O pailp Cettgrapt. HARRISBURG, PA Tuesday Afternoon, April 9. 1861. OFPCIAL Appointments by the Governor. Salton ARMSTEONQ, of Philadelphia, leather iospector. To be commissioned on expiration of term of present incumbent. H. I. D. DODLRY, ASSOCtate Judge in Arm- strong county. TIIOSIAT L. BALDWIN, Associate Judge in rii9ga county. The Apportionment Bill. In another item we present the appor tionment bill, as reported by the Joint Committee of both Houses of the Legisla ture. It will be observed that it is the most impartial bill that could possibly be presented, the population of the several districts are as equally distributed as could have been done. Whilst we are dissatisfi ed with our own district, by which we are attached to York county, we gracefully ;mimic, and hope that the bill may be passed: Speech of Hon. W. W. Ketcham. ',We publish on the first page to-day, the apeeth of Senator W. W. Ketcham, on the subject of the accounts of the Delaware and Hudson Canal Company. The ques lion involves many legal points, and is fraught with the mystery common to the accounts of old corporations, bttt notwith standing, Senator Ketcham has discussed its merits in full and displayed wonderful skill and ability in his analysis of the sub jeot. We commend this speech to the careful perusal of our readers, as giving much valuable information on an impor tant subject, and as adding another chap ter in the history of the public and pri vate improvements of Pennsylvania. Message from the Governor. Gov. Curtin sent to the Senate to.day a message relative to the important crisis in which we are involved. We print this message this afternoon, to which we in vite the careful attention of the readers of the TELEGRAPH. Only the most pres sing emergency in the relations which the State boars to the Federal Govern ment, could have induced the Governor to communioate thus with the Legislature, and the reader will observe that the message itself singularly responds to the appeals which the TELEGRAPH has lately made on the subject of our national diffi culties. The Governor assumes only the true position of Pennsylvania when he declares that the State is loyal to the Union, and that the people aro ever ready, in a spirit of compromise and con cession, to preserve their friendly relations with all the States, and to add if possible to the bonds of union, by strengthening their position agatnst all the attitudes of treason. The Executive recommenda tions in regard to the military service of the State, would have been wise and pro per under any eircumstanoes, but in the present juncture they become so impera tively important as to demand at once the prompt action of the Legislature. How ever judicious it was for the Governor to couch his suggestion on this subject with calm dignity and discretion, he would have awakened a response from every county in the State, had he called on the people to cast themselves in the breech between their country and that country's assailants, We all know that a sworn effort is being made to destroy the Union. We all understand the object of the trait• ors both in our own midst and at the South, and therefore as we now applaud the Executive suggestions to arm the State, and place its military on a proper footing for defence, it may not be long before we are called upon to endorse Gov. Curtin in offering the services of the •State to the federal authorities for the purpose of assisting in maintaining the federal power. We again invite the attention of the reader to the message and the proeedings had upon its delivery to the Legislature. SINGULAR DIVALOPRENT—TIIN MUM= OF or Two HUSBANDS,—The Mtlwaukie Sentinel says it is believed from recent developments that Ann R. Bihusky, who was executed at St. Paul, Minnesota, for the murder of her hus band by administerng arsenic, was the same liaison who, on the Bth of November, 1849, poisoned Alex. D. Simpson, her husband, in the town of Fayetteville, N. C. In that case arsenic was the agent employed, and after the death of Simpson, his wife was arrested, but succeeded in escaping to Charleston t and thence to liavana, where she remained until May, 1860. She returned to Fayettevill on the 7th of No vember following, surrendering herself for trial and was acquitted. On the trial of Mrs. Bi lanky at St. Paul, she stated that she had re sided at Fayetteville, N. C., where her husband died. The chriatien names of the two women were identical, and many circumstances in St. Paul subsequent to her execution, have been called , to mind which tend to the belief that she and Mrs. Simpson were the same person. The History of the Times When the impartial pen of the historian is invoked to trace the transactions of