PI pailp Edtgrapt. PEOPLE'S UNION STATE TICKET. AUDITOR GENERAL: THOMAS E. COCHRAN, of York County SURVEYOR GENERAL WILLIAM S. ROSS, of Lucerne County. UNION COMITY NOMINATIONS C 014611699, WILLIAM J. ROBINSON, of Dauphin county. (Subject to the decision of the Congressional Conferees.) ASSEMBLY, THOMAS G. FOX, of Hummelstown. JAMES FREELAND, of Millersburg. DISTRICT ATTORNEY, • A. JACKSON HERR, of Harrisburg. COUNTY COMMISSIONER, JACOB MILLEISEN, of East Hanover. DIREOTOR OF IME POOR, DANIEL SHEESELY, of Lower Swatara. COUNTY AUDITOR, DANIEL LEHR, of GMTZLOWIL COUNTY SURVEYOR, THOMAS STROHM, of Linglestown. CORONER, JESSE B. HUMMEL, of Hummelstown. HARRISBURG. PA Thursday Afternoon, September 4, 1802. PENNSYLVANIA, SS. In the Name and by the Authority OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA, ANDREW G. CURTIN. Governor of the said Commonwealth. A PROCLAMATION WHEREAS, in the present position of af fairs, it is expedient that measur• Should be taken to arm and prepare our people for defence : Now, therefore, I do Earnestly recommend the immediate 'ormation thioughoiit the Com mouwaalth, of voluweEr companies and regi m• nts, in conformi , y with the militia act of 1858. itra.s will he distributed to the organ:- matt es so to be mimed, agreeably to the pro visit us of that act. It 141 further recommended, that, in order to give due opportunities for drill and instruction, all places of kindness be closed daily at three o'clock, P so that persons employed there in mil, after that hour, be at liberty to attend to their military duties. The cheerful eine' ity with which the men of Pennsylvania have hitherto given th. =elves to the gervit e of the country, has prom(' heavily on her military resources. lam reluctant to ask her people to Retinae further burthens, but as their safety requires that they should do so, It is in their behalf that I put forth the recom mendations herein contained, and urge a prompt compliance with them Given under my hand and the great Seal of the State, at Harrisburg, this Fourth day of Sep- Umber, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-two, and of the Commonwealth the eighty-seventh. B 1 THZ Goviasoa. ELI SLIFEB, Sioretary of Commonwealth OEN. .KBARNEY NOT KILLED The Neu , York Evening Post has received in telligence of despatches sent to a gentleman in Newark, N. J., (that Gen. Kearney, reported as having been killed in the late battles, is alive and in the hands of the traitors. We trust that the fact of his being alive may be fully substantiated, and that the gallant one-armed brave may be speedily restored to the country and the service. NOMINA2IONS FOR THE LEGISLATURE. The friends of the Government, throughout the state, are selecting the very ablest and most loyal men in each district, as candi dates for the Legislature. These nominations are made solely on the merit and character of the individuals themselves merits looking to a devotion to the Union, and a character for loyalty which will shrink from no responsibili ty in the service of the country. In Lancaster county, we notice that the !Awl& of the Government have formed a reg ular Union county ticket, while their nomina• tions for the assembly are composed of men as mach distinguished for their personal virtues as for their public reputation and popularity. This portion of the ticket is composed of the following gentlemen: Hon. IL C. Lehman, N. Mayer, Dr. H. Bow man, Hon. B. Champneys. Mr. Lehman was a member of the last Leg islature, and Judge Champneys is well known as a very prominent Union Democrat, who has served several terms in both branches of the Legislature. In Centre county, William Hard.; 'has re ceived the nomination of the Union conven tion. If the people of Centre desire to be faithfully represented, they will of course elect Mr. Harris, because no more capable, consci entious or experienced man could possibly be entrusted with the interests of any constituency. We believe, too, that Mr. Harris is decidedly the mnet popular man in Centre county ; but we rely more upon the integrity of the cause be represents, than mere personal popularity for hi• success. Holmes itsclay is the candidate of the Union men of 1111111 in county. He is up to the fall standard of loyalty, and has