Pennsylvania daily telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1857-1862, June 13, 1862, Image 2

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    ; ilp Cetegraplj
Forever float that standard sbeet I
Where breathes the foe but falls beforeus,
With Freedom's soil beneath our feet,
And Freedom's banner streaming o'er us.
OUR PLATFORM
THE UNION-nth CONSTITUTION-AND
THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAW.
:i: • I•A • : . . '' i''i ni ' 0
THE PEOPLE OF PENNSYLVANIA, who
desire cordially to unite in sustaining the
NATIONAL ADMINISTRATION in its patriotic
efforts to suppress a sectionsl. and unholy re
hellion against the UNITY OF THE REPUB
LIC, and who desire to support, by every
power of the Government, one hundred . thon
sand heroic brethren in arms, braving disease
and the perils of the field to preserve the Union
of our Fathers, are requested to select thenum
ber of Delegates equal to the Legislative Re
presentation of the State, at each times and in
such manner as will best respond to the spirit
of this call, to meet in STATE CONVENTION
at 13 A BRISB T TRE, on THURSDAY, the SEVEN
TEENIH DAY OF JULY next, at eleven
o'cloik, on said drip to nominate Candidates for
tho offices of AUDITOR GENERAL and SUR.
TEYOR GENERAL, and to take such measures
as may be deemed necessary to strengthen the
Jovernment in this season of common peril to
a common country. _ _
A. R. McCLURE,
• Chairman People's State Committee
Gs°' W. HAMKgRBLY7
Secretaries
Jos& M. Stmuven,
HARRISBURG, PA
Friday Morning, June 13,1862.
GOV. CURTIN.
In order to allay any apprehension which
may grow out of the fact of the absence of Gov.
Curtin from the State Capital, as it was known
that he went hence to undergo a critical and
important surgical operation, we are able to
state that, by letters received in this city from
both the distinguished patient and his physi
clan, Gov. Curtin is now fully relieved, and
will return to this city in a very few days.
During the absence of Gov. Curtin, and while
he wag himself undergoing a severe operation,
he found time to . devote his energies and solid
tude to the succor and care of the Pennsylvania
soldiers who, wounded or sick, may have been
carried to New York, and there, perhaps, in the
excitement and confusion of the hour, suffer
from neglect or delay in reaching the hospitals
provided for their comfort within the limits of
this state. To meet such an emergency, and
to guard against the possibility of any 'Penn
sylvanian suffering either at home or abroad,
GeV. Curtin has organized, during his present
sojourn in New York and while he was confined
to a sick chamber, a society to be known as
the Sons of Pennsylvania. The. object of this or
ganization Is entirely for the relief and care of
our wounded ; and the motive which prompted
its organisation, with the object, may be added I
to the other noble acts which have characterized
the official and personal bearing of Andrew G.
Curtin towards the men of Pennsylvania who
went forth under his auspices, to fight the bat
tles of the Union.
—We repeat, that Gov. Curtin may be ex
pected, home in a very few days.* Painful as
has been Pus suffering, we are assured by his
physician that his recovery is certain, and that
his health and strength will be greatly im
proved 'hereafter. We rejoice to announce
these facts.
TITS PITTSBURG POST occasionally finds its
way into our sanctum, carried hither by some
friend,. anxious to exhibit to us the depth of
infamy which locofocoisna can reach without
exactly finding itself in the sulphuric regions
of Belsebub himself. The last number of this
deb ctable sheet which has found Its way to ou
table, contains what lecofocoism would call "a
reply," but which is only an attempt to dis
prove tbe plain facts which we printed in the
figures showing that by the army vote the Re
publicans hud five to one Democrat in the
quota of Pennsylvania troops furnished to swell
the armies of , the Republic. The Post should
not be surprised at this fact, because the editor
of that-sheet labored with unremitting seal, at
the inauguration of the rebellion, in persuading
Democrats to stand aloof from the fight for
the Union, denouncing the struggle as an abo
lition effort to coerce the southern traitors into
obedience to Constitutional law. If the De
rnocracy are largely represented in the army,
then the Post had no influence, because all its
energies were directed to the denunciation of
the war and the slander of those who sought
its maintenance by enlistment. In proof of
this declaration, the course of the Post was so
violent as to induce the people of Pittsburg
to threaten its proprietors and editors with
hanging, if they did not desist, while Barr, the
editor; turd a halter in 114 view, hanging from
a lamp post in the - vicinity of the Post printing
office, as a stern warning to to deter him
from further efforts to give aid and comfort
to the enemies of the country. The character
of the. Post became so infamous, that personal
safety required the withdrawal of all names
from Its columns, of men either as editors or
proprietors, and this is the condition of the
copy on out table. Yet such joomils attempt
to controvert the influence which the truth
of figures is daily making among the masses
of the people of Pennsylvania.