the present to their true source and responsi bility, he will be compelled to discharge a duty which will leave a stain of dark and irrefaceable crime on the name of the Democratic party, its measures and its men. However we may endeavor to deal leniently with the errors of individuals, and close our eyes Co the common faults and frailties of our nature—there are yet degrees of crime and extents of excess which must not be permitted to pass un noticed or unoondemned. They will not be permitted to do so, particularly when they seek to thrust suffering on the gen eration that governs or entail misery and sorrow on that which is to come after us, to inhabit and possess the land. All that we were as a government, so far as pres tige and political influence are concerned, we inherited from the wisdom of those who bathed their virtues and their patri otism in their own blood, and became martyrs to their faith, with the holy reso lution and purpose of creating a govern 'must which would end the martyrdom of patriotism, and establish forever the civil and religious rights of mankind. Those who formed and framed and labored for the establishment of free institutions on this hemisphere, never dreamed that the blow which would destroy their cherished object and holy purpose, would be dealt by the hands of a portion of the Ameri can people themselves. They never ha amgined that treason would be hatched in the capital of the republic they poured out their blood to organize. If the blow ever did come, and treason plotted to sub vert the liberty of the American people, in their opinion it would come from abroad, and be hatched by those who nev er enjoyed and therefore could not appre ciate the blessings of free institutions.— But in their confidence in those who were to come •after them, the statesmen and heroes of the revolution were mistaken. Instead of the blow that is to destroy us, coming from abroad, it is dealt from at home, by those most benefitted, and the treason with which it is clutching the na tion by the throat, was concocted by the very men who were sworn to its preserva tion and protection. This is no idle as sertion. The history of the past proves the origin of the treason, while the trans actions of the present are daily develop. ing the designs of those engaged in this treacherous revolution. The cause of all our troubles is traced to the subject of slavery. In the infancy of the nation, and while we as a people were yet dependent oolonies, slavery was introduced. After the revolution, and af ter the formation of the first Constitution, every Christian man and patriot in . the land admitted the evil of the institution, and consulted for a plan to ensure its gradual extinction. Such was the pur pose of Jefferson and Adams, of Madison and Monroe, and on-this idea of the abol ishment of slavery the leading men of the past looked to the future for the grandest and holiest realization of their conception of free institutions But as politics became a business, and the hunt for office a trade in which the worst pas sions and propensities of men were in voked and displayed, every prejudice which could be flattered and used for set fish purposes, was at once cultivated and fostered. The Democratic party was or ganized to counteraet the purpose of ef fecting the gradual extinction of sla very. Its legislation has all tended towards such an achievement. During the years of its success, its efforts to pre vent the protection of free labor were in keeping with its 'purpose to consolidate and spread the institution of slavery over all our territory, and constitute it a recog nised element in the government of the country. Not satisfied with incorporating slavery in the domestic policy of the gov ernment, a foreign war was provoked, in order to satisfy its voracity and eater to its demands. And herein is the true source of all our difficulties. As long as the South maintained the balance of pow er, as long as they were able to control the government, to manage its depart ments, the machinery of legislation was undisturbed, and no section complained of the aggressions of the other. The breed ing pens of Virginia were never more flourishing than when their owners were permitted to sit in high places of power —nor were South Carolina, Georgia, Ala bama, Florida and Lonsiana, fearful of the invasion of any of their privileges or the disregard of any right, when the na tional legislature refused to recognise free labor, or persisted in pouring into the lap of Revery the treasure of the whole country. By such acts and such legisla tion, the Democratic party were able to hold they government -of the country in their own hands, because it made the fleunovluania