the independence an d integrity to make a useful and popular reprosentattro. OUR GENERALS IN THE FIELD. One of the most humiliating evidences of the petulance and ingratitude of a certain class of the American people, who presume to represent the progress and inteligence of the nation, is the manner in which the officers in command of our armies in the field, have been criticised and condemned. This criticism and condemna tion are not merely confined to the press repre senting a certain class,but it extends to that class of people themselves, who assume an exclusive ness, and make it their boast that they give tone and force to American sentiment. Thus, we daily bear one General after Another condemed by men who never were in sound of a battle—who are totally ignorant of the science of war—who have no knowledge of the manual of arms. Yet these men cooly set themselves up as critics. They arrogantly assume to judge when a wing should be turned—when a charge should be made —or a retreat ordered—in a contest of which they may have just received the first tidings. We hear men daily deciding upon the merits of our officers in the field, until the conversation of such has become the greatest bore of our ex istence, and we are almost led to desire never to see or hear such as these while the conflict lasts. The system is radically wrong, unjust and ungenerous, which thus assails, overhauls, ele vates or condemns, at will and on impulse, the leaders of our armies in the field. It is crest- lag heartburnings and dissentions, where confi dence and unanimity would otherwise prevail. It is making martyrs of those who should be left unmolested in the service of the country and the persuit of the it own honor—while it as often seeks to make heroes of others who scarce ly deserve the title of man. It has done more to demoralize the army, defeat our plans and postpone ours success, than the strategy and courage of the rebels combined; and if it is to be persisted in, it must eventually contribute to our defeat and disgrace. Those who are not in the army—who are not standing up with their bosoms bared to the fire of the enemy—are not the men to criticise or condemn the conduct of those who are per forming such service. We may have the liber ty of speech, but we have no right to make it a medium of abase of those who are doing what they can for the country. We may claim the freedom of the press, but that freedom can not be converted, with impunity, into a licensa to assail the men or the measures' which the government deem bat for its own preservation. Let us, then, be patient with our servants. They have "a hard road to travel,"' and a rough field in which to toil. Let us be forbearing with those in command of the armies in the field. Let us rely on their valor and judge ment, until we have proven ourselves, at least, equal to what we claim to decide upon ; or actual participate in scenes of which we presume to judge. When we do this, we will gain a better idea of merit and of justice, and the actions of our Generals in the field will be come more and more worthy of our confidence and our commendation. OUR EFFORTS The fact that the army which so proudly left ashington city a few mouths since, and which promised such glorious results, the fact that this army is now back In almost its old position , should not be and is not a reason to doubt the ultimate success of our cause. Men have only failed. The nation is as strong as ever—as in• exhaustible and as enthusitetic as when the first note of treason was sounded by the booming cannon belching their flaming missies against Fort Sumter. What we may suffer in inortifi. Con at the changes thus wrought by the fall ing back of our forces, the enemy will suffer in real disadvantage, because the sooner the con• flint is brought to the loyal states, the sooner this struggle will be ended. Had the rebels occupied Pennsylvania a long as our troops have been in Virginia, their retreat would have been as hopeless and as destructive as that of Napoleon from Moscow. While we have lost immensely, the rebels have not gained what can be seriously regarded as an advantage. They have been drawn from their capital and its entrenchments, while we have fallen back upon the seat of rour own