Pennsylvania daily telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1857-1862, November 21, 1860, Image 2

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    victims; the makers of Weiler matches become
cadaverous and emaciated from excess of sul
phur; and in England, which has been called
the work shop of the world, nearly a million
workmen die annually, at an average of less
than thirty years, from working in dust, heat
and foul air—dying of black lung, asthma, bron
chii is, heart disease, or other fatal, distressing
maladies, which embitter the life to which they
put so early a period.
In short, there are but few employments
which supply the luxuries of our boasted civil
ization, which do not, at the saute time, short
en human life. Our comforts And refinements
are bought at the price of sacrificing hecatombs
of human victims—voluntary sacrifices to the
industrial arts, which supply them a comforta
ble living, while they dig for them an early
grave. It is a well-known fact, that this pre
tnaturemortality in certain_ professions largely
iiiiliiiites - thewages of these who pursue them.
Wbile millions of men are hurried out of life
by the direct influence of unhealthy conditions
and employments, millions more cut short their
existence by the voluntary suicide of bad habits
of eating, drinking, and vicious indulgence.—
. Where a few die of hunger, myriads perish of
diseases caused by excesses in food and drink.
Intoxicating drinks destroy thousands, and tens
of thousands perish prematurely of gluttony.
How totally deficient are the habits and condi
tions of a civilization, in which premature mor
tality is the rule, and a healthy old age is the
very rare exception I
patt g Cetegrap,
A RRISBURG, PA
Wednesday Afternoon, November 21,1860.
The Volcanic State.
The little volcano of South Carolina
being now in the midst of one of her
violent eruptions, belching forth such
quantities of fire and melted stones as to
terrify the timid lest the Union should
be swept away in a general conflagration,
it may not be amiss to examine her past
history and see how frequent and harm
less have been such eruptions heretofore,
and what trifling causes are sufficient
to ' excite her smouldering fires. It is
summed up briefly ~by a cotemporary as
follows
The protective tariff of 1833 excited
her still more than Lincoln's election. A
Convention, authorized by the Legisla
ture, assembled and passed the celebrated
ordinance nullifying the tariff and pre
scribing measures to prevent any collet•
tion of duties within the limits of the
State; and further declaring that in the
event of any attempt on the part of the
Federal Government to enforce obedience
to the Acts of Congress, there would fol
oeTelegisitiontorkpechitikgrifermejp of ajar
firmly and promptly met this treason, is
suing his famous proclamation, and urging
upon Congress the passage of such laws as
would enable him to preserve and protect
the Union. The result was' the passage
of ""The Force Bill" which authorized the
President to collect the revenue 'and pro
tect the Government offices, by the em
ployment of whatever military and naval
force might be necessary. South Carolina
fumed and fretted fora while, mounted
cockades and made bombastic speeches—
but finding old hickory earnest and deter
mined, she eagerly took advantage of
Clay's Compromise Tariff, and receded
from her position.
Again, in 1835 a few philanthropists
in the North formed Emancipation Socie
ties, which for a time promised another
serious eruption. A Southern Conven
tion was called, and Calhoun recommend
ed espionage of the mails, and the sup
pression of Abolition documents ;—but
Calhoun and his supporters were badly
handled in Congress, and secession was
once more postponed, till in 1836, the
presentation of certain petitions opened
the crater again and gave escape to much
black smoke, but very little fire.
After this, until 1838, having had the
entire control of the Government, the bel
ligerent little State remained in compara
tive tranquility, only hinting vaguely at
disunion in certain contingencies, and
holding it out as a penalty for the refusal
to admit Texas, or for the passage of the
Wilmot Proviso; but in 1848 Oregon
was organized into, a Territorial Govern
ment, with a clause in the organic act
prohibiting slavery, and another harmless
eruption was the consequence.
Again, in 1850, California came in as a
free State, and South Carolina saw in this
cause to secede from the Republic, and
the air was hot and thick with the lava
which was thrown from her crater ; but,
as usual, the eruption, though violent,
was brief and harmless, and the Compro
mise measures were accepted as a perpetu
al adjustment.
And now the election of a President by
a constitutional majority has given vent
once more to the volcano, and a Conven
tion has been called as in 1833, and all
the incidents which for thirty years have
characterized the chronic inflammation
have been reiterated. But the time has
come when these fiery ebullitions are esti
inated at their true worth, and the Amer
ican people have for the last time been
diverted by them from puraning their plain
path of duty.
Peurtoptuania ails iCelegreq34, - tUtimeobap 'Afternoon, Noutmber 21, 1860.
Douglas on Public Affairs.