In
Award to the army vote, we have simply
given the figures, derived from sources at once
respectable and reliable. Those figures exhibit
a truth distasteful to the journals which first
opposed the war, and now do re to be known
as it s suppprters. We are tot bound to ac
count for this. Our object is gained when we
have proven - that the issues of this great con
flict for the Constitution, the l aw an d the
Union, are made up from Republican pried
pies, and that the heroes who are 'sustaining
the brunt of the fight are also Republicans.
This we have proven to the satisfaction of loyal
men. Therefore, we are not particularly dis
turbed by the howlings and the perversions of
dough-faces of the Pittsburg Post ilk.
A SINGULAR FACT IN TER HISTORY OF
MODERN DEMOCRACY
There is something peculiar and undefinable
in the spirit of modern democracy. It has
puzzled the politicians of all countries, to
know whether this peculiaaity related to It
dishonest purpose on the part of its advocates
to benefit themselves only, or whether it par
took of a fraud still deeper, and which con
templated the final overthrow of the govern
ment. We are not troubled on either of these
definitions, believing that both will apply with
eci
nal justice to the party in question. What
has struck us lately, and which now claims
our attention, is the singular fact that the
democratic party is straggling for organization
at this present time. When the rebellion was
organized, the democracy of the north sud
denly found themselves disorganized, divided
into angry factions, each intent on the extinc
tion of the other. While this was the condi
tion in the north, tho democracy in the south
were thorougly organized. When Sumter fell,
a cry'of indignation rang through the land and
aroused its physical and =lntel forces to the
rescue of the government. When.the disaster of
Bull Bun filled the loyal states with , mourning,
and requiems for the dead were borne on ever
breeze that blowed Rom the north, the east and
the west. When Ball's Bluff in all its bloody de
tails spread a tale of hcaror before the people.
When all the possible misfortunes which
at one period in the history of this struggle
seemed to conspire to frustrate the efforts of
the government to put down rebellion, at that
particular time we heard nothing of the democratic
party. It had no leaders—it had no advocates
in the north—it made no avowal of principle
—while its old leaders seemed to content them
selves with the disasters which loyal men de
plored, giving aid to the rebellion by the ex
pression of deep sympathy for the efforts of
those engaged against the government. The
denjocracy, as a party, postponed their organization
until the time should come when such an organization
would be beneficial to the cause of the rebel traitors.
That time has,arrived, and that aid is deman
ed by the rebels, as they fiy from stronghold to
stronghold, unwilling to meet loyal armies in
their purimit, and unable to hold a single lo
cality which they boasted was, impregnable.
The democratic party, by seeking re-organiza
tion at this time, seeks to fulfil the compact
into which it entered at the inception of rebel
lion, because by such an organization, the aid
and comfort which northern dough-faces prom
ised, can alone be extended to the traitors of
th eesonih. It is another attempt at the ful
fillment of a bloody bargain which was hereto ;
fore frustrated by the indignant masses of the
free states, by openly threatening the very
men now attempting this re-organization, with
the halter and the horse pond.
That the organization of the Democratic par
ty is for the purpose of affording aid and com
fort to the rebel cause, no man of judgment,
who understands the tendencies and' is ac
quainted with the alliances of that party, will
for a moment doubt. It is not organizing for
the purpose of attempting political 'success in
the loyal states, because that is impomible. It
is not consolidating its forces; to achieve any
particular legislation, looking to the support of
the army or the payment of the debts growing
out of the rebellion. These are questions
which do not interest those who have no inter
oat beyond those invested in mere political suc
cess. The object and the purpose, then, of this
organization is to afford all the aid in the
power of the northern dough-face Democracy,
to the declining fortunes of a rebellion which
the spirit of. that Democracy has excited, and
without the success of which that same Demo
cracy will be lost to further influences in per
jury, peculation and treason.