government and its fortifications. They have been madly impelled forward by the want of provisions and the scarcity of the munitions of war. They have gained no victory, while they leave the strong est position they have yet occupied. This is at least our view of the subject, and confiding as we do, in the devotion of the people and their power to resist any force which the rebels can hurl against the capital or its long line of defence, we will not despair, we will not give up, but cling in faith and assurance to our hopes of a speedy and decided change of the gloom which now seems to have taken hold of those who have never been over sanguine of our success. THE Sac= ORGAR, is as bitter as gaul since its proprietors have tested the power of a gov-. ernment whose patronage they so long enjoyed and abused. It is daily engaged in assailing all who profess to give that government a loy al and sinceje support. One of its dodges is to claim for the Democratic party such a support of the war as has been conducive of all the suc cess which we have yet achieved, and without which success in the future would be entirely hopeless. Of the truth of these assertions, we are only able to judge so far as our own knowl edge goes, and as the secesh °rim claims to ba a competent witness on the suqect, it must also serve as a fit illustration of the truth of what it asserts. If we are to judge the entire Demo cratic party, then, by the heroes who eject their spleen through the columns of the secesh organ, and whoderive their support from its patronage, the services of the Democracy in this war are of very little account. It will not be denied that a certain released Lieutenant Colonel never even smelt powder—never devoted a month at a time to his regiment—was always absent when a light threatened—and resigned when the war became a work of bloody earnestness. His ex pense to the country, with that of his kin, was not lees than three or four thousanddollars, for which no service, that could be called such, was ever rendered to the nation. It is this kind of Democracy that we charge with being faithless to the country. Between this and the Demo cracy that is loyal, there is as much difference as %lie is between the purity of a swill tab pentteptuanin Watlp ttlegrapth eliursbat) lfternoons figAtmbtr 4, 1862. and "the old, oaken bucket that hangs in the CM The secesh organ is also ashamed of its own abuse of the gallant Gen. Pope, and now seeks to justify its failure in estimating the power of a great General, by perverting the language of those who have been and are the defenders of that soldier. Bad Gen. Pope been reinforced, as he should have been and was ordered to be, he would have defeated the rebels, and lit erally looked upon the backs of his enemies. The only complaint which has honestly been made against Gen. Pope, comes from that class of semi-secession sheets in the north, that have been worshipping the " military genius" and the " military power" which has been the author of all that now seems dis astrous to our cum. Had ; Pope been sustained —bad others in command obeyed the orders of the President, by forwarding the reinforce ments which Gen. Pope was assured were to be sup,..lied, the rebels would have : been driven beyond Richmond, Pope would have been in the rebel capital,and the country electrified by a vic tory which would have forever settled the peace of the nation. • AS it is, Gen. Pope is yet des tinedtd• achieve this result. But, whether he doetriiii or not, what be haS already done, stamps him as-a soldier a head and shoulders higher than those whose commissions happen to give them priority in command. The Aggregate Quota of Troops to be Raised by Each County. The - following table shows the number of troops to be furnished by the several counties. The quotas embrace all the troops called for since the commencement of the war, excepting the three months' men. The number assigned to each county will be apportioned among the several townships, and boroughs and precincts by the Commissioner, in accordance with the enrolment ;' and he will credit each township, precinct, &c., with the men already furnished, as shown by the enrolment, and make a draft for the number necessary to fill the quota, un less volunteers are fuanished on or before the day fixed for the draft. Credit cannot be al lowed for teamsters, mechanics in the army, men enlisted in regular army or marines, or for volunteers enlisted in regiments of other States. Several counties have already raised their full quotas, and there will be no draft in such coun ties. The troops to be raised for the old regi ments are not embraced in-this table. There will probably be a special draft for those. Adams 1,646 A11egheny......10,69 3 Armstrong— ... 