Senator Douglas, now that the exciting
Presidential campaign is over, bas found
time to express his opinions upon its re
sults. •It is perfectly natural that he
should feel some little annoyance at the
triumphant success of Mr. Lincoln ; and
a little manifestation of that feeling in a
speech the other day, though neither dig
nified nor commendable, was perhaps par
donable. More recently he has put pen
to paper, on Abe same subject. Having
been requested 3z.eral prominent chi
h- ‘. 2 .•.PQ .
zees of New Orleans to deliver a speech
in that city "on the present condition of
the affairs of our country," Mr. Douglas
preferred to commit his thoughts to pa
per. In this manifesto he says, what
probably no man will doubt, that no man
in America regrets the election of Mr,
Lincoln more than he does. He adds :
But while I say this, I am bound, as a good
citizen and law-abiding man, to declare my
conscientious conviction that the mere election
of any man to the Presidency by the American
people, in accordance with the constitution and
laws, does not of itself furnish any just cause or
reasonable ground for dissolving thB Federal
Union. It is not pretended, so far as lam in
formed, that any provision of the Constitution
has been violated in the recent election. No
act has been done which impairs or destroys
the constitutional rights of any State or citizen.
Nothing has yet occurred to release any citizen
from his oath of fidelity to the Constitution - of
the United States, which is the supreme law of
I every State and every citizen.
I do not anticipate, nor do I deem it possible
in the present condition of the country, that,
under the administration of Mr. Lincoln, any
act can be perpetrated that would destroy or
impair the constitutional rights of the citizen,
or invade the reserved rights of the States upon
the subject of slavery.
To those, if any such there may be, who look
upon disunion and a Southern confederacy as a
thing desirable in itself, and are only waiting
for the opportunity to accomplish that which
had been previously resolved upon—the elect
ion of Mr. Lincoln may furnish a pretext for
precipitating the Southern States into revolu
tion. But to those who regard the Union under
the Constitution as our fathers made it, the
most precious legacy over bequeathed to a free
people by a patriotic ancestry, and are deter
, mined to maintain it as long as their rights
and liberties, equality and honor are protected
by it, the election of Mr. Lincoln, in my hum
ble opinion, presents no just cause, no reasona
ble excuse for disunion.
THE "UNFRIENDLY LEGISLATION" of
some of the Eastern States in regard to
the runaway slaves, seems to be the bur
den of complaint on the part of the seces
sionists of South Carolina and Alabama.
Those" States never lost any fugitive
slaves, nor are they likely to, so that is a
mere pretence. But if that furnished a
ground of_ secession, then secession ought
when the laws were passed. Lincoln had
nothing to do with that “unfriendly legis
lation," nor has his election any connect
ion with it.
IVIEETING OF CONORESS.—The second
session of the present (36th) Congress
will assemble.at Washington, on Monday
a week, the third of December. This is
the short session of the term, and as
there will be no organization to effect, it
will be likely to get under way at once.
The President's Message, it is said, is al
most completed. It will be sent in ad
vance of the meeting of Congress to the
principal cities of the country.
THE SECESSIONISTS lose Georgia by a
majority of not less than two thousand
five hundred, Breckinridge having simply
a plurality. As it requires a majority of
votes to choose electors, there is no choice,
and the electors will be chosen by the
Legislature. The Legislature, however,
has adjourned, electors cannot be chosen,
and Georgia will actually have no vote in
the Electoral College.
WHERE IS HENRY A. WISE 7—He
has not been heard from lately, and as
he declared, "I will never remain in the
Union twenty-four hours after Lincoln's
election, so help me God," his agonized
friends fear he may have seceded individu
ally.
Southern Hastiness Rebuked.
The Mobile Register, in noticing the resigna
tion of Southern Members of Congress, says :
The telegraph reports that Senators Chesnut,
of South Carolina, and Toombs, of Georgia,
have resigned their seats. If this hasty ex
ample is followed by a few more, the Black
Republicans will have the control of Congress
and the whole machinery of the Federal Gov
ernment. The army, the navy, and the Treas
ury, the public property, the public buildings
and archives, will all be left in the hands of
our enemies to increase their power for our in
jury. Is this the wisdom, the prudence and sa
gacity of statesmanship, or is it part and parcel
of that madness, which, by breaking up the
Democratic party, brought on this crisis? Are
these men fit to lead the South in its new paths
of trial, and in its first steps of independent
nationality ? They first adopt the policy of
beating the Black Republicans by demoralizing
and scattering the only political army that
possessed the organization and spirit to oppose
them ; and they next abandon to the enemy
the sword and the purse and the public pro
perty as the best means of beating the enemy.