WRERE SHALL THE SOLDIERS REST IN
DEAlfir
The question is beginning to be agitated in
various counties of the state as to the policy of
' providing a suitable spot in which to lay the
remains of,such of our soldiers as have enlisted
in those localities and were killed in battle, or
died from wounds received in the defence of
the Union. In Lewisburg, as we notice by a
communication in the Chronicle; a proposition
is made that each county provide a lot in any
of the cemeteries within itilimits, to be con
secrated expressly to the burial of soldiers who
thus die. We cannot refrain from applauding
this measure. as one in which every citizen is
interested, and as also calculrted to perpetuate
for all future time, the memory of the patrio-
tism and de it • displayed by the men now
tton
struggling in defence of the Union. It is pro.
posed at the same time, while thus providing
lots in which to bury the heraiodead, to raise a
fund in each county to be appropriated to the
erection of monuments to preserve the-re
collection of the battles in which the nation is
now shedding so much noble blood.
We heartily approve of these measures, and
trust that the subject will receive some atten- .
tion in this county. Dauphin county has con
tributed a large number of men to swell the
regiments of the state, and it therefore be
hooves her people to make some arrangements
brwhich the remains of such of those as may
be brought to our.midat stiffened in death, may
not only be appropriately received but honor
ably interred in the spot expressly devoted to
that purpose. We have. ample room in the
extensive cemetery which crowns one of the
hik surrounding the city, and in that locality
a lot.should at once be provided; if it has not
already been done, for the exclusively burial
of the patriotic dead of this war. • And there,
too, a monument:should rise, fitting in extent
and beauty, to commemorate the 'memory of
such men. In after years, these monuments,
rising in stately splendor in every cou n t y i n
the state, would .become the shrines before
which men would bow, not "to strange gods or
In infidelity renouncing thetiod of all nations,
but to worship that Vreat God, to ihose in
flume be ascribed the jiitorke -whit*
have made and must continue to preserve U 8 as
a nation.
We leave this subject in the hands of the
people of Pennsylvania. We heave it in the
hands of the patriotic people of Dauphin
county. Whatever may be the action or the
liberality of other counties, we predict that
Dauphin will not be behind in bestowing all
merited and appropriate honors to her gallant
dead.
A BOYD HAMILTON has been elected Recording
Secretary of the Pennsylvania State Agricul
tural Society, vice John H. Ziegler, resigned.
We congratulate the society in thus securing
the services of a gentleman so eminently quali
fied to discharge the duties of the important
position to whieh•he was assigned by the almost
unanimous voter of its menlbers. Mr. Hamil
ton, to a zeal and a business perseverance
which are indomitable, joins the practical
knowledge and scientific attainments that are
beginning to be • regarded as essential to the,
success of agricultural pursuits, and therefore
in every particular will reflect credit and be o f
great service in the position to which he has
been called. The society pay Mr. Ziegler a
handsome compliment on his retirement,
which he has fairly won and honestly de
-8011%8.
TIEB PEOPLIeS Cosysterrow of Cambria county
met at Ebensburg on Tuesday, the 10th inst.
Colonel Jobn M. Bowman, of Johnstown, was
unanimously chosen delegate to represent Cam
bria in State Convention, at Harrisburg, on the
17th of July, and Colonel William K. Carr, of
Wilmore, Colonel James Cooper, of Johnstown,
and E. Roberts, of Ebensburg, appointed Sena
torial Conferees, to meet like conferees from
Blair and Clearfield, to select a delegate to rep
resent this Senatorial district in said conven
tion.
Con. JOSHUA T. Omura has not been honored
with a heariog by the Patriot up to this date.
If Colonel Owen had written a slander against
the administration of. President Lincoln; or a
falsehood in favor ,cif slavery, his letter would
have Bien gobbled up by the Patriot as a choEe
morsel for the digestion of its patrons. But
Colonel Owens has written the , truth against
Democratic sympathy for treason, and that is
sufficient to damn him In the estimation of
those who esteem party before conntry.
Tan NExr Swan Fem.—By reference to the
proceedings of the Pennsylvania State Agricul
tural Society, published in another colunut t it
will be seen that the Society has resolved to
hold the next State
-fair at Norristown, Mont
gomery county, on Tuesday, September 80,
October 1, 2 and 3, 1862. 4-
'-'6.1".•:-.. ii- - .:=- - --- C - - 1. c , f r,""
%/ .7----- •- - . t - -.)-7-7, \ .1.1
.. . ....5.
Fri.
from
,our Evening Edition of Yesterday
From Gen. Haneck's Army
ORN. BURIIII IN 110T`PIEUIT OF POLK'S ARMY
Sr. Louis, June 11.