2,124 Beaver 1,725 Bedford 1,677 Berke 5,532 Blair 1,634 Bradford- 2,944 Bucks— • • 3,753 Butler 1,986 Cambria 1,725 Cameron.— .... 278 Carbon 1,260 Chester 4,397 Centre. 1,698 Clarion 1,604 Clinton 1,046 Clearfield . 1,118 Columbia 1,447 Crawford 2 886 Cumberland ... 2,877 Dauphin 2 861 Delaware 1,801 Erie 2,928 lilk 844 Fayette 2,868 Franklin 2,485 Fulton 688 Forest. 62 Greene 1,436 Huntingdon ... 1,669 Indiana 1,992 Jefferson .. 1,083 PHILADELPHIA NATIONAL UNION NOM INATIONS. The National Union party; composed of dele gates from both political parties, tree to the Union and Constitution, have nominated the following gentlemen ak candidates for the re spective offices designated : Mayor—Alexander Henry. City Solicitor—F. C. Brewster. District Attorney—Wm. B. Mann. Receiver of Taxes—J. C. Reich. MOS/S,I3IONAL. First Congressional District—Adjourned anti September 16th, in order to permit the loyal Democrats to name the candidate. Second Congressional Diiitrict—Charles O'- Neill. Third Congreisional District=L. Myers. Fourth Congressional District—William D. Kelley. Fifth Congressional District—Result not known. SENATORIAL. Second Senatorial District—Jacob Ridgway Fourth Senatorial District—George Connell THE LEGISLATIVE TIOZIT. First District—Wm. Foster. Second—Morton A. Everly Third—Thomas T. Willis. Fourth—Samuel J. Bea. Fifth—Joseph Moore, Jr. Sixth—Dr. Charles Clin,gbans. SeVenth—Thomas Cochran. Eighth—:James N. Kerns. Ninth—John A. Barton. Tenth—Samuel S. Panooast. Eleventh—Adjourned without a nomination. Twelfth—Luke V. Suplee. Thirteenth--Japes Holgate. Fourteenth—Alexander Cummings. Fifteenth—William F. Smith. Sixteenth—Edward G. Lee. Seventeenth—Chas. R. Abbot. The gentlemen nominated will receive the hearty support of the loyal voters of the city, and will triumph over secession sympathisers. The Breckinridgers have nominated Samuel J. Randall In the First Congressional District, and in the Second Col. C. J. Biddle, who dis graced an Uncle Sam's uniform for several Months around Washington, but when the time bad arrived to move in au enemy's country and, perhaps do battle, he graciously resigned his position. The loyal citizens of Philadelphia will tender him a traitor's reward. Tun Vitamowr ELK:aim—The state election of Vermont was held-.on Tuesday. The vote vote was light, and pretty much all one sort of ticket. Everybody elected so far as ascertained is Union, and it is probable that there will not be half a dollen peace Democrats in the legiels• tare. The following are the state officers chosen : Governor, Frederick , E. Holbrook ; Liecitenaut-Govenior, Paul Dillingbian ; Treats- Page.. .... 000e. t '; ' '' ''' ,: :: - -..;''. 4";-'' . . 1 -` '. ''''. : Via . : .- --1 9r,' , 7/ 1 7/'' ' -;;L* "- , - . ..,.. 7. ~ . . 1 " . --- '-. ' ''' , 44l Tr. ‘' 'l' ' i-....-: -,,,,: -• r :" From Washington. APTIJRE OF CITELINE IN THE LATE BATTLE Arrival of Paroled Prisoners. GENERAL EWELL DEAD• GENERAL LEE WOUNDED, WASHINGTON, Sept. 4. Information has been received that persons from this city with others were yesterday on the late battle field at Bull Bun, attending to the hurlal of the ditaii, and 'about twenty stir _ geons were with thif party.. It is further stated that a number of our cit izens including Government clerks were un doubtedly captured on Monday by the enemy, who were engaged in harrassing banks on his retreat. There going on the battle field with out a flag of truce rendered them unsafe. The paroled prisoners who have arrived here say that they were well treated by the enemy, except in the matter of food, and further that report was prevalent among the enemy that Gen. Ewell had died of his wounds and General Lee was yesterday slightly wounded in the hand by an accidental discharge of