MAUI), Telegraph, Cutobag 'llterttoon, 'April 9, 1661 South a unit in their favor. They suc ceeded in polluting the minds of the peo ple of the North with false notions of monopoly, whenever protection to labor was broached, until the very labor which was thus sought to be fostered, suffered itself to be bound in its service and drag ged into the depths of Democratic misery and destitution. For forty years all our struggles have been for slavery. The for• cible and fraudulent annexation of Texas was for the same purpose. The bloody and costly war with Mexico aimed at con ferring benefits on the some hellish influ enee—and to-day we stand on the verge of a conflict even more sanguinary and far more expensive to curb the lusts and laroeneies of this identical institution. The historian will deal impartially with these feats. As long as the Democratic party was able to protect and maintain slavery, the advocates and supporters of that evil were also advocates and suppor ters of Democracy. As long as the Demo ()ratio party was powerful for slavery propa gandism, the entire South Vaß devoted to Democracy. But when the Democratic party became demoralized, when its lead ers at the• South assumed all the regal arrogance of aristocratic power, and the masses at the North suddenly changed their faith in its purity and purposes, then its southern adherents suddenly ceased in their devotion, the party itself was divided into angry factions, and the cry of revolution and secession-became as popular as free trade and direct taxation had before been audaciously insisted upon. No sane man will dare to declare that the revolution at the South is the result of any fear of political invasion from the North—and only those who are insane will deny that it is the effect of northern de velopment, progress and improvement on the last relic of barbarism that yet re mains on this continent, in the shape of African slavery. It is the struggle of the Democratic party to maintain slavery. The effort of a decayed and dissolute aris tocracy, under the name and in the dis guise of a corrupt Democracy, to main tain its power in this government for the purpose of triumphing in its own base and selfish objects. Let not the American people, the la boring man and mechanic, bo misled, therefore, in the contest which is about to be waged. The conflict has been forded on them, and the struggle will be for their dearest rights. Under any circum stances, war seemed inevitable, and we had better have it written of us hereafter that we were willing to perish in a con test for life and liberty, than that we. su pinely submitted to our fate, and lost both liberty and life. As THE DANGER TO THE UN/ON is augmented, the treason which is the cause of the danger is increased. The Demo cratic party and its organs, not satisfied with having created the confusion which has paralysed business and destroyed pub lie and private confidence in the govern. ment, are engaged in the most persistent efforts to justify the work of effeotually destroying the government. After hav ing been engaged for eight years in con cocting secession—after the northern leaders of the Democracy having contri buted to its venom the force of assumed legality, by giving it the countenance of two administrations—after having, within four years, secretly plotted with the lead ers of the Southern revolution, passing into their hands the military resources of the country, surrendering forts of im portant defence, and suborning officers and soldiers in their duty to their coun try, the cry is raised that the conflict which has been forced on the government is a "Black Republican struggle, in Which no Democrat should shoulder a musket or pull a trigger." It is indeed a Republi can struggle to maintain the majesty of the government against the encroachments of a daring combination of traitors, and every man who refuses to stand by the administration in its efforts to rescue the property of the nation from the hands of the traitors who now possess it, is himself a traitor and a cDwara, unworthy of a home to shield or a land to own him. The position of the Democratic party, its organs and its leaders, in this crisis, needs neither rebuke from the men who are struggling for the preservation of the Union, or exposure from the Republican press. The Southern leaders of that par ty, the men who formerly controlled its majorities and monopolised its patronage, are the same who now plot the downfall of this government. Between the Clearlea• ton Mercury and the defunct Pennsylva nian, there was a happy affinity and a glorious syMpathy which made them a unit in hope, sentiment and treason against the government. And as treason is in fectious, the carcass of the Pennsylvanian has already distributed its poison through the columns of its cotemporaries, until it exhibits itself in the open and shameless treason of the Patriot and Union, preach ing a justification for the crimes of Jeff. Davis, and admonishing its readers against giving any aid to the government in its efforts to maintain the law and preserve the Union. Is not such a recommenda tion a fitting close to the career of the ad vocates of Breckinridge ? And are not these same Democratic organs precisely in the position of the traitors themselves?