In the name of God, do they not see that in
both cases they have played right into the
hands of the Black Republicans? Well may
the South exclaim, "Save me from such friends
as these !" Who knows but it may be of the
utmost importance, on the fourth day of next
March, and during the coming Wint er , t o h ave
every Southern seat in Congress filled, and
every member at his post! Shall our represent..
atives resign and skulk from the danger before
they are ordered to do so by their constituents 1
All this is another evidence of the "precipitate"
rashness of the Breckenridge leaders. They are
unfit to rule the storm they have raised.- They
have "sown the wind and reaped the whirl-
FROM THE FEDERAL METROPOLIS.
Correspondence of the Telegraph.]
WASHINGTON, November 20, 1860
The people of the North, the laboring mass
es and mechanics, are perhaps the least of all
others, disturbed by the action of those agita
tors in the South, who are now so industrious
ly engaged in stirring up sectional strife, and
engendering a bitter sectional feeling, which
can vent its rage only on these who so zealous
ly cultivate this spirit of bitter resentmeet.—
Thn result of the last Presidential election was
the effect of a cause produced by the leaders of
southern factions themselves. It has been the
fashion with these men to impugn the- mo
tives of every northern man who reached place
and power in a legitimate manner, and no term
was so apt in the mouth of a southern wan as
that of abolitionist as applied to the northern
man who dared to regard slavery as a political
and social evil, from which it would be a bless.
ing for the country to escape at any moment.—
This spirit first showed itself during the admin
istration of the younger Adams ; and ever
since, the moat intolerant opposition has been
waged against not only northern statesmen as
piring to the highest position in the gift of the
people, but any southern man who dared to re
gerd the North with an eye of favor, came as
completely under the ban of this political tri
umverate as the most violent recognized aboli
tionist would be hunted and secured in the
streets of Charlesian, South Carolina. For
forty years a clique of southern Democrats have
ruled this nation with a high handmaid a rough
spirit of dictation. They have been engaged
directly, for at least twenty years, in building up
a northern party, to resist the aggreseion grow
ing out of the arrogance with' which they
themselves have been monopolizing the places
and power of this government. During the
administration of Van Buren, and from that
' period to the present, a space of twenty years,
it has been a fixed principle for this same
southern clique to indulge in the wildest cru
sade on the men and the measures of the north
ern wing of the Democratic patty. A northern
Democrat was not regarded with confidence in
the Senate, unless he crawled at the feet of thi
southern hierarchy. New York and Pennsyl
vania Senators were accustomed to yield in
every instance, until at last the supercilious
submission of a northern Democrat to the de
mands and commands of the South, attracted
the attention and disgust of the masses of the -
American people. Martin Van Buren was the
first to throw off this yoke, but even he was
not able long to combat the prejudices with
which his long scrutiny had invested him, and
to day this same Martin Van Buren is again at
the feet of the_ southern dictator, as humble
and as contrite as though his sins were as scar
let mad his errors in numbers equal to the sands
of the seashore. Gen. Harrison was met at the
thresbhold of hie administration with the same
opposition that now seeks to force Abraham
Li c
Llll the expression of a conservatism
Wll.l
Henry Clay was defeated by the same clique
because his noble nature embodied a nationali
ty which they could neither appre date or com
prehend. They defeated Clay and elected Polk,.
to use him for the worst purposes, and even
after the southern clique had thus turned the
administration of James K. Polk to their own
uses and aggrandisement, by the war with
Mexico, they were the first -to insist on the
casting vote of George M. Dallas, by which the
interests of the North were sacrificed, and the
prospects of labor for a time hopelessly de
stroyed. Bunning through Polk's administra
tion to that of Taylor's and the rule of Pierce,
the same power has been used for the same
purpose by the leaders of southern factiohs.—
They have in all instances, and M all cases, in
sisted on the recognition of the interests of
slavery to the exclusion of the rights and pros
pects of free white labor. During the admin
istration of Buchanan the same spirit predom
inated and still predominates, yet in, the face of
such action and such a spirit the southern peo
ple protest against the result of the recent
Presidential election, and insist that it was pro
duced by a sectional cause for a 'sectional pur
pose. There can be no question as to the sec
tionality of the cause, but they must first prove
that freedom and prosperity are sectional ele
ments, before they can establish the sectionali
ty of the effect, and when once this spirit of
dictation and arrogance so long practiced by
the people of the South, is curbed and abated,
the good sense of a better judgment will teach
men that error is bound to give way to right.