his own pistol. MILS SUBSISt ON GUNN CORN "NOTHING TO WEAR." Jackson not in the Late Battles, HE IS MARCHING ON WIPER'S FERRY Ratters in Washington and Alexandria Special Dispatch to the Press.] I have just had a conversation with Adjutant Qnidno, of the 49th Georgia Volunteers, who is a native of Poland, and an intelligent man, and was rather more communicative than most of the prisoners recently captured in Virginia. He was taken, with nineteen others of his regiment, last night, within a mile of Fairfax Court Boum, while stationing pickets during a violent stoum of wind' and rain, and, through the darkness, accidently wandered into our lines, where they were suddenly surrounded and captured by our troops. Juniata. 959 Lancaster . 6,860 Lawrence 1,866 Lebanon 1,766 Lehigh 2,878 Lucerne 5,368 Lycoming 2,209 Mercer. 2,186 McKean 629 Mifflin 963 Monroe 987 Montgomery... 4,147 Montour 771 Northampton.. 2,810 Norttulinber'ld. 1,709 Perry 1,843 Philadelphia... 88,414 Pike 48& Potter 674 Schuylkill..... 6,304 Snyder 890 Somerset....... 1,683 , Sullivan 241 ' Susquehanna... 2,167 Dogs 1,887 Union 837 Venango....... 1,482 Warren, 1,118 Washington .._ 2,788 Wayne .. 1,892 Westmoreland:. 8,178 Wyouting.6..., 744 York 4,006 ant tun out of the nineteen rebels taken bad shoes upon their feet, seventeen of them having marched for three days with their feet tied up in rags! and so slashed by pieces of rock and stubble that these very rags were clotted together with blood. BEMIS SUBSIST UPON GRIM 00.1. N. Quldno assured me that the rebel army had subdsted iteelt in its recent marches almost en tirely upon green corn, what they call " roast log ears" in the South, and in consequence of their self-denial, in enduring every halt:11161p and privation, they were the more confident of tweet's. He says neither Jackson nor Ewell was in the recent battles, but •Johnson, Lee and Long street, commanded in the different engage ments, and this, he says, we might have known from the fact that communications have been sent to General Pope several times by General Lee. Only about one-half of the entire army was around Washington, he says, as far as his means of knowing goes, but reinforcements were continually arriving from the South. The rebels are heartily sick of the war, but say they are determined to achieve their " indepen dence." General Pope's immense army trains arrived in Alexandria today, and it is evident that he is falling back within his entire army. It is said that great movements are now being exe cuted in various directions, fof which it may not be proper for me to speak It is said that no troops arrived in Washing ton to-day from the North, and, as a natural consequence, rumor is at work, and with one of her thousand tongues proclaims that Gen. Wool left Baltimore at at daylight this morn ing, with 30,000 men en route for Harper's Ferry. It is alsosaid, in confirmation of this that Stonewall Jackson is undoubtedly march ing upon that point with a latgwarmy. Alexandria and Washington are nothing more than vast hospitals ; every vacant church, public hall, or- private residence has been seised and filled with sick and wounded soldiers, and the streets of the former place are said to be filled with straggling soldiers and skulkers from our armies. THY COTOBOXIS. . The Potomac river is filled with gunboats There are several lying between this city and Alexandria. LOSS OF THE 11. S. STEAMER ADIRONDACK THE CREW SAVED. NEW Foss, Sept. 4. The U. S. steamer Adirondack was totally lost on the 24th ult. off Abaco. The crew were saved. The Adirondack was a new frigate of twelve guns, recently built bete, and sailed with sealed orders on the 17th of July, under command of James Ganaevert. Flour dull but without change, sales 1,500 bbls. at $5 for superfine, $5.50 for extra, and $5,75(456 for extra family ; receipts light. Bye flour selling at $8.50, and corn meal at $8.12 ; there is a good demand for wheat, and 10,000 bushels sold at $1.27®51.30 for red, and $1.38041.53 for white ; new rye selling at 704720. and 75®77c. for old ; corn active and 80,000 bushels yellow sold at 70(475c. ; oats steady at 85c. for new and 60c. for old. Provisions held firmly,sales mess pork at $ll.