— The difference, only, between them is that to their wanton treason the Breckin ridge press add hypocrisy to their crimes, in arrogantly claiming to be Union men, while they audaciously preach the de struction of that glorious compact. APPORTIONMENT BILL. AN ACT to divide the State into Congressional • districts for the election of representatives in the Congress of the United States. Sso. 1. Re it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of f Pennsylvania in General Assembly and, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That for the purpose of electing representatives of the people of Penn sylvania to serve in the House of Representa tives in the Congress of the United States, this State shall be divided into twenty-three dis- Iricts, as follow : let. Second, third, ' fourth, fifth, sixth and eleventh wards in the city of Philadelphia. 2d. First, seventh, eighth and tenth wards in the city of Philadelphia. N. Twelfth, thirteenth, sixteenth, seven teenth and nineteenth wards in the city of Philadelphia. 4th. Fourteenth, fifteenth, twentieth, twenty-first and twenty-fourth wards in the city of Philadelphia. 6th. Twenty-second, twenty-third and twenty-fifth wards in the city of Philadelphia, Bucks county and that part of Montgomery countyembracing Moreland, Abington, Chelten. ham, Horsham, Upper Dublin, White Marsh, Springfield, Montgomery, Gwynned, Hatfield, Towamaasing, Franconia and Lower Salford. Bth. Delaware county, Cheater county, Up per and Lower Marion, borough of Bridgeport, in the county of Montgomery. 7th. Berko county and the balan c e of Mont gomery county. Bth. Lancaster county. 9th. Schuylkill and Lebanon counties. 10th. Lehigh, Pike, Monroe, Carbon and Northampton counties. 11th. Susquehanna, Wayne and Luserne counties. 12th. Brpdford, Montour, Columbia,Sulli van and Wyoming counties, and the baance of Northumberland county not included in the thirteenth district. 18th. Dauphin and York counties and Lower Mahonoy township, in Northumberland county, not included in the 12th district. 14th. Union, Snyder, Juniata, Perry and Cumberland counties. 16th. Somerset, Bedford, Fulton, Franklin and Adams counties. 16th. Cambria, Blair, Huntingdon and Mif flin counties. 17th. 'Dogs, Potter, Lycoming, Clinton and Centre counties. 18th. Jefferson, Erie, Warren, M'Kean, Elk, Cameron, Forest and Clearfield counties. 19th. Crawford, Mercer, Venango and Cla rion counties. 20th. Indiana, Westmoreland and Fayette counties. 21st. Allegheny county south of the Ohio iSnd Allegheny rivers. 22nd. Allegheny county north of the Ohio ELI* Allegheny rivers, and Butler and Arm strong counties. • 28d. Lawrence, Beaver, Washington and Greene county. Sac. 2d. That the election of Representa tives to serve in the House of Representatives of the Congress of the United States agreeably to the Constitution of the United States and the direction of this Act, shall be held bythe citi zens of the State qualified to vote for mem bers of .the State Legislature on the sec ond Tuesday of October, A. D. 1882, for the Congress, in every second year thereafter, un til an enumeration of the inhabitants of the United States shall be taken, agreeably to the Constitution and laws of the United States, at the same places respectively under the care and direction of the same officers, and subject to all the laws, penalties, rules and regulations in force for conducting and governing elections within this Commonwealth. Sao. 8. That the returns of the election held under this Act shall be made at the times and in the manner prescribed for making returns of elections by the seventy-sixth,seventy-seventh, seventy-eghth,seventy-ninth,eightieth, eighty first, eighty-second, eighty-third, eighty-fourth, eighty-fifth and eighty-sixth sections of the Consolidated Acta regulating elections within this Commonwealth, passed the second day of July, A. D. 1889, and the several supplements thereto. Sso. 4. That the judges of the first, second, third and fourth districts shall meet at the State house in the city of Philadelphia. The judges of the fifth district shall meet at the court house in Doylestown, in the county of Bucks. The