The development and progress of this age allprove
this assertion. The triumphs in the improve
ments at the North, the opening of new terri
tory and its dedication to freedom, with the
distribution of the blessings and benefits of in
dustry, all' prove that the rule of wrong, of
ignorance, of passion and prejudice are at an
end. But because this is so, the southern people
desire to precipitate the country into mob vice
Lance and anarchy, preaching at the same time
treason in a more revolting shape than that of
which they complain. In such a state of things,
the South cannot expect long to be able to sus
tain herself. I mean by this, the leaders
of the factions that are engaged in this agita
tion, because the great mass of the people are
averse to an actual dissolution of the Union,
even while they lendtheir countenance to dem
onstrations which seem to encourage such a
proceeding. They must and will yield, if not'
to the love they owe the Union, at least to the
security they cannot find beyond its protection.
In two months Congress will assemble, and
then we may expect for a few weeks, at least,
a regular blow from all quarters. Those who
were not re-elected will, of course, exhibit
their disregard for order and decorum in loud
talk and commanding threats, but sensible
men will devote themselves to the business of
the country. So that by the time the session is
over, much of the asperity that now exists at
the South will have disappeared, and peace
and quiet be once more restored to the coun
try. In anticipation of this result there is a
different feeling manifesting itself among the
old attaches of the Departments, who are most
ly a shrewd and keen set of investigators_ .of.
the changes in an Administration. Old Abe is
beginning to assume quite a patriotic attitude
in the vision of these gentlemen,. soma whom
protest that they always regarded him as a
statesman of exalted and conservative convic
tions. It is predicted that his Cabinet will
give greater satisfaction to the country at
large than the Cabinet of any former Presi
dent for sixteen years past. This prediction is
founded on the rumor that a part of the policy
of Lincoln's Administration will be. to retain
in office as many of the present clinks from the
South as possible, and confine the. changes par
ticularly to northern Democrats. No one here
doubts the working of such a policy. It would
meet the acquiescence of the southern fire-eat
ers, and work like a char a;r-ertsing even
the wrath of the hot-lw u of South
Carolina. Reduced to a political analysis, se
cession is nothing more tlr w an action threat
ened by a fear of losing office, beiriuse such a
loss would be, the most injurious which many
of the first families of Virginia and the chival
ry of the South generally could possibly suffer.
I venture to write that if Abraham Lincoln
were to issue a circular, stating that not a sin
gle man from the South holding office under
the Government would be removed, the present
agitation in the South would at once end. You
can believe as much of this as you please--it is,
nevertheless, my firm conviction. INQUIRER.
-Nat6t-.:_bn idegraplj.
SPECIAL DISPATCHES
TO TRU
DAILY TELEGRAPH.
Kew York Tea Sales.
NEW YORK, Nov. 21
The tea sale to-day was spirited and full
prices obtained. The money market is easier,
but stocks are lower.
Charleston Cotton Market•
CHARLESTON, November 21.
The Cotton market is depressed. Five bun
dred bales were sold to-day.
Flour Mill Destroyed by Fire.
OSWEGO, N. Y., November 21
The Huron flour mill was destroyed by fire
last night. Loss s4s,ooo—insurance $30,000.
Suspension of Students•
BOSTON, November 21
The faculty of Harvard College suspended
nine students of the Sophomore class today
for an attack on two Freshmen. Among those
suspended are A. C. Hazeltine, of Philadelphia,
and J. I. Kilbreth of Cincinnati.
Sailing of the Steamer Persia.
New YORK, November 21
The steamship Persia sailed at noon with 86
passengers and $64,000 in diamonds. Mr.
Lindsay, member of Parliament, is .a passenger.
Victims of the Burned Steamer Pacific
LOUISVILLE, November 21.
Eleven persons are thus far aseertained to
have been lost by the burning of the Pacific,
mostly boat hands and deck passengers. There
_were rao_northern eople among the lost.
The Charleston Banks.
CHARLESTON, NOY. 21
The financial pressure here is , quite considera
ble, and it is feared, the.banhs will be obliged
to resort to a suspension of specie payments.' It
is argued that such a proceeding will benefit
rather than further depress the mercantile
community.
linited States Senators from the South
WASEITNGTON, Nov. 21
Up to the present moment the indications are
that the only vacancies in the United States
Senate from the South will be those of the
Senators from South Carolina—the resignation
of both being peremptory.
The Mobile Cotton Market,
MOBILE, Nov. 21st
Cotton sales to-day 6,000 hales at 9i. Sales
for three days 11,500 bales. Receipts 13,350
bales. Cotton freights to Liverpool 17-32@
9-16 ;to Havre 15-16. Exchange on New York
per sterling 95®,98.
Conservative Meetings in Cieorgia.