- WW2 ; hams at B}@llc. ; sides at 61c. and shoulders 6c.; lard firm at 91c.; coffee, sugar and molasses dull ; 500 bbls. whisky sold at 83 83}c. New Yogi, Sept. 4. Flour firm—sales of 14,000 bble. at $4 95® 6 50 for state, $5 65@6 65 for Ohio, and $6 80 as 80 for Southern. Wheat quiet—sales of 8 4 5,000 at $1 12(41 21,f0r Ohicagospring, $1 16@1 28 for Milwaukee dub, and $1 81® 184 wr red Western. Corn dull—sales of 40,000 bus. at 60e. Pork firm at $ll 60. Lind steady at 8(§1100. %bay dull at &lc. hold ers demand 84c. Bus/atom, Sept. 4. Flour quiet.. Wheat steady for white ; red is hi t h e r, at 8841 88. Corn adYnntiog Whisky dull 1106 --- Wilre 8007&i, 34 ythow 08e189. Oat! steady. ==:: .........-.-.. FROM THE REBEL LINES. I=l WASHINGTON, Sept. 8 A SHOKLINB EST JA.CIDON /IN YEII VALLST COMIUG HOKE STAILTLIING RVXORS THE TWJH MIME MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. PEEELADEPHIA, Sept. 4 New York Money Market. Nsw YORK, Sept. 4 Stocks are better,-Chicago and Rock Island 66i, Illinois Central Railroad Illinois Cen tral Bonds $lOO, Michigan tiontnern 68, Read ing 59k, American gold $1 17j, Treasury 7 8-10 $1 03. Illarritlt On the Ist, by the Rev. Franklin Moore, Mr. DALLAS M. 13sasa to Miss MARY JANE WYANT, both of this city. Wird In Shamokin township, Northumberland Co., Pa., of cancer, on the lat inst., LAVINA, wife of Jacob E. Muench, Esq., aged 37 years and 6 months. New 'Abtertisemtnts. WANTED.—At the Buehler House, a msn swirl thoroughly understands the business of barkeepog. To such a person steady employment wilt be given. sept.3-dat CAVALRY RECRUITS WANTED. HE undersigned baying been author ize 4 to rate a company of cavalry in a - clrdwee with the I scent requtaiti of the War Department, is ce• sirona of obtaining ABLE BODIED INTFLLIGENT YOUNG MEN who have had experience as horseman with a view of ftiltrg rtu said company immee i YOUII Z men of Dauphin comity who would rather volunteer than to be drafted should remember that ;his is the time t o mak e a free will offering of them services to their country. By doing so they will receive a bounty of $5O from the county, $25 from the Urovernment, $l3 being one mcntha pty in envenom:id a premium or Et, and at the end of tae war writ receive a bounty of $75. JASIEB Of IWr N, Capta'n. Ofene in Third Street a few doors above Market slreet, Harrisburg. sepc3-0101. PUBLIC SALE. IN pursuance of an Order of the 0 plum' Court of Dalipbie co inty, will be eirpoied to sale, On Saturday, the 11th Day of October, on the mansion premi3es— 1.. All that measuage and tract or land situate in East I liar over township in sail county, both& dby lands of mthob Petty, Henry lickert, J. cob 'Steely and John. Lin- gm, containing one hunlrt d an I twelve acres, be the game more or less, there .n • rec et a larga two story stone owelling house, and Large bank bare, wagon shed, corncribs, smoke L 5.,.:: n 1 other buildings. ant al- o one other new two story frame dwelling Louse, with basements ac. There is an excelerat sprite or never failing water at each of the dwe tinge, and a goof t ump also at the stone house. This prop s sin le arout ball a mile from the Harr sbure and Juries owo r, ad and about thirteen miles from liatri burg, Tnere is a good orchard of exceilr nt mutt on the - pi relines, and about ten aer a of good timber lan I. Thl ran rider is lin ear a high irtat e of cultivaima ant fences in goo I le. pair. a ltogether ale is one of the moot tieeirabm farms in th = 00 ghborbood 2 Alto at tee acme time and place, a certain tract or land. 'sittutth In the same township, ad ioioing lands of William !Carts, John Widmer, Mane is Creek and adaza Bethink, containing eleven acres, be the same more or e•s Tris land n wrli timbered aid is susceptible of being made Road farm hnl, or meadow. 3. also at the some time and place, a tract or unim proved len , etude ore the Eoooad mountain lo the sane township, adminlog lauds of Michael bstrier and ramnel Etty der, Jam Kelm, Famucl Liugle ud °theta e rosining treaty se es, ortre,mr less. Thl. land Is welt timbered. late the e•iate of Benjamin hei 31, dec'd. Bale to a mmenr e at ten A. M. or said day, when att meanee will be Or n and enuditii ns of sale made known by Ji 411. 