judges of the sixth district shall meet at the court house in West Chester, in the county of Chester. • The judges of the seventh district shall meet at the court house in the city of Beading, in the bounty of Berks. The judges of the eighth district shall meet at the court house in the city of Lancaster, in the county of Lancaster. The judges of the ninth district shall meet at the court house in Pottsville, in the county of Schuylkill. The judges of thelenth district shall meet at the court house in Mauch Chunk, in the county of Carbon. The judges of the eleventh district shall meet at the court house in Scranton. The judges of the twelfth district shall meet at the court house iu Bloomsburg, in the county of Columbia. The judges of the thirteenth district shall meet at the court house in the city of Harris burg, in the county of Dauphin. The judges of the fourteenth district shall meet at the court house in Miffiintown, in the county of Juniata. The judges of the fifteenth district shall meet at the court house in Chrunbersburg, in the , county of Franklin. Tho Judges of the sixteenth district shall meet at the court house in Hollidaysburg, in the county of Blair. The judges of the seventeenth district shall meet at the Court Rouse in Williamsport, in the county of Lycoming. The ljudges of the eighteenth district shall meet at the Coart•House in Ridgeway, in the county of Elk. The judges of the nineteenth district shall meet at the court house in Franidirt, in the county of Venango. • The judges of the twentieth district shall meet at the court house in Greensburg, in the county of Westmoreland. The judges of the twenty-first district shall meet at the court house in the city of Pitts burg. The judges of the twenty-second district shall meet at the Court Rouse in Butler, in the county of Butler: r, The jwigetketf the fwentY-thmi . .distriut oh& meet at the Court House in Beiver, inthe coun ty of Bower. Message from the Governor The following message was delivered to the Legislature today. After being read in both houses, committees of conference were appointed with instructions to report by bill on the subject as early as practi• ruble : PSSESTLV/LVIA Easel:airs Cusacaza, Harrisburg, April 9, 1861. n the Senate and House of Repromtatives of the Curnmantaadth of Pennsylvania : Gunn= : As the period fixed for the adjournment of the Legislature is rapidly approaching, I feel constrained by a sense of duty to call your at tention to the condition of the military organ ization of the State. It is scarcely necessary to say more than that the militia system of the State, during a long period distinguished by the pursuits of peaceful industry exclusively, has become wholly ineffi cient, and the interference of the Legislature is required to remove its deficits, and to render it useful and available to the public service. Many of our volunteer companies do not pos sess the number of men required by our militia law, and steps should be forthwith taken to supply these deficiencies. There are numerous companies, too, that are without the necessary arms; and of the arms that are distributed, but few are provided with the more modem appli ances to render them serviceable. I recommend, therefore, that the Legislature make immediate provision for the removal of these capital defects; that arms be procured and distributed to those of our citizens who may enter into the military service of the State; and that steps be taken to change the guns al readY distributed, by the adoption of such well known and tried improvements as will render them effective in the event of their employment in actual service. In this connection I recommend the establish ment of a Military Bureau at the capital ; and that the militia laws of the Comiabnwealth be so modified and amended as to impart to the military organization of the State, the vitality and energy essential to its practical value and usefulness. Precautions, such as I have suggested, are wise and proper at all times, in a Government like ours ; but special and momentous consid erations, arising from the condition of public affairs outside of the limits, yet of incalculable consequence to the people, and demanding the the gravest attention of the Legislature of Penn sylvania, invest the subject to which your ac tion is invited by this communication, with ex traordinary interest and importance. We can not be insensible to the fact that serious jealous aim and divisions distract the public mind, and that, in portions of this Union, the peace of the country, if not the safety of the Govern ment itself, is endangered. Military organiza tions of a formidable character, and which seem not to be demanded by any existing public ex igency, have been formed in certain of the States. On whatever pretexts these extraordinary mili tary preparations may have been made, no pur pose that may contemplate resistance to the enforcement of the laws, will meet sympathy or encouragement from the people of this Com monwealth. Pennsylvania yields to no State in her respect for, and her willingness to pro tect, by all needful guarantees, the constitu tional rights, and constitutional independence, of her sister States, nor in fidelity to that con stitutional Union whose unexampled benefits have been showered alike upon herself and them. The most exalted public policy and the clear est obligations of true patriotism, therefore, ad monish us, in the existing deplorable and dan gerous crisis of affairs, that our militia system should receive from the Legislature that prompt attention which public exigencies, either of the State or the Nation, may appear to demand and which may seem, in your merlon, best adapted to preserve and secure to the people of Penn sylvania and the Union the blessing of peace and the integrity and stability of our unrival led constitutional government. The government of this great State was es tablished by its illustrious founder "in deeds of peace ;" onr people have been trained and dis ciplined in those arts which lead to the promo tion of their own moral and physical develop ment and progress, and with the highest regard for the right: of others, have always cultivated fraternal relations with the ple of all the States devoted to the Cons tntion and the Union, and always recogif g the spirit of concession and compromise that underlies the foundation of the government, Pennsyl vania offers no counsel, and takes no action in the nature of a menace ; her desire is for peace, and her object, the preservation of the personal and political rights of citizens, of the true sovereignty of States, and the supremacy of law and order. Animated by these sentiments, and indulging an earnest hope of the speedy restoration of those harmonious and friendly relations between the various members of this Confederacy which have brought our beloved country to a condition of unequalled power and prosperity, I commit the grave subject of this communication to your deliberation. A. G. CURTIN. New 2hertinnunts. S3ICA-N - 0011. 33.1CAITZ wuz, Gm TWO OT ENTERTAINMENTS AT BRANT'S HAIL er Thursday and liiday Evenings, llth and 12th, 1,10. FOR THE BEITERIT OF THE STATE CAPITAL. . BAND. An afternoon performance on Friday for the accommo dation of schools. TICKETS *5 Cents. SCHOOLS 10 Cents. Aprll9-4td. PUBLIC AUCTION. IWILL sell by public suction, on WED the 19th day of April,A. D., 1881, and • continued from day to day until all Is disposed of, at the store room north-weetent side of Market Square, No 12, next to refire confectionary, the entire stock of goods embracing Chum and Glass Ware; Tea and Toilet delta; , Molasees of different grades; Black and Green Teas; White and Brown Sugars; Coal Oil and Fluid Lamps and Lanterns; Oil Stands and 011; Tea Caddy's; Platform and Counter Scales ; sugar ; he .; also Liquors, such as Brandy, Wine, &a. ; some old Bottled Liquor. Bale to commence at 8 o'clock in the forenoon, when terms will be made known by ap9 2t W. L. TREWIO%. - - - - NOTICE. IfIHE partnership heretofore existing be twean SAMUEL L. BARN and WJW&M L. DAILY, under the drat of SLILY & BROTRER, was dissolved, on the 26th ultimo, by the decease of WILLIAM L. &ULT. The bunion of the Firm will be settled by the a urvirlng partner. CARPET STOCK, SELLING OUT. N 0.920 CIIZSTNTIV'STREET, In order to close up the business of the late Firm of - 3133tecothozos, Their large and fresh stock of Fine Carpetinga, Oil Cloths IEO __I I Will be offered fur sale at Redsteed Pricer. Housekeepers and Storekeepers will Ond It to their 111- Wrest to tall, as every article will be offered low. ao.2wd firAMB.—Three Hundred Extra Eugdr Cored Ham keit received by . _ CO: apB WM DOCK Ja. Nero 2briertiscnints. TREES AT AUCTION, THE most extensive assortment t, description of evergreen, shale ac:; Ir._ • shrubbery, garden fruits, to be sold id House, Harrisburg, Thursday morn:cg It i u April 11th, ever offered in Harrisburg. Front '""° mown and extensive Nurseries of J. L . o, Co , West Chester, Pa April9.2to EMPTY BA.RRELS. --Two "t un ,. Empty Flour, Sugar and Wine fiiirrek sceptiona and prices. apB NOTICE TO FIRE COMPANIES . TOTE the Good Will Fire c 0n , 1 ,,,•,_ Harrlaburg, give notice to all tiro rump,- ' we offer for sale a good secona SI ('; ENGINE, in good renal. and ready I would salt any Lear organ z 2d, coTpa yu. "y small and good machine, can proottr, For any further Information you w 11 p 1 a,,, G. W. I Setretary of C nac r t!.. apS I.vr WANTED TO PURCHASE • ATWO STORY BRICK 1107,zE, trick buildinf, located in a re rcti. hood, of which poscecsion will Not be wan:. : months. Apply at [17.1 1111,4 V. HUMMEL'S GROCERY Removed to Aro. 8, Market s 't 4 DOORS ABOVE HARRISBUG BANK MY friends and the public arc inv l t e d call and examine my stock of Ch;u,. Queanstrarc, at my new location, to, o!ber - ret stock of Groceries of all kinds, whir h I cheap for cash as they can be bought in iii: o spa-Mead* VALENTISE 111".