;
A gentleman who has just ardved. from
'Corinth, and is conversanr with matters there,
says General Buell, with sixty thousand troops,
embracing two divisions of hicovra and all of
General Pope's forces, were,at Guntown, in hot
pursuit of General Polle,e rebels.. ,
General W. T. Shermaresi division was en
gaged in repairing the bridges on the Memphis
and Charleston. Railroad, hetwaer,L9o4nan and
General Wood's division of Buell's corps
ryas repairiog the bridges , across Big Bear creek,
twenty-six miles from °plinth.
General Thomas, with about 0,000 troops, is
at Corinth renovating the town so that it may
be used as a habitation for troops.
Gene. Dl'l:flan:land: and Wallace are at Pardy
with 20,000 troops.
;The railroad from Corinth to ...Jackson, and
thence to Grand Junction, is being rapidly re
paired, and communication was expeoted.to be
opened with Columbus, Kentucky, in a day or
two, affording an important and speedy route
for the trausportation of supplies, Eleven lo•
comotives have been captured at 'different
points, lour of which are in running order, and
the balance being rapidly repaired.
FROM BEFORE RICHMOND.
Death of Colonel Ashby Confirmed
GENERAL kloCramtres HisrxmAarsas, June 11.
The Richmont papers of Monday have in
account of a skirmish near Harrisonburg,
,in
which Col. Ashby, of the rebel cavalry, was
killed.
Coif Wyndham, of the First New Jersey
Cavalry, was taken prisoner.
Qn Saturday, Jackson was at Port Republic,
in Riickingbate, from which he would retreat
when pursued by the F*lderal • troops. The
same papers publish the names of the killed
and wounded in seven rebelregimente, making
a total of 559. •
The weather Ain continues unfavorable for
military operations. It has rained every other
day for the past'two weeks. The water in the
Chickahominy has not receded, and the roathi
are in a terrible condition. •
Battle at Chattatiodgi% Tenn
Aiother Great Victory Won by Gen
Mitchell.:
TWO DAYS' UMW 'FIGHTING.
THE ENEMY COMPLETELY•BEOUTED.
A private dispatch has been received by the
President of the Chicago Sanitary Commission;
from Cairo, which says that General 'Mitchell
has woa.another brilliant victory at °batten
"nooga;Tenuessee: •
The enemywas completely routed after two
days' hard fighting. ,
NO particulars are given. • -
LOSS OF UM,SM'i2IM . SAI.LLE J. THOMAS
Navi Yomr, Jtm•3 12.
The steamer George Pranody,. rfrom H a t.
tares, reports the lose of the schooner, Sallie J.
Thomas, from Baltiroore. She had two locomo
tives aboard..- . , • -
THE 11. S. FRIGATE NIAGARA itIKLOW.
Bono; Ju4ke 12.
•
The, IL B. frigate Niagerk . irem ek
l
has Allualled:bo9 l r. • - - •
The Menandoah Valley.
ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN JACKSON'S TROOP
AND MELDS' ADVANCE GUARD.
HEAVY LOSS ON BOTH SIDES
Advices received at the. War Department
state that Gen. Tackson's army attacked Gen.
Shields' advance on Monday morning, near
Port Repreolle. The conflict is said to have
been maintained for about four hours by about
.2,000 of our men against the main body of
Jackson's army. The enemy's force became so
overwhelming in numbers that our advance
was compelled to fall back, which it did in
good order, until it met the main body of Gen
eral Shields' command, near Conrad's Store.
As soon as this was effected, the enemy in
turn retired. .
The fighting !Staid to have been very severe
and the loss heaiy on both Bides.
No further particulars have reached this De
partment. - •
(sitcom> DEWATCH ]
WASHINGTON, June 11.—A private letter states
that Gen. Shields had previously succeeded in
destroying a large quantity of supplies belong
ing to the rebels, found at klitford, and at Con
rad's Store.
The damage by the recent rains, including
the carrying away of the bridges over the South
branch of the Shenandoah river, materially in
terfered With the commissariat arrangements
and the movements of the troops.
LURAY, Va., June 10, via Washington, Junell.
—Colonel Carroll, commanding the Fourth
brigade, consisting of the Eighty-fourth Penn
syivania, Eleventh Peonsylvania. 6.:venth Indi
ana, and First Virginia regiments, numbering
altogether about one thousand six hundred
strong, reached Port Republic on Sunday. A
reconnoissance was made and the enemy round
to be in town. After a skirmish, Colonel Car
roll concludtd to hold the badge, and, order
ing that it should not be burned, put his guns
in position to command it.
At 6 o'clock on Monday morning he was
opened on by some twenty heavy guns, which
had been placed in position by the enemy dur
ing the night. Our forces tried to reach the
bridge repeatedly, in order to destroy it, but
they were met by storms of bullets, and were
obliged to retire.
A large cavalry force of the enemy then
crossed the bridge and attacked our troops,
while their infantry followed. -
Our men opposed them at every step, often
driving them back with heavy loss ; but the
numbers after Gen. Tyler's Third -Brigade,ii-:
rived, were so much interior to the enemy;---'
mein being at least five to t ne—that it was
impossible to hold our position and we were
compelled to fallback, our boys fighting every
foot of the way.
After fatliog back some three or four miles,
a body of cavalry were sent to attack us, but
were received in such a manner as to compel
them to retire, when the engagement ended,
having la ted f ive hours. , -
Our loss in killed and wounded is notknown
but it is large, as is also that of the enemy.—
We lost a large number of prisoners.
During the fight Col. Carroll's horse fell with.
him, injuring the Colonel badly.
Capt. Reilly, of Gen. Shields' staff, was badly
injured in the head. He received praise from
all who saw him fighting.
, 1 Col. Boolaey, of the 29th Ohio, mut - badly
wounded. His men. charged three times in
order to get him, but he was carried off by the
enemy.
Gen. Ashby, a the Black Horse Cavalry no
toriety, was positively killed during the fight
at the bridge over Middle river.
()apt. Koegh charged with a body of cavalry,
and held the bridge for some, time, during a
tertibleinorm of , grape. • •
This was one of the most hotlysontested en
gitgements,of thewhole war-' lndictitdd by
the loss compared with the numbers engaged,
who fought like demons.
LATER.
Two regiments from the rust Brigade arrived
in time to assist in covering the retreat. The
pioneer corps also helped. Colonel Buckley
his arrived here wounded.
XXXVIIth Congress—First Session
Mr. Symms, (Pa.,) reported back the tax
bill from the Committee on Ways and Means.
The Senate had made 814 amendments, a
large number of these being of an unimport ant
character. In order to facilitate (WIE/Reaction
he recommended a general non -concurrence' in
all the amendments, and then asked for the
appointment of a committee of. conference.
Mr. COLFAX said he regarded a committee of
conference as a necessary evil, but at the same
time they ought to reduce the disagreeing
amendments to the smallest...possible number,
and send the latter to conferenoe. - He sug
gested that the bill would be severely 'criticised
and those who vote fcr it will have to answer
to • their constituents. He believed all the
athendmenta could be considered in three or
four days.
Mr. M i pitttna. said the Committee on Ways
and Means did not arrogate to itself the power
to_overrule the sense of the House. The pro
position of his colleague, (Mr. acmes) was
merely made for the dispatch of business.—
There was a special order for to-day , and to
morrow until the measure be disposed of. The
committee would not know what kind of a
supplement tariff to report. • .
Mr. Wyomm (Ky.,)'opposed the course re
commended by Mr. Smuts, on the ground
that the members would helve no opportunity
of expressing their dissent to offensive amed
meats, nor could they vote against them with
out voting against the entire bill. Mr. Smuts'
motion to non concur' with the Senate amend
ment, and asking for a committee of conference
was then adopted, yeas 80 nays 58.
The House concurred in the report of the
committee of conference on the disagreeing
amendment on the India appropriation bill.
Mr. Limn, (Conn.,) introduced a joint reso
lution recommending that, in addition to the
4th of July, the 14th of June and 17th of Sep
tember .be observed as public holidays. Tue ,
first: to commemorate the Declaration of Na
tional Independence, the second the adoption
our flag, and the third the formation of the
Constitution. • The resolution was tabled.
Hamm, (N. J.,) preiented the petition
of 117 merchants of New York city asking for
an extension of the thus allowed for warehouse
goods. '
CHICAGO, Jona 11
TEE MONEY liiiatKET.
Naw Yoex, June 12.
Sterling Exchange higher, at 16@164 per
Dent: ; premium stocks better. Chicago and
Rhode Island, 661; Illinois Central, 64, do ;
Bonds, 981 ; Michigan Southern, 681; IC T.
Central, 93i; Reading, &7f; Milwaukie and
Wiscionsin, 48; Missouri, eo. 64; U. a cow
pima, Be. $1.85 $1.06t do. •it,igeolliMil!