1 L MiLsl. Adninidratcr of Penjamia Kelm, o.e.'d. Harrisburg, nept. 2,1362. wawa am NOTION: TO BRIDGE BUILDERS. THE undersigned Commissioners of Dan l. phin county, Pa., solicit proposals for the rebuilding of seven bridges acmes Swatara Creek. One at Lautermich's Fording. One at Union Deposite. One at or near Hummelatown, called the Red bridge. One ht Hummelstown—the late Turnpike bridge. One at Jacob Behm's Mills. One near Felix Niekley's, called Island Ford. One at Middletown, being the Turnpike bridge. All the bridges were swept away by the late freshets. Bidders will have the advantage of all the stone now remaining at the piers and abut ments of the old bridges ; all of which will be respectively the property of the contractors All bids must be indorsed on the specifications, which are printed and can be obtained at the office of the County Commissioners at Harris burg as early as the sixth of this month. Let ting to be done on the 17th day of September instant, at two o'clock, P. M., at the office aforesaid: Two of the spans, with the whole of the flooring of the Lautermilch's bridge, lies near the site and will be the property of the contractor. JACOB BERM, GEORGE GARVEBICH, HENRY MOYER, Commissioners. sept3-d&wtd Joule Mute% Clerk THE undersigned offers at Private E s ale that valuable tavern stand, (now occupied by J. w. etober ) satiated in the village of Proress, Dau phin county, Pa., anti two miles and a half northeast of Bardsbu'r This stand has an excellent run or cus tom. The buildings are entirely new and very substantal. a well of Lever failing water near the 41,:0r, togetner with a floe variety of fruit and ornamental trees. The property will be add cheap. For Lerma &c., address JOHN ENRICH, Progress P. a P. B. Goo stabling attached to the premises._ PUBLIC SALE OF VALUABLE REAL ESTATE!! Will be sold at Public Sale, on Friday, the sth day of SEPTEMBER, 1882, A N the premises, situate in Derry town. ship, Dauphin county, about 1 mile from Bookers ?Me, two mdes irom Campbellstown, cue mile from Derry station, on the Lebanon Valley railroad, on the public road, leading tetherfro e Hceve shoe turnpige to the Colebrook road. all eal estate of Daniel Fish burn, deed., comsisting of a first rate LIMESTONE FARM, containing 117 acres, niore at less, ail acres of which le good wocd high's and the balance claired, well tnced, and in a late of cultivation, thereon erected a large two story FRAME HOUSE, g e e , and a large bank barn, CO by 86 feet, and 20 feet high, a large soots Out hnee, wipe iced, ler go stone hog pen, and fewo out buildings &pump wi h a never ittitir.g well ater' eny 27 feet deep at the door, with a first rate clot ru under roof at the out house, with ruining water cm the firm. also a Seat ate orchard of choirs font trees, seperitely f•nced with seven feet p sting. There s also on the farm a lime tilo ' with an abundance of limestone, and it is one of the beet sunatons in the oguntry for the We of lime. 7bh p• openly adioing lands of Jrcob Hereto', CPl's Giugarkk, Oats John Gingericho Jonas Mi ler, Joseph Hershey and David Beret, is ehnetei in one of the beet terming dietricts in the State, convenient to mitts, a ores, sch.ol nooses and chum' as, and Is one rt the most de sirable farms In the eounty, and well worth the atten tion of cap% idate. also, 14. the MEW t'me and piece, Ate adrei of good CHESTNUT SPROUT LAND, Situate 2, 4 tales from the 'farm, adjoining lands a °Lao minor, 4,e0, go 13a h omit others Perm I wish ziL6 to I - I,w the props ty. can mil on the littem*a. sin , 0 irmtaeataa at to o'clock a, It. s et Rawl day, *lee 11 4041-ace in/ be Wee muta cendtba s triaus ,nown ap BANJAILIA 1 11:# 1 8011.11;kgisaq r, neeml ttw TWIDAIOI , I WFFRE 1-A Fresh and iarg° "Tar """"Airx:713,117,14 GAIETY 10810 HALL. GAIETY MUSIC HALL GAIETY MUSIC HALL I GAIETY MUSIC HALL I Walnut Street between 2d and 3d• THOUSANDS WONDER. THuUSANDS WONDER. WE'LL TRY. • SEE THE TALEN 1. SEE THE TALENT. MISS KATE FRANCES. MISS KATE FRANCES. MISS KATE FRANCES. HAS ARRIVED. HAS ARRIVED. UNION STAR SISTERS UNION STAR SISTERS are engaged at an immense etpeuse acd 'will appair this evening in conjunction with beautiful anti vo calist and dausnises. EDWIN HYDE, irtte of the New Bowery Theatre, New York, it, ht; :bak•pearean Itcadilu s, Burlesques, Comte Bongs, he. MISS MOLLIE FIELDING. MISS MOLLIE FIELDING. MISS KATE ARCHER. MISS KATE ARCHER. MISS JULIA EDWARDS. MISS JULIA EDWARDS. and the GAIETY MI 4BTREL Dick Berthelon Jake Budd, Dan Howard. Mast Edwards , J H. Hanoi. Drat Vanzart, T. H. Hopis. Tem Murray and Bob Edwards. also numerous maxillaries, with new costumes, new acts a.. ADIdISNIVI N. B —Owing to the great expanse occurred by the management in obtaining three arti-ti. he is Obligel to raise the price a trifle higher, h Fug ibis wif meet with the approbatian of nay calrGlll3. 