AUGUSTA, GEO., NOV. 20.
The largest meeting ever held in Greene Co,.
Georgia, was convened in the Court House on
Friday last: The moat influential men partici
pated. Resolutions were adopted, by an almost
unanimous vote, of a conservative character.
They urge the call of a State Convention of all
parties, to calmly consider the evils which at
present threaten the destruction of the national
Union; appeal to the people of the Union to
discard the councils of agitating politicians and
demogogues of all sections, and rally to the
support of an imperilled government.
A large meeting in Hancock county, on Sat
urday, unanimously adopted firm conservative
resolutions, denying that the mere election of
Lincoln was a cause for disunion, but declaring
that the unfriendly legislation of many of the
free States was an outrage on the comity of the
Union, and demanded resistance.
MARRED{ BY TELEGRAPH.
PHILADKLPHIA, Nov: 21
Breadstuffs are dull and drooping. Shipping
brands of flour are freely offered at $5 26,
without sales except for home use; 500 bbls.
extra sold at $5 50, and extra family at $5 76.
Wheat has declined 3®,6c. per bushel ; 4,000
bushels sold; Westerared at $1 25@>1 27 and
white at $1 85®1 40. Corn is lc. lower ;
5,000 bushels prime Pennsylvania and Southern
yellow sold at 67®68c. Provisions quiet ; mess
pork has declined to $l9 ; sales of hams at 12
0130., sides at 117 1 c. and shoulders at 97}c.—
Coffee firm ; 2,000 bags Rio sold on private
terms and small lots at 14®15e. Whisky dull
at 21a2lic.
NEW Yomr, November 21.
Flour is declining and the market is un
settled. The sales are unimportant ; State and
Ohio are unchanged in quotations. Southern
$6 2606 60. Wheat dull and nominally un-.
changed. Corn heavy ; 10,000 bushels sold ;
mixed 66@66c. Provisions dull. Whiskey
dull at 19/c. Receipts of flour 13,465 bads;
wheat 108,987 bushels ; Corn 46,007 bushels.
BALTraimm, November 21
Flour has declined 25c ; sales Howard street
and Ohio at $4 75 closing heavily. Wheat
very dull and IQs lower ; sales red at $1 05@,
$1 16, and white at $1 20®$1 45. Corn dull ;
white and yellow 60®65. Provisions dull ;
mess pork $l9 00, a decline of 50c. Coffee has
declined ic • sales of . Rio at 14®14ic. Whisky
dull at 201-e.
T YKENS' VALLEY NUT COAL I—For.
1 4 1 A —sale at $2 00 per ton. - -
Atir ALL COAL DELIVERED BY PATENT
WEIGH atutrs.
"delivered from both JAIdE3 WERELER.
Air Coald yards. - %aorld•t‘
Arm 2burtisentarts.
JOHN MAEURER,
RASPBERRY ALLEY, BETWEEN OHE:STNUT AND
MULBERRY STREETS, HAERLSBIIP.6, PA.
ESPECTFULLY informs the public that
xu.be is located at tie above mentioned place, and he
has commenced the WOOL DYEING and CARPEPWEAV
ING BU,INE:-8 iu all its various branches. He is pre
pared to till all orders at the shortest notice, and will
guarantee generar satisfaction. llts prices will be
reasonable.
-
..... .
Having carried on the business for many years in
rmany, and over two years here, and also having had
an extended experience in this country, he is fully com
petent to execute all work entrusted to him, and hopes to
receive a reaspnahlit share of custom from his fellow
citizens.
• .
fai-A ganeral assortment or Caret are t PHU& kept
on hand end will he sold at the lowest rate.
nov2l-60.3md
TAKE NOTICE.
A LOT OF OLD GUNS, which have ac
xi.. cumulated la the shop of the undersigned, during
the last year, unless called for And reclaimed by the
owners will be told to pay storage.
n0721-3t.* GEORGE CIJNEEL.
DR. D. W. JONES
OFFERS the most certain remedies in
America for Gonorrhea, Gleet,Strioture, Seminal
Weakness, and all those Diseases arising from an Injudi
cious habit, all Mercurial and Syphilitic Eruptions, Dys.
pepsia, Liver Complaint, Rheumatism, Ring Worm and
Totter. All female complains, such as Monthly Irregu
larities. All those above named Diseases will be re
stored to Constitutional soundness or no charge. Any
person or persons being afflicted with the above named
Diseases, will call on me at the WHITE HALL.
I will make a written article with him or her, and place
it in the hands of some responsible person to hold until
a cure is performed, and if there be no cure effected af
ter using the medicine a reasonable time, the patfant
shall lift the article without a charge. All the remedies
used by me are entirely vegetable, and can be taken at
all times without change of diet or hindrance from
business. n2l-dline
Persons desiring information by letter must enclose a
siamp to insure an answer.
PUBLIC SALE.
TN pursuance of an order of the Orphan's
Court of Dauphin county, will be exposed to solo on
SATURDAY, DECEMBER 22,1860,
on rho premises, in Washington township, Dauphin
county, Pa., the Real Estate of Jetta R. Miller, dec'd.,
consisting of a Tract or Plantation of Land, adjoining
lands of Daniel KoppenheffetcJohn Holtzman and others
containing (Inc Hundred and Fifty-Five Acres and One
Hundred and Forty-Six Perches, which will bo divided
to suit purchasers. On the one and of said farm there
are about Forty Acres of Heavily Timbered Land, and
about Thirty Aeras at the other end, About Eighty-
Five Acres or the whole is cleared—that part being the
middle tart cf the farm, and having two
Log DWELLING-ROUSES, there- ma is r
brt. The Farm is well supplied elle
with water, and has on It a small APPLE "
ORCHARD, late the estate of Johu R. Miller.
Sale to commence 11 o'clock P. J.. on said day, when
attendance tt lithe given and terms mare known by
LEVI 111111 T,
Administrator of said deceased
PETER HIMMEL, Clerk 0. C.
Washington Township, November 21. dlt-wts
TAUGH.LIN'S & BIISHFIELD'S
CHEMICAL
WRITING FLUID.
rrnis INK is a rival of the celebrated
L Arnold Fluid. R is equal to it in every respect;
being undoubtedly made-of similar material. It flows
freely from the pen, does notthickert and will not mould,
and is nearly one•third CHEAPER than Arnold's.
Quarts; Pints, Half-Pints, 4 oz., 2 cz. Battles. Writing
and Copying Fluids, for sale at
lIELLER'd DRUG STORE,
no2o 91 Market Street.
PUBLIC SALE
WILL be sold at public out-cry, at the
EUROPEAN HOTEL, in the city of Harrisburg,
on WEDNESDAY EVENING, the sth day of December,
at half-past six o'clock, the following described proper
ty. situate on.tho not th side of Second street, betwe.c.
story R I D WELIIG
-
Emus, with hack buildings nod LOT OF LIN
GROUND to each. The one Lot extends back ■N
one hundred and fifty-kevea fcet six inches ; -
the other one hundred 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 ho sold, the whole together, or separately.—
For further information enquire of the undersigned. -
Terms made known the evening of the sale.
nolfl-ts BERRYBILLL & ECKELS, Attorneys.
BITOKWREAT FLOUR.
AOO BTJ ACKS
ClniKA .9 f f
.ti, .E p x rat tr , a New fromvy, Hulled . 1 l
ley, for eale, wholesale and retail, by
nl9 3t* EBY 3: KUNKEL.
a. BOOK
TEAT EVERT
FARMER, MECHANIC & BUSINESS
MAN WANTS.
JUST PUBLISHED,
THE TOWNSHIP & LOCAL LAWS
OP THEI
STATE OF PENNSYLVANIA.
COMPILED SMOM THE ACTS OF ASIEMBLY BY
WILLIAM T. HAINES, ESQ.
AND POISUBBBD BY
EDWARD F. JAMES,
WEST CHMTER,
This work contains over 400 pages of closely piloted
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.contaius the duties of EnpervisOre of every County
and Township In the State.
It contains the mode of proceedure for the laying out
and opening of public and private roads, of vacating and
altering roads, the building of bridges, &c., &c.
It contains the Common School Law, with explana
tions, decisions and directions, together with forms for
Deeds, Bonds, Contracts, Certificates , &c., &c. This de
partment cf the work was compiled at IlarrlSbnrg by
Mr. Samuel Y. Bates, Deputy . Euperintendent, and is
altnie worth the price of the volume to any one inter
ested in CoMmon Schools.
It contains the duties of Township Auditors.
It contains the laws relative to Dogs and Sheep.
It contains the duties of Assessors.
It contains the laws is relation to, Strays, Mules sail
Swine.
It contains tbe ISAS relative to Fences and Fence
Viesiers.
It contains the lava relative to Game Hunting, Trout
and Deer,
It contains the Election Laws with all the necessary
Forms.
It contains the Naturalization Taws 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,
Attestations, Bills of Exchange and Promissory Notes,
Bills of Sale, Bonds, Checks, Covenants, Deeds, Deposi
tions, Doe Bill& and Produce Notes, Landlord and Tenant,
LeasesAetters of Attorney, Marriage, Mortgages, Re.
ceipts and . Releases. The work is bound in,Law sheep,
and will he sold to subscribers at $1 25 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 approbation, 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 ono. Dauphin County will be thoroughly
canvassed for the work, and the,suppart of the citizens
is respectfully solicited.
THEO. F. SCHEFFP,R,
General Agent for Dauphin county.
P. G.—Good canvassers are wanted in 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
attention. nol7-Iwdaltw
SECOND HAND PIANO FOR SALE.-A. 6
Octave Piano, in best order, for sate;at W. }MOO RE'S
Music Store.. 92 Market street. Price $5O. Payment ta
ken tin monthly instalments. g
VENETIAN BLINDS & FURNITURE
MADE and REPAlitql, to gaol style, at short notice.
nd on reasonable terms, by A. R.SHA.EP, Second stroea
ow Chestnut. ct115;3-,,,
STORAGE!` STORAGE
S TORAGE received at the Ware:house of
JAMMS M, lringrtian.
.filizu 1 lcureous
Tue ANAL 6.041110 N OP LANGUSWES.—There tt a
log tendeney - in this age to appropriate the mot
site words of other langnagei, and after a ts tale to
colporate'them into our own thus the word few, L ';,
winch is from the Greek, signif ing "for the
now becoming popularized in connection with Mr. z..: i.al ;!
illg's great 'Headache remedy, but it will sees ltte
a more general way, and the wo:d Cephalic will been,,.
AS common as ItleelrAYPe ami ma ay tylwrs wtto.;.:.
Unction as foreign words has been worn away
MOLL usage until-they seem "natty,: and Lt th e in :
burn "
'ardly Realized.
RI 'ad 'n 'entitle 'eadacho tha hafternons, haul
stepped Into the bapothecaries hand says hi t Lt. au.,
"c an y o u hole° me of au 'eadacher' "Do :
.s j, h ut :
"cad" says 'O. .Rexceedingly," says hi, hand 11:,01,
'e gave me a Cephalic Pill, nand 'pcn me 'oliorr it curAl
me so imick that I 'ardly realized 1 'ad 'ad an 'eadaLCe
which Lau,.
gliii•Heltiecas is the favorite sign by
makes known any deviation whatever Loin the Lou aI
state of the brain, and viewed in this light it m ly
looked on as a safeguard intended to give notice of di:
which might otherwise escape attention, till too late Li, hi,
remedied; and. its indications should never he negieiod
Headaches may be classified under two names, v z:—
Symptomatic and Idiopathic Symptomatic Ileadai Le is
exceedingly common and is the precursor of a great va.
'let) , of diseases, among which are Apoplexy, Eton ,
Rheumatism and all febrile diseases. la its tervehs
form it is sympathetic of disease of the stomach COGEti,
tuting sick headache, of hepatic disease constituting bit
lious'hgadache, cf worms, constipation and other rhsei
dors of the bowels, as well as renal and uteriLe affect.
ions. Diseases of the heart are very frequently attend
ed with He idsches, A11931:11111 and plethora are also atfrc.
tons which frequently occasion headache. idiopathic
Headache is also very common, being 'axially distin
guished by the name of nervous headache, sometimes
coming on suddenly in a state of apparently Sound health
and prostrating at once the mental audphysical miergies,
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 peen
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, and by its
Bubble power eradicating the diseases of which Head
ache is the unerring index.
tuncwr.—llissutt wants you to send her a box of Ce
phalic Glue, no, a bottle - of Prepared Pills,—but I'm
thinking that's not just ienaither; but perhaps ye'll be
tether knowing what it is. Ye see she's nigh dead and
gone with the Sick Headache, and wants some more of
that Fame as relaiyed her bet ore.
Druggist.—You must mean Spalding's Cephalic Pills.
Brid get.—Och I 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 ft" is so preva.
lent, so little understood, and so touch neglected as Cos
tiveness. Often origirating in carelessness, T r 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 most
fatal and dangerous diseases, and unless early eradica
ted it will bring the sufferer to an untimely grave
Among the lighter evils of which costiveness is the usual
attendant are Headache, Colic, Rheumatism, Foul Bream,
Piles and others of like nature, while a long train of
frightful diseases such as Malignant Fevers, alicessas,
Dysentery, Diarrbena, Dyspepsy, Apoplexy, Epilepsy,
Paralysis Hysteria; Hypeahoodriasis, Melancholy and
Insanity, indicate their presence in the system by
this alarming symptom. Not unfrequently the diseases
named originate in. Ct nstipalion, but take on an ludo.
pendent existence unless the cause is eradicated in an
early stage. From all these considerations it follows that
the disorder should receive immediate attention when
ever it occurs, and no person should neglect to get a box
of Cephalic tills on the first appearance of the complain t,
as their timely use will expet the hist:Mous approach o
disease and destroy this dargerous fee to human life.
A Real Blessing.
Physician.—Well, Mrs. Jones, how is that headache?
Mrs...Tenn.—Gone I Doctor, all gone I the pill you stnt
cured me in just twenty minutes, and I wish you would
send more so that I can have them handy.
Physician.—You Can get them at any Druggists. Call
for Cephalic Pills, I Iliad they never fail, and I recom
mend them in all cases of Headache.
--- Mrs , ronm.--.1 . shall send for a box ditectly, and shall
tell (ill my 5uffem.,,5:....a,m..--iney blessing.
TWENTY AfiLLIONS oa DCLLARS SAVETL—MY. Spalding has
sold two millions of bottles of his celebrated Prepared
Glue and it is estimated that each bottle saves at least tea
dollars worth of broken furniture, thus making an aggre ,
gregate of twenty millions of doliars reclaimed from total
loss by this valu.ble invention. Having made his Glue
a household word, he now proposes to do the world still
greater service by curing all the aching heads with his
Cephalic Pills., and if they are as good as his Glue, Head
aches will soon vanish away like snow in July.
sze—Ovse Exorrsolsorr, and the mental care and anxie
ty incident to close attention to business or study, nre
among the numerous causes of Nervous Headache. Ths
disordered state of mind and body incident to this dis
tressing complaint is a fatal blow to all energy and am
bition. gafferers by this disorder can always ob:ain
speedy relief from these distressing attacks by using one
of. the Cephalie Pills whenever the symptoms appear.—
It quiets the overtasked brain, and soothes the strained
and jarring nerves, and relaxes the tension of the sto
mach which always accompanies and aggravc'es the dis
ordered condition of the brain.
FACT WORTH KNOWING.--spalding's Cephalic MID are
a certain cure for Sick Headache, Billions Headache,
Nervous'Headache, Costiveness and General Debility.
Garai` Demoveay.--Among the most important of ail
the great medical discoveries of this age may be con
sidered the system of vaccfnnation for protectiou 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 sure specific, whose benefits will be expert
speed by catering humanity long after their discoverers
are forgotten. -
Figy-This you ever have the Eick Headache 2 DO you re
member the throbbing temples, the fevered brow, the
loathing and disgust at the sight of food. Ifow
totilly
unfit you were for pleasure, conversation or study. one
of tbe Cephalic Pills would ave relieved you from all the
suffering which you then experienced. For this and
other purposes you should always have a boa of them ea
baud to use as occasion requires.
4 E OI I C:A
4N r
, : croficar4 s4 'soi i .,
‘ 4 lP)`sfr CURE' 'wet'
Nervousileadache
A tli cl
vt ! R I F .t
Heactathoi.
By the use of these Pills the periodic attacks r of Ner
vous or Sick Headache may be prevented; and if taken at
the commencement of an attack immediate rr fro,.:
pain and sickness may be obtained.
1 They seldom fail in removing the Nausea sue Head 6
to which females are so subject.
They act gentiyupon the bowels,—removing
For Literary Men, Students, Delicate Fen 155,
155, and a: 1
persons of sedentary hates, they are valv joi as a L a .;,-
tive, improving the. appetite, giving krds and yip?.
to ti:e
digestive organs, and. restoringth
% „ •
strength of the whole system, — a".eral elestictif ,t
The CEPHALIC PILLS ;ire t•
e result of long rove-ii
in use in many yea -
gation and carefully co hducte"
A eperlments, having been
2e, dor
l
' Jog which time they Late Fo'
vented and relifdved a -
past amount of pain and sande?,
tom or from a dery from Headache, wher.he originating an the ntrontu s'ii
_—
~, aogea state of the stonac'e. 1
ne Y are e "' ' .rely vegetable in their compositio , J , . at '
maybe rake- nat all times with perfect safety witi.. o , ll r.
making e '..ly change of diet, and the absence of 0 1 U
, ‘ .1 1 ‘:: ,
gr44441 ".e taste renders it. easy to administer duos to oksJ.T
BEWARE OF COI7I , ITERFEITS 1
The genuine have five signatures of Henry C. -pill'_
en each box.
Sold by Drugglsts and all other Dealers In Med"ciars
A Box Will be7sost by mail prepaid en receipt of the
PRICE 25 CENTS.
All orders should be addrsed to
HENRY 0. SPALDING,
48 Cedar Street, New York•
110V15.d/gWly