Deirry, 7 840,106 1 •
ANOTHER SEVERE FIGHT
WASHINGTON, June 11
[THIRD DESPATCH.]
PARTICULARS OF THE FIGHT:
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES.
- -
ARRIVAL OF TURPENTINE AND TAR
FROM NEW ORLEANS.
BO6TON, June 12.
The schooner Flying Dragon arrived at this
point this morning from New Orleans on the
22d ult. with 400 barrels of spirits of turpen -
tine and 300 barrel 4 of tar.
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH
PHILADELPHIA. June 12.
The flour market is very quiet ; 000 barr els were disposed of at $4 87i for S k Ins; wheat,
superfine. $5 for good prime extra, and $5 for
North-met extra family. Receipts are light.
Rye flour is steady at $8 25, and Corn meal at
$2 6 Wheat is selling in a small way at
$120125 for Red. 'Corn $1 80(41 88 for
White. Rye sells freely at 86®67c. Corn in
fair request, and 4,000 bushels yellow sold at
40c. for Pennsylvania, and 89e. for Delaware.
Provisions dull and declining. Mess Pork
sold at $U 50. Coffee is
,iine • sales of Rio at
140211, and /Atmaira 21424. Whisky
is steady at 241Q25.
BALTIMORE, June 12.
Flour quiet—sales of 1,606 bus. at $5 60 for
Howard street and extra Ohio. Wheat advan
cing. Corn dull -sales= of 11,600 bus: at a de
cline of 2c. for yellow. Rye unchanged. Pro
visions dull, but unchanged. Whiskey firm
at 261 c. for Ohio. Coffee steady at 20i020.10.
Flour heavy; 9,600 barrels sold at $6lOO
5 20 for Ohio State, and Southern are un
changed. Wheat ateady and less firm.—
Corn doll-86,000 bush. sold at 910$1 10 for
Chicago spring; $1 01131 Oil for Milwankie club;
$1 0801 1S for western. Corn unchanged—
sales of 60,00 bushels. Pork heavy $lO 964
$ll for mess, prime uncbarured. Lard un
changed. Whisky dull at 284024 i.
Marrieb.
On the 24th of May, 18112, by tbe Rev. Franklin Moore,
Mr. Liao. P. CHANDLER to ML s MAZY ORM; all of Morris
burg. •
[For the delicious cake accompanying the above no
tice, we return the *happy couple' , our hearty thank,.
.May their married life be calm and placid as the May
morn on widen they eetered into their new relation one
'o the other, and their affection never pale before the
lapse of tne, but rentalh"
'"free i.• the needle to the pole,
And died and constant as tbe ncr.bern ear."
And In the end—well, may the end atmensaftny take okra
of !Pelt I
Wmatisments_
OYES 1 0 YES
DESIRING to rest from the active cares
of trade, I have parsed the st re into the bands of
eon Joon T. St sminger, w bowill eon laws the' busi
ness as heretofore at the notion more, fark.2l, corner
of recond end Chestnut str eta in this City; where I
would respectfeily Gall the attentim of my friends and
the nubile ventrally to my large wok of new and second
hand Caoldtlng Dew and mead band farnbars, end as
.ndlesti variety of larval aril:lea alt of which will be sold
at the loWest aattlre prices. Oath will be paid lor all
*Moira In my Lae of badness.
- • PHIL'"? ENSIUNGEIit.
N. B. Crying seise, eel leg horses, vehicles, stock,
real es ate, sod they orrparty will be putmeoelly at
-tended to upon reaaonable terms, by ealtng at eo. 24,
earner ottincond and Liunnatit meets In id a 4117.
AND, BleB=ol/111,
My . A a-Ooeeer.
Jell-dlagitaor
AUDITOR'S NOTICE
HAVING been appointed auditor by
by the Court of ammo Phase( Droaphba aeons,
te swore d attibotioa of the aloney in court. made an a
cortaln writof Vendtrioat Pepoolor,'Ne 89 Apra T. IS6*,
oirecttd to the She/INi Tinge oottnty in the ale ti.e
Commonwealth of Peonsylvanla _
D.Y. I
win meet as these basin lea: aratnst tee real estate or
the aforesaid allaot D. Bs by, at -ray *fade 'on Third
;greet in the City of Harrisburg, on Wader the Nth
day of July sett at .10 &clock, atirtildt:plaoe acd
demo all persene latenurad oral eland if they deem
iroPe 2 r -iioawlw . .110011 Na etiv:Date
Jel
OA and see those nice and cheap Eht.