808 EDWARD 3, r. oie Proprietor and Manager. SANFORD'S OPERA HOUSE• Third Street, Below Market, OPEN EVERY EVENING S ANPORD'S GREAT STAR TROUPE OF MINSTRELS. Will appear at the above hall, in a grand whinge of Singing, Dancing, Near Acts, Burlesques &0., presenting to the pnelic the best ervert.lxinient in the oity. The laughable i-ke eh of MESMERISM. PRO 7 FSBOR SUBJECTS Doors open at 754 o'clock to cqminence at 8 Admis sion 2.5 me, r heAra chairs 40 Carery 16 . ts., Private B •aes 60 eta. Beats can be sccortd without Oars charge. r Ihriher particulars Ef CO small bills. au2o.dur HEADQUARTERS, PENNSYLVANIA MILITIA, RIIROEON GILNERAL'S ORME, • Harrisburg, August 16, 1862. STATE MEDICAL BOARD OF PENNSYLVANIA. HE State Medical Board will meet in the HALL. OF 1112 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, at Harrisburg; on ThIUIiSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11th, 186 - 2, and sit one day for the examination of candidates for the post of Assist +nt Surgeon in Pennsylvania Regiments. Candidates will register their names at the Hall at 8 • st., and none but those present punctually at 9 A M., will be examined. Citizens of Pennsylvania of good ltraith and capable of active service in the field, can alone be received. By order of A. G. CUBTIN, Governor and Commander in Chief. HENRY H. SMITH, attl6-deodtd Surgeon General, Pena's. TO TRH PATRONS OF TRH JONES ROUSE. Joars' Rocas, Harrisburg, September 2, nal .11AVING disposed of my entire inter- OA in the JONES' WINS to Mr. J. N. thOiel- An of erheiter couoty, oefo,e retiring I cannot resist item tendering my ttan.s to toe public coat ma is this. eet.bilsomenc the Racitog popular hotel of the acts Capital, for so many hare, end bespeas Mg tor my successor the same liberal hupp3n waicn 1 ever received, In the asttlement of my business I will necessarly be pr.sent n the Ake of the hots I f:r sumo tame to come, a here twill be pleased to meet Elf old friends sea former guests, sod introduce th m Is my SUWee sor. The patine and friends of the J ties' House, will end Mr. lteClel an an us bate, liberal and sccomodating man of business, wheat ambition it Is to preserve the reputation of the eatabli h cent over which he now presides, and to make 11 . 1tiil further wertky of generous topi:et. Wk. 1.14, CPV e ELY. a,i><d2t FOR THE SOLDIERS. ANHNtteaVlrilit opene d a ER ETOttiot, of WRITING CASES. Expressly manufactured for the soldiers. PORE FOLIOS, POCKET INK STANDS' PENCILS, -PENS AND WRITING MATERIALS OF EVERY VARIETY, • SOLD AT REDUCED RATES, sept3-dimew e y: ~ ~}: AllEPlanted by some experienced gard. miters ia eagaat , Aeotembar and October, m pro fare,nee to a , y• oth r 118eSOLI, and with great owes. A floe amertment at the he. cone Maury, HaMa burg. auBo-dtt ANOTHER SUPPLY OF MORTON'S UNRIVALLED GOLD PENS - . BEST PENS in the world, for 75c, 511. 25 Si fa, $2, $3, and 54, for sale 4at SCHEFFER'S Bookstore. BLACKING ! mABoN'S "CHALLENGE BLACKING. too Gr o ss" ass»rted size;, osi: received, mid for ss e ut 97bolessie prices, dell FRESH BUTTER AT MARKET PRICE. WE, HA'INQ fitted up a large Reirig. orator, and baying made contracts with some of Our most rebaole farmers to Gum ah us toil' fresh and. sweet butter regmarty, will be suabled to supply Oir Customers with sweet ilash toe cold butter rt. ail Um*. my 29 Wit. DOCK, Jr. & co. NNW mackerel, in halves, quarters or MU, Just reL aryl, and for Bale low, by ICHnai *lux, forcer Fruot awl Mar.c.t h la. an 29 Flus'Dates, Prunes, Raising, and all kind' of Nula at A 4 1.4 W l SS':' Store, Third and Walnut. inyt Kff:LER 7 4 . I t.,:t 01600 to buyiPoteos fleitaine, 21mustmente. . D. HAVEN J. & B..LANBoRD WV. DOCK, Jr., & Co. 20 cis
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers