Coal delivered from both yards. nevl64
STORAGE! STORAGE !
STORAGE received at the Warehouse of
JAME 3 M. WJEWW.PR,
nl6.tr
GIIN AND BLASTING. POWDER.
JAMES X. WHEELER,.
HARRISBURG, PA.,
LGUT FOR ALL POWDER AND FUSE
IitaiTSFACTIMID BY
E. I. 111/FONT DE NE,MUURS kW. ;
Wilmingloe, Del.
Aar A large supply always on hand. For sale at man.
ufacturer's prices. ' Magazine two miles below town.
far Orders received at Warehouse.
DRIED APPLES
and DRIED PEACHES,
ooldB For Ws by wDf . BOCK,JR. &CO
inAT MAY
FARMER, MECHANIC
.& BUSINESS
THE TO'VMSHIP& LOCAL LAWS
COMPILED FROM TELE ACTS OF ASKEMBLY BY
WILLIAM T. HA.INES, ESQ
'ibis work coniains over 400 pages of closely printed
matter, and will be sold by subscription.
It teaches the duties of Justices of the Peace, with
forms of the transaction of their business.
it teaches the duties of Constables with all the neces
sary forms, appertaining to the office.
It contains the duties of Supervisors of every County
and Township in the State.
It contains the mode or proceedure for the laying out
and opening of pulite and private roads, of vacating and
altering roads, the building of bridges, &c.,
It contains the Common School Law, with explana
tions, decisions and Directions, together with forms for
Deeds, Bonds; Contracts, Certificates Jkc., &c. This de
partment cf the work was compiled ' at Harrisburg by
Mr. Samuel P. Bates, Deputy superintendent, and is
alone worth the price of the volume to any one inter
ested in Common r_rchools.
It contains the duties of Township Auditors.
It contains the duties of Assessors.
It contains the laws in relation to Strays, Mules and
It contains the lairs relative lo Fences and Fence
Viewers.
it contains the laws relative to Game Hunting, 'Trout
and lieu.
It contains the Election Laws with all the necessary
Forms.
It contains the Naturalization Laws, with all the ne
cessary Forms for application.
It contains a large number of Legal. Forms, which are
used in the,every day transactions of business, such as
acknowledgments, Affidavits, Articles of Agreements
and Contracts, Partnership, Apprentices, Assignments,
Attestatictp, Bills of Exchange and Promissory Notes,
Bills of sale, Bonds, Checks, Covenants, Deeds, Deposi
tions, Due hills and Produce Notes, Landlord and Tenant,
Pea.es, Letters of Attorney, Marriage, Mortgages, Re
ceipts and Releases. The work is bound in Law sheep,
and will be st ld to subscribers at Si 55 per copy, paya
ble en delivery of the work. The work has passed the
revision of many of the best Lawyers in the State and
has received their unqualified approbLtion, as a reliable
hand book of reference upon all subjects upon which it
treats. The whole is arranged in such a manner as to
present a plain, concise and explicit statement of the du
ties of all Township Officers, as may be readily under
stood by any one. Dauphin County will be thoroughly
canvassed for the 'work, and the support of the citizen?
is respectfully solidited.
THEO. F. SCHEFfER,
General Agent for Dauphin county.
P. S.—Good canvassers are warded is all parts of this
county for the above work, to Whom a liberal compen
sation will be given. Applications which must be made
at an early date, addressed as above will receive prompt
aitPntiou. nol7-Iwdsltw
LOWEVIIME, Nov. 19
SECOND HAND PIANO FOR SALE.-A 6
Octavo Pion% in best order, Tor sale at W. KNOCHE'S
Music Score. 92 Market street. Price $5O. Payment ta
ken cm monthly instalments. g n
•
VENETIAN BLINDS & FURNITURE
MALE and REPAIR L'D, in good style , - at short notice,
rid on r.asonable terms, by A. R.811)1111', Second street
ow Chestnut. °ctls 3m
CABINET WAREHOUSE.
JAMES R. BOYD & SON,
29 SOUTH SECOND STREET,
Cabinet Makers and Undertakers.
A LARGE VARIETY of Tete-a-Tote So
li Arm and Parlor Chairs, Marble Top Tables,
Bureaus, Bedsteads, Wash ,Btands, Hat Backs, So. Call
nd examine our stock and prices, as we can sell as low
as can be bOught in the State. ' nol6•dlm
MEM
To Every Diseased Man, Woman & Child.
J)it. STEWART, Physician for Chronic
Diseases is permanently located in Harrisburg, and
can already refer to many cases which he has cured atter
they had been treated without benefit by_the old system.
Us can also refer to hundreds of such cures in different
portions of the United States and Canada.
. _ .......
He pays particular attention to Affections of the Lungs
and Throat, in which class of complaints his treatment is
law and miff succeed where there seems to be no hope of
recovery.
Dr. S. has beenwonderfully successful in Disease of the
Stomach,. Liver, Kidneys, Nerves, all forms or Female
Complaints, Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Scrofula, Epilepsy,
and Affections of the Eye and - Ear.
A'candid opinion given in regaid to curability. Terms
moderate. Office at the Buehler House near the ladies'
entrance.' Hours 9a. In. to 6p. m. Letters should be
addressed to DR. J. STEWART.
nov-13-2wdsw
The finest assortment of ALBUMS ever offered In this
city, ranging in price from 50 cents, to $lO 00 each, bound
in all styles oflainding, at
BERGNER'.2 CHEAP BOOKSTORE,
novl2. 51 Barite! Street.
FOR SALE OR RENT,
O N
very favorable terms, a commodious
A../ brick house on Walnut street near Second. Posses
sion to be given on the Is tof April. Enquire of
DR. JAMES FLEMING,
neS dtf Second S rest above Walnut.
A NEW AND FINE ASSORTRIENI
of
LADIES' TRAVELLING
MW
SI-10PP'ING BAGS
At all prices t for sale at
BERGNER'S: UREA? BOOKSTORE,
61 Market Street
BITUMINOUS - BROAD TOP COAL
FOR
BLACKSMITH'S USE.
A SUPERIOR ARTICLE, for sale at
$3 00 per ton, or 52% cents per bushel.
fir ALL COAL DELIVERED BY PAT.BATT
WEIGII CARTS.
rl6-tf JAMES M. WEIECIER.
Comustdonows Draw, I .
Dauphin County, Pa.y
RAHR1,413132G, November 10th, 1860.
?THE Board of County Commissioners
will receive sealed proposals until 2 o'clock, P. 11.,
of Wednesday, November 21st, for Furnishing, Deliver
ing and Erecting a Cast Iron Fence around the let of the
new Court Houser on the sides bounded by both alleys,
Including two Single and two Double Gates. The said
Fence to be of the pattern and dimensions agreeing In
every particular with that of the New School Presbyteri
an Church of Harrisburg, Pa. _ _ _
COTTAGE FURNITURE ; -in Chamber
kj Suits, containing Dressing Bureau, Bedsteads, Wash
Stand, Table, Four Chairs, and a' Rocking Chair, from
$23 to $4O a suit.
Bureaus mid Bedsteads from 14 60 to $lO 50, and
other articles at equally low figuress,• at the Ware Rooms
of JAMES R. BOYD & SON,
nolfwiJm 29South Second Street.
CANE SEAT CHAIRS.—The largest and
best variety, fifty different styles and pattern, from
$6 to $l6 a set. Also, Tucker's Spring Bed Bottom, the
best in - rise—only s6—at
JAMES R. BOYD & SON'S.
.29 South second Street, next to Bell's Store.
. nol6-dim
"EXTRA SUGAR CURED HAMS !
Just received by
uovls Pi'lsl. DOCK JR & CO.
TWHOLE, HALF RAISINS!„.I.OBO XES . ARTER
A AVE R
Just receiVedwbym. ROCKat, at CO
novl6 •
New '2overtistittento.
A. 13 C:0 Co
NAN WANTS.
JUST PUBLISHED,
OEM
STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA.
AND PUBLMED BY
EDWARD -F. JAMES.,
WET CHIMTER,
~. ~ i
MOH & COVRERTHWAIT
=1
MERCHANTS,
Corner of Front and Market Streets,
HARRISBURG, PA.
• T. B. COWEERTHIPAIT.
IMPORTAN T
ALBUMS! ALBUMS!!
JOHN S. MUSSER,
JACOB BERM,
GEORGE OARVERIOH,
• Commissioners
ATTEST—Joszra MILLER, Clerk. nl6-td
latistellattrous
THE AMAIGAILATION OF LANGUAGES.—There in a n. it
ing tendeney
in this age to appropriate the OIOA
res
sivo words of other languages, anti after a while t ' a
corporate them into our own ; thus the word Cepbc'
which is from the Greek, signif3 ing "for the head," ;;
now becoming popularized in connection with air. ppald .
ing's great Headache remedy, but it will soon be used In
a more general way, and the word Cephalic will become
as common as Electrotype and many others whoze
Unction as foreign words has been worn away hy com
mon usage until they seem "native and to the eaa a ,
born "
Hi 'ad 'orrible 'eadacbe this haftereooa, hand i
stepped - Into the hapothecaries hand says hi to the no m
"Can you hease me of an 'eadache 1" "llo.a it haute
'ard" says 'e. "Hexceedingly," says hi, hand upon that
'e gave me a Cephalic Pill, hand 'pcn me 'onor it cured
me 'so - qulck that I 'ardly realized I 'ad 'ad an 'eadache
wagADAme is the favorite sign by -which nature
makes known any deviation whatever from the natural
state of the brain, and viewed in this light it IMy
looked on as a safeguard intended to give notice of dbease
which might otherwise m cape attention, tilt too late to be
remedied; and its indications should nevtr be neglected.
Headaches may he classified under two names, viz
Symptomatic and Idiopathic Symptomatic Headache is
exceedingly common and is the precursor of a great va
riety of diseases, among which are Apoplexy, Gout,
Rheumatism and all febrile diseases. In its nervous
form it is sympathetic of disease of the stomach consti.
tuting sick headache, of hepatic disease constituting
lnt
lious headache, of worms, constipation and other disor
ders of the bowels, as well as renal and uterine affect
ions. Diseases of the heart are very frequently attend.
ed with Headaches, Armada and plethora are also affec
t ons which frequently occasion headache. Idiopathic
Headache is also very common, being usually distin
guished by the name of nervous headache, sometimes
coming on suddenly Ma state of apparently sound health
and prostrating at once the mental and physical energies,
and in other instances it comes on slowly, heralded by
depression of spirits or acerbity of temper. In most in
stances it comes on slowly, heralded by depression of
spirits or acerbity of temper. In most instances the pain
is in the front of the head, over one or both eyes, and
sometimes provoking vomiting; under this class may also
be named Neuralgia.
For the treatment of eithar class of Headache the Ce
phalic Pills have been found a sure and safe remedy, re
lieving the most acute pains in a few minutes, acd by its
subtile power eradicating the diseases of which Head
ache is the unerring index.
lhimost.--Itissus wants yeti re send her a boa - of Ce
phalic Glue, no, a bottle of Prepared Yilis,—bat I'm
thinking that's not just it neither; but perhaps ye'll be
Other knowing what it is. Ye see she's nigh dead and
gone with the Sick Headache, and wants some more of
that same as relaived her before.
Druggist.—You must mean Spalding's Cephalic Pills.
Bridget. —Och ! sure now and you've sed it here's the
quarter and giv me the Pills and don't be all day about
it either.
Constipation or Costiveness.
No one of the "many ills flesh is heir to" is so preva
lent, so little understood, and so much neglected as Cos
tiveness. - Often originating in carelessness, nr seden
tary- habits; it is regarded as a slight disorder of two little
consequence to excite anxiety, while in reality it is the
precursor and companion of many of many of the must
fatal and dangerous diseases, and unless early cradles..
ted it will bring the sufferer to an untimely grave.—
Among the lighter evils of which costiveness is the usual
attendant are Headache, Colic, Rhenteatisin,Foul Bream,
Files and others of like nature, while a long train of
frightful diseases such as Malignant Fevers, Abcesses,
Dysentery, Diarrhoea. Dyspepsy, Apoplexy, Epilepsy,
Paralysis, Hysteria, Hypoehondriasts, Melancholy and
Insanity, first indicate their presence in the system by
this alarming symptom. Not unfrequently the diseases
namod originate in G nstipation, but take on on inde
pendent existence unless the cause is eradicated in an
early stage. From all these considerations it iollowe that
the disorder should receive immediate attention when
ever it occurs, and no person sheuld neglect to get a box
of Cephalic Pills on the first appearance of the complaint,
as their timely use will expel the insiduous approach o
disease and destroy this dangerous fat to human life,
Physician.—Well, Mrs. Jones, how is that headache?
Mrs. Tones.—Gone ! Doctor, all gone I the pill you sent
cured me in just twenty minutes, and I wish you would
Bend more so that I can have them handy.
Physician.—You can get them at any Druggists. Call
for Cephalic rills, I find they never tail, and I carom.
mend them in all cases of Headache.
Mrs Janes —I shall send for a box directly, and shall
tell all my suffering friends, for they are a real blessing.
TWENTY MILLIONS OF DOLL bits FAVED.--3fr. Hpaldieg has
sourtwo -- marions — or - nciftles of his celebrated Prepared
- Glue and it is estimated that each bottle saves at least lea
dollars worth of broken furniture, thus making an aggre
gregate of twenty millions of dollars reclaimed from total
loss by this valutb!e invention. Having made bis Glue
a household word, he now proposes to do the world still
greater service by curing all the aching heads with his
Cephalic Phis, and if they are as good as his Glue, Head
aches wilt soon vanish away like snow in July.
_ mnb_l4
SirOVER Emma:ma, and the mental care and anxie
ty incident to Close attention to business or study, are
among the numerous causes of Nervous Headache. The
disordered state of mud and body incident to this dis
tressing complaint is a fatal blow to all energy and am
bition.. Sufferers by this disorder can always obtain
speedy relief from these distressing attacks by using one
of the,Cephalie Pills whenever the symptoms appear.--
It quiets the overtaskcd brain, and soothes the strained
and Jarring nerves, and relaxes the tension of the sto
mach which always accompanies and aggrava' es the dis
ordered condition of the brain.
FAG" WORTH KNOWING —Spalding's Cephalic Pills are
a certain cure for Sick Headache, Entices Headache,
Nervous Headache, Costiveness and General Debility.
GREAT DISCOVERY.--Among the most important of ail
the great medical discoveries of this age may be con
sidered the system of vaccfnnation for protection from
Small Pox, the Cephalic Pill for relief of headache, and
the use of Quinine for the prevention of Fevers, either of
which is a sore specific, whose benefits will bo experi
enced by suffering humanity long after their discoverers
are forgotten.
AarDui you ever have the Sick Headache ? Do you re.
member Me throbbing temples, the fevered brow, the
loathing and disgust at the sight of food. How totally
unfit you were for pleasure, conversation or study. One
of the Cephalic Pills would have relieved you from all the
suffering which you then eaperienced. For thin and
other purposes you should always have a box of them on
hand to use as occasion requires.
Olife.l4
tuft 4 1 ,
eeroead lei V;
..)'sfr CURE - Kfer
Nervous Headache
CURE
Headadre.
By the use of theie Pat the periodic attacks of Ner
vous or Sick Headache may be prevented; and if taken at
the commencement or an attack immediate relief from
pain and sickness may ho obtained.
!They seldom fail in removing the Nausea and Headache
to which females are so subject.
They act gentlynpon the bowels,—removing Costinenese4
For Literary Hen, Students, Delicate Females, and all
persons of cad entary habits, they are valuable as a Laxa
tive, improving the. appetite, giving tone and vigor to the
digestive organs, and restoring the natural elasticity and
strength of the whole system.
The CEPHALIC tilts are the result of long invest",
gation and carefully conducted experiments, having been
in use in many years, during which time they hive pre.
ventedand relieved a vast amount of pain and minting
from Headache, whether originating in the nervous sys
tem or front a deranged state or the slcinati.
They are entirely vegetable in the'r composition, alai
may be, taken at all times with perfect safety without
making any change of diet, and the absence of any disa
greeable taste renders it easy to adtninieter Amite cleadreti.
BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS
The genuine have five signaturei of Henry C. spaldieg
en each box. ' -
Bold by Druggists and all other Dealers in Nedioiess ,
A Box will be, soot by mail prepaid on receipt of the
PRICE 26 CENTS.
All orders should be addressed to
HENRY 0. SPALDING,
46 Cedar Striae, New York.
novls.4arly
'ardly Realized.
A Real Blessing.