%a gars 11* prolamin', &a., at,
'01.9 S BOWMAN,
fen Carnar F, oat sad Karam akraeta.
PARE Cider Vinegar, wbioh we war. ant
to be made moiety from cider. jnetreatlved and for
We low by NICBOt trik ..O*MAN,
Jett Corner front and Mar,‘Ketretite.
LARGEt and extensive astentneut of
Q assware, Including Ta molar& °obit% DLitt;
bOria, &0., IC., sod °mythic , tor preserving at
_ aIOEKLi et B
Jen - Comer Prowl and *eke( streets.
WANTED --A cook at the City Betel
None need call editions won recommended.
Jell4Bo
OITY TAX,
NOTICE is hereby given, that the Common
Council of the City of Harrisburg, have
completed the levy and assessment of Taxes for
the year 1862, and that all persons shall be en
titled to an, abatement of
FIVE PER CENT.
on the amount of their respective City Taxes,
on payment of the same to JOHN T. WILSON,
Esq., City Treasurer, let his office in the new
Court House,) on•br before the2Oth day of June,
1862.
By order of the Common Council.
DAVID RABBIS,
jell•dtje2o -
ATTENTION FARMERS 1 •
13CYTRES, MATHS, GRAIN CRADLES,
. RAKES, ISOMIX SiONSLi sad EMUS In gram
Variety; to be had aaau. at
' OILISSICPS Eisrdware Store,
hlO dl[Opposite the Court ease.
NEW. MARBLE AND STONE YARD
HENRY BROWN
HAVING 'opened a MAB .
inac AND Errozrz
YARD on Canal Street, near emastant street ; *pp°.
alai the P nnaylvania named Depot, at. as this ma hod
of informing the cirasana of Harrtaoarg and vicinity that
be is prepared Co ao all ktoda of marble and atone m. , rt
to a superior manner, and on the moat reaaona We terms.
Jain d2tte,
. WE STUDY TO PLEASE.
Ef.WRY 0. SHAFFER, Paper Hanger,
- beefed °paned a Writ, near ani well selected
turWalt Paper and Window ha.les; at Lis new
store No. la Market street, nest to 811mmel a Kithusers
grocery near the Bridge, •
Oir Paper hanging personally attended to. All work
warranted. Jea dints
WANTED.
A T Harrisburg Car Manufactury six or
, eight g Ortpatters. • • jt&dliii,
LARZ TROUT.
J UST received a small Invoice of
MACKINAW LAKE .TROUT.
The Tuba; vary superior, and an* Price I'M km
WM. DOCK, J&, &CO
HAMS
1-7,000 LBS. Jersey Sugar Cured
Hams, :sods splendid' 11 of . Owego
Ow torn Coca:FedSugar Corot fiams,just received.
A , L iprlB W. DOA SE., & CO.
JUST RECEIVED.
A LARGE ASBO:RTMENT, of Family
214 L „Babies of different styles of binillng;at 900, $1 26
S 1 14 $2, 63,:4, 66 oadslo. Alto Pocket Biblqo dlr.
• rent stylotiod prima at • 4111111M1311'8 BoOltstore
ktbls y
VANILLA BEANS.
WE are offering for sale a splendid
quality' of irsolUs; Bean at tow prices, by the
mud, ounce or
• 'MUMS DRUG STORR.
• 91 Merkel Strout.
SITABD. 3 & LIPINErId. Pickles and
"Tr. Wm" ibr sale atJOILIT WX/Plk awl
Medical Storekeepers.
The following extract of an, act of
itttelAtion to the appointment of NI
keepers is published for the inforoi
sons desirous of applying for sucb,
AN ACT to authorize the appair,,...,.;
- peal storekeepers and chapl a i n ,' '.. '
Bett enaded by the Senate and 11, '
.. • 0,
dote of the Einited Sista of
semUed, That the Secretary of War r
to add to the medical depart c,.
medical storekeepers, not exc..e4
s
bar, who shall have the pay ant -;al
military storekeepers in the
department, who shall be
or druggists, who shall give tr
rity required by existing
keepers in the quartermaster
who shall be stationed at .
necessity of the army may
That the provisions of this ; h t
force only during the contiou
sent rebellion. Approved Xl.ty
IL The following are the
will govern the app , iintment c ,
keepers under the first sectioa ..; t
act of Congress:
1. A board of not less than
officers will be assembled by tt,.