$)11 .1 LANCASTER:BANK NOTEs WALNTMI:P. CIEVERAL HUNDRED DOLLARS notes of the Lancaster Rank, three years itace, are wanted, for e t kb t b • Wil be paid. Apply at ape KEYSTONE NITRSEPIEs TREES ! TREES ! ! TIIEE GREAT BARGAINS LOOK TO YCUR INTEREST NOTHING PAYS SURER thana'. veatmeut in FRUIT TRRES. Aleo, I . and SMALL FRUITS or all kinds. sbakte and iiru al MN, news, &c., will be FOli prices, to suit the times. GIVE US A CALL. Specimens of the above can be scan in the I.nr , ; ket Rome during market hours, where or ler, u taken, or at the Nurseries immediately below ' m264teow .1 STEAM WEEKLY ; 141-1M" BETWEEN NEW Inn lOr4J:‘ :44 AND LIVERPOOL. . _ LANDING AND EMBARKING MOUS at QUEENSTOWN, (Ireland.) it e 7 pool, New York and Philadelphia Steamship r, intend despatching their full powered Clyde-h. Steamships as follows : KANGAROO, Saturday, 13th April ; EDINOI . c. urday, 20th April; GLASGOW, Saturday, and every Saturday, at Noon, from Pier St , N . RATES OP PAS3AOR. FIRST CABIN ...... .575 o'l do to Loudon SSO 00 I do to Lona n.. Steerage Return Tickets, gect for Six Months.... Passenger* forwarded to Paris, Ilakre, Bremen, Rotterdam, Antwerp, &c., at reatwed fares. ,rorrersons wishing to bring outtbelr frieLd; tickets here at the following ra es, to New York Liverpool or Queenstown; Ist Cabin, $75, fn.'. and S. Steerage from Liverpool $4O On F rom ;111,.,m,1,,v, $3O 00. Those Steamers have superi or BCCuiumAatvius passengers. sod carry experienced Tray built In Water-tight Iron Scellons, and hay , : ?Melt V: Annihilators on board, For further Information arp at tbo Company's Offices. JNO. G. DALE. Age , ap1341 15 Broadway, NOW Or O. O. Zimmerman, Agent, ilarristi ENGLISH AND CLASSICAL BOARDING SCHOOL, FOR YOUNG MEN AND BOIS MOUNT JOY, LANCASTER COUNTS", N STUDENTS prepared for College or Head. Location pleasant, healthy and rig .• cess by Pennoyivaota Railroad. For circular. tog terms, &0., address tho Principal. apls.lUtd tw L 1861. BARGAINS IN Many, Cass Manias, all SHNILTING 16 66 lINBLIACHED AND BLE6sCHIM 1113131159, r.I lk TIMINGS, all prices and widths. Towitmas, all Wadi. COUPTZEPAEIIIII2I, very low. CA.UCCO, vary cheap. Piuow Casa Wanes, different qu Using Fnartsos, all quallues Fi1p.41117 8 / 1 C8M:319. LARGE :TOOK OP CaMMEI3. STAXII. OIL CLOTRI. BIM Mass OP DRUGGETS. Any House Furnishing or DomeaticGou,k will t PERT CHICAP, at CATHCART & BROrttEIV , , Next to the Barri Om Harrisburg Broom Manufactory , TWO DOORS PROM FRONT ST., IN 101. \ B ROOMS sold wholesale and re'i It and e c z eM. n c e b e el a rr thanstocc can pa , hi t ul, u aps-3md IMPORTED BOLOGNA SALS AG I% - very rare lot jast received and for sal,: by apIS WM. DCCK Jit JOHN WALLOWER, JR,, GENERAL. FORWARDIP COMMISSION MERCTIAN'! GOODS AND MERCHANDISE pr , forwarded by Pbiladelphia and Rendic e. Central, Cumberland Valley and Penney iv At I .nd Canal. HAULING AND DRAYING to and from I city to the different Railroad depots w t>e ;t:. very lowest rates. FAIALLIN removing will be promptly sue, Orders left at Brant's European Hotel, or at : of E. S. Zollinger, will receive prempt amut signtnenta of freight respectfully soliett , l JOHN WALLOWER ill • apt Office iteadm_ DAVID HAYNES, 110 MAHKEI. BABRISBURG, Ageut for LILLIE'S PATENT Wrought, and Mlle,' Iron Fire 'ant 11,r6 SSB.IPMEII. Strietly the ONLY Mercantile Sara made, V. 1.1 Fire and Burglar Proof. 11.3 r UPHOLSTERING HUSK MATTRESSES, COTTON TOP MATRESSES, COLTON COMFORTS, FRENCH CARPET HASS:II2'A' CHAIR CIISHIOS: . LOCSUk - On hand and tot sale wholesale and Teta lowisi rates for cx3h . HAIR MATRASSES and SPRING BuTl,'.' MADE TO ORDER SOFAS, LOUNGES, CHAIRS, HAlR Repaired and made equal tonew lkiA veryr l O rE t l so S ; '.' 1 M 0.109 Market street between Fourth and ~ toar29 J. T. B t• FARMER'S HOTEL THE subscriber begs leave to inf , r Mends and the public that he has taken teat'. EWE HOTEL, in Market street opposite the t',.tr: ftrmerly J. Stahl's, where he is prepared to .", date, thew on reasonable terms. Having r,aa forrdshellbellonse entirely now, be hopes t'Y r , issue.] W business, to receive a liberal share o Me. (apt-Enid] 8. G. Pritit _I WV. DOCK Titt 1861. J. E
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