War to examine such applicant:
be authorized to appear t , b , t ,
2. Candidates, to be elizit.h. t
shall be not less than taeurv-ii.
than fortyyears of age ; half p
physical ability to perform
facnorily, and shall present wit. •
LIOOB satisfactory evidence of I:
eater.
Nnw Your, June 12
NEW YORK AND B
ONLY el 3n.
VIA East Pennsylvania
ring the whole monti...!
Excursion tickets at th ,
had at the office of the t hov •
ing, good for all purcilge[
EDWARD M
je94tje2B
_
STRAWBERRIES
Strawberries by the Quail, OH ur Ri
ORDERS sent through •
or !eft at the lower Stark (n I
Dray. mo Dings, wilt re promp ip .
Aka they can Pe had at th, pmc „t
day, fresh plcxed from the r:0 , 5
Ke none Farm a ."
102
THE general variety (,f g ,
Jesting the
TOILET ,
be found at Kellar's,
i
BIT:LTA RI)
UNION RES'P it
AND BOWLING 1,:t.1,
NO. 119 MARKET STREET,
TEE subscribers having en2c:c
° building at the abo7o pu.se, ' •
tea 411076 indicated, beg to call toe a orta - :
tic to the following
TKO RltarAintaxt, es the first aotq war, •
attached, le fitted up in viral-cia3a • .•
tisane be 'suppled with the best Viz ,
the Atlantic cities, together with terrtow
lands of game In season. Oysters Norco!
style, and meals to be had at oil
the celebrated hrewerles to the caicir;
nand.
The Ten-pin Alley, or Bowling
and contains three alleys of modern
the lovers of this healthy esercle • eat:
The Billiard Saloon is upstairs —e''2
and sontains three marble top c
We; squid to any made.
Ratriaburg ban mug reit the want of
Mica of thls hid, and t preprn-tor, .tr
to conduct it in n a quiet and orderly VULG....in! 7:
17thilig in their power to make a a 1.1. s too
they her* to receive a liberal sutra or
a3-dtf thl r. ARIADo
.1
FBEAUTIFUL TISSUE PA l'r 11,
stars, pinta,
OR covering Looklol, GI tseA,
~c7i:,r,
rimer, CrOgialerlting C. i, p., VOLD 1.::,,,,--,
• t and oat so U w lai7g over Er n,73
mr3l. circles or fccoo,:s. For sa.r 3; ...,,,r
rCIIEIe rAi'r: F , Lt': ' ,---
RAB ClDER.—Constautly
113:1 , /
very superior article of M.II. . mos cipcs;;
Tr EL
LER'S DRUG- BTOAE is the PIF
A SUPERIOR lot of Dan sud
...Qs. PAK 'Mink as ilto Om of JON 10.
N r----
4 "tierhseme u t s
M
8. Candidates will lks requir.•• •
factory examination in th , l
of a good English educatio'i, IL
materia medics; and to g i g -., ,
possess the requisite busiurb
the position.
4. The board will report t”
War the relative merit of the
amined, and they will rtrel7,.
accordingly.
6. When appointed, each rta
will be required to give b ! •
of $40,000 before ho
on the performance of hi: .1 A , .
By order of the Secretary ot ,
1 v
A board of Medical
lion of applicants wilt r
of Washington on the B ret d
Untie in session one mouth
Applications to app ir
should be addreo-ed to ti a S-,
Surgeon General' s 0171 Ce,
GENERAL INSURANCE
FiRE, MARINE AND
of HIT
Third Street, betweee
berry Alley,
lIAR,Evs3t
WILLIAM 13 L" F. 14 I
A S Agent for the
well blown w
float loss or damage oy 9 e,
pettedly, On property elLtu ,
Also Dutirsve on 1.174?.9 ID;
Apply personally or hi
THE DELIWAI, min:AL
SAFETY INSURANCE COUP
INCO RPOF:A TEI.) 15.:5
CAPITAL. A . ......
110 , 1 IIitk:RANCE
COMPANY ot. ER
OF OIL 414:11.11i t
INCORPORATED 17 94
CAPITAL AND Ass..T , .$ 1
THE GIRARD LIFE
ANNUITY AND TROT COMP AN
or - pa LAD
INCORPORAJED 1;
CAPITAL AND A;.NEIS .. ...E,
eat4.el-rd-inlo
FROM READIN
POMADE HO NU (.1
FOR FIXIN , : THE
MOUSTAC H E'
SE 1 r