Pennsylvania daily telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1857-1862, October 11, 1862, Image 4

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    SPEECH
HON. A. K. Mee LURE.
Delivered at the Grand Ratufeation Meeting Add in
Philadelphia, on Wednuday, October 8, 1862.
Hon. Alexander K. McClure, in response to
the united demand of the assemblage, came
forward, and thus spoke:
.
Fellow citizens :—A deadly, relentless foe
ham grappltd with the republic. Its aim is the
subversion of constitutional liberty throughout
the continent; and it cannot triumph, however
partially, without striking at the very vitals of
order and security, and leaving us a future
fraught with anarchy and despotism.
In such a cri-is, with the well-being of thirty
millions depending upon !be issue, the partisan
should he lost in the patriot. The nLau who
now seeks to attain a partisan triumph, regard
less of the common weal. is weak and deluded,
or is a d liberate foe of the government. When
the loyal hearts of the north shall have restoreo
the nation to unity and fraternity, and driven
treason and its abettors and sympathisers be
yond the hope of future power and evil, we can
then ear, as in . , times pastote to thmtrue pol
icy of 't a govern tient. ButMitil Weil; there
is one duty to which every other must be su
bordinat-• ; one aspiration, one hope, one
prayer, more e.ruest than all the rest. It is
the preservation of the government, the unity
of the republic.
I shall make no partisan appeals to-night. I
earnestly beseech the sincerely loyal of all po
litical pereua-ions to make common cause in
behalf of a o .mmon and a periled country. I
see about me many whom I have heretofore
Met in the rugged strife of politice as foes. On
the tieing then dividing us we would be divided
still; but they Join in ignoring party issues,
and party tniunuphs, because it is the dictate of
patriotism so to do.
I do nit charge that all who shall act other
wise are disloyal. The masses of the people of
Pennsylvania, of all panties, are faithful to the
government They may be deceived by: trick
stets, and lured by their lifetime love of party,
into unintentional but fearful wrong, but they
will re urn to their highest and holiest duty as
truly as the oscillatiug needle will turn to the
pole.
I do know, however, that every foe of the
government—every enemy of the ii.g—every
open or secret sympathizer with tieason—every
one who has hailed our season of national dis
aster AA gloom with delight—every fiend who
has rjoiced as thousands of our sous and broth
era fen on the gory field, vainly resisting the
foe—ail tilt se will vote against the ticket 1 urge
upon you to night. They will do it with a
purpose—a deliberate, tired and solemn pur
pose; and it suo esatul, they will not have la
bor. d and hoped eutintly in vain. They know
well that if P. nusylvanla shall cast her mighty
voice against the Uuiou ticket, there will be joy
not only wherever treason has a home within
the State, but there is not a murderer of our
heroic brethren in the field, from the Potomac
to the Gulf—float the archfiend at Richmond
to the humblest of his f..llowers—that will not
shout with triumph. Francis W. Hughes will
be no less jubilant then hie fugitive Schuylkill
nephew, w uose battery thundered its deafly
volleys into our ranks ou the Autietam ; and
wh• r ver a traitor's) heart beats there will be
polo. es.
A victory certainly so intended by the politi
cal 1. adeia arrayed against us, and clearly to be
so understood by the pet fid ions tiaitois in arms
against the government, is nut to be permitted
by a loyal people, save at the peril that threat
ens every home with insecurity, every life with
danger, every species of property and credit
with destruction, and every principle of older
and government with revolunion. I believe
that the loyally of our people would mea,ura
bly defeat the full fruition of such a triumph—.
tLey would revolt and spurn those who betrayed
them-and hop dto betray a country. but the path
of safety to ourselves, to our hearthstones and
toOurgovernment, is that which leads to clearly
loyal results. The veroict in Pennsylvania
should cheer and inspire loyal hearts— not trai
tors; should stlengihen our brave brethrtTin in
the field and our patriotic President—not nerve
the arms of remorseless foes to renewed deeds
of carnage, to d. white still thousands more of
our happy homes.
Wgg can only judge of what shall be claimed
as tffh fruits of a Democratic victory by what
its authoritative represeutAtives present as its
articles of faith. That the masses of its voters
mean to be loyal and faithful will not atone for
the insidious disloyalty that is promulgated by
its leaders. The treason that we see and hear
about us under the thinnest guises of fidelity to
the Qovernetent, nee is but the apparent sanc
tion of a great State to bring it from its swad
dling clotuts into the fulled manhood, and ar
ray it with desperate deuomination and most
dangerous power on the side of this unholy re
bellion.
The loyal people of Penneylewd., must ap
preciate this struggle. There is danger that
while we are confident that a causer so good, so
patriotic, so necessary to the weil-being of every
man and every interest, cannot but triumph—
there is danger, I say, that it may fail through
the over-coelidence and, consequent supineness ,
of its friends. Let every loyal man look, well
to his country. In this dark hour it Inuits no
divided love, no doubtful devotion, no qeali
fled support . It has thrown its bro:d shield of
safety and of freedom over our forefathers and
ourselves, - until it has reared empire after em
pire, end scattered, in rich prolusion, the price
less blessings of our irtnitutions from the Al,
latrt.c t , • the Pacific, from the Lakes to the Gulf.
It has made a people surpassiug the world in
all that is ennobling in peace and terrible in
war. And now, when mad ambition seeks to
plunge the fairest continent into anarchy, and
perpetually crimson it. future history with fra
ternal wars, surely the voice of Pennsylvania
must be faithful to hertelf, faithful to her hun
dred thousand sow in arms, faithful to her
thirty thousand herein dead, and faithful to
the Republic.
We are wet In this contest in the sacred name
of the constitution. They bring gift* to de
stroy. Did the leaders who are marshaling the
hosts agaiust the Government declare to the
people frankly that they mean to end
.this war
by an ignominious treaty—by a reconstruction
that would leave the Government the mere
prey of the traitors who have made thirty mil
lions mourn—they would be condemned in
thunder tunes at the ballot box. Every loyal
heart would spurn them until obscurity would
be a welcome refuse.
But they array themselves professedly in be
half of the Constitution, and appeal to the in
herent reverence of faithful men to that instru
ment to give them,vic.ory. if they were sin
erre and . loyal men, and faithful to their own
avowed devotion to the Constitution and the
laws, they cool i be respected even in the
sti looms' of construution that peace ever invit e.
But when they come with disunion lingering
on their lips, and with appeals toevery-dieloyal
prejudice, to every selfish interest, and to every
cowardly conviction, they aim at a partisan
triumph at the cost of a bisediog gauntry.
The Democracy of Ptiiladelphia, as represen
ted by its chosen leaders, has. not left us in
doubt as to im true position. When beaten in
a Presidential contest by a•cionstitutional ma
jority, and when treason was schooling its
murderers in the south by threats of dissolu
tion, that party met in this hall to deliberate
maw the duty tl Its members in the crisis. It
was declared that thef met as a "distinct po
litical orgabis (tion"—that they were "a part
of the 280,000 electors of Pennsylvania, who
by their votes and 00-operation, meant to arpress
eggepkie and thorough sympathy with our southern
8r hr anti rectinution, in the Mid abildigil and
0 11 4 11 fro of MI TV* of the nod Mad brs
seuffiern statesmen and affirmed by the Supreme
Cou•t, of the United - Statea."
The "absolute and. extended form of the
rights of the south as claimed by southern
statesmen" has. given a new : chapter in the
hiatoiy:of the republic. .The Sequel • is. benire
us. More than a hundred thousaud trae men
have fallen to maintain our governtnent against
the "absolute and extended" rights claimed by
southern statesmen. Half the republic is one
vest field of desolation, and millions of debt,
and paralysed industry and commerce, are the
finite of southern rights as conceeded by our
Democratic friends within thew walls.
Are they not measurably, if not wholly, re-
Fponsible for this bloody, this appalling record?
when treason reared its hydra•head in South
Carolina, it was greeted with the hand of sym
pathy, of encouragement, yea of fellowship,
where I now stand, by the leaders of the Demo
matio party. Had they been true to the Gov
ernment of the Constituti.ri as they now proles.=
to be, they 'would have hurled their honest,
earnest denunciation against rebellion, and II
would have died still-born ; we should have had
ObedieUce to the laws in every section, and
wore than two hundred thousand American
tithsens, now sleeping untimely in the " city
of the silent," would live to bless and defend
oar tree institutions.
I have said that the band of fellowsbip was
extended to disunion in this hall. It is a hu
tuiliatiog, a blistering record ; but here it is,
so plain that the, wayfaring man must under
stand it. Among tbe resolutious adopted on
the 16th of January, 1861, by, the Democratic
party, acting as it declared, as a distinct po
litical organization," was the following :
"Twelfth, That in the deliberate judgment
of the Democracy of Philadelphia, and, so far
as we know it, of Pennsylvania, the dissolution
of the Union, by the separation of the whole
south—a result we shall most sincerely lament
—may release this commonwealth to a-large email
from the bonds which now connect her with the con
federacy, except so far as tor temporary convent
epee she chooses to submit to them, and would
authorize and require her citizens, through a
convention assembled fur that purpose, to de
termine with whom her lot should be cast,
whether with the north and east, whose fana
ticism has precipitated this misery upon us, or
with our brethren of the south, whose wrongs we feel
as our own i or whether Pennsylvania shuulu
attend by herself, as a distinct community, ready,
when occasion otters, to bind together the bro
ken Union, and resume her place of loyalty and
Francis W. Hughes, the chosen represent&
tive of the Democratic party in this struggle,
has also made his record, and it is aping the
government. He fitly champlms the Democracy
teat hailed rebelltun as a proper remedy for a
political defeat. In a resolutiou that he meant
t submit to a State eaten:adage of his party, he
portrays, in words of glittering treason, the
bright destiny of Pennsylvania ae " a member
of toe new confederacy," and claims teat her
wealth, population and glory may thereby " be
piomoted in a degree unparalelled in the histo
ry and prosperity of any people."
These men meet no and claim the verdict of
our State as loyal men. Fresh from an effort
to hurl Pennsylvania over the battlements of
the Constitution into the arms of rebellion,
they come with falsehood upon their lips and
treachery in their hearts, and appeal in the
name of the Constitution they solusolently, so
wantonly defiled.
I would indeed, that this terrible record were
otherwise ; 1 would be glad to claim every citi
zen of Pennsylvania is a member of one com
mon loyal brotherhood. We have foes enough,
God knows, with bristling bayonets, Lading
the messengers of death into our nation's rich
est blood. I would not add one to the number,
did not disloyalty robe itself in the sacred garb
of patriotism, and attempt an unholy fraud
upon a loyal State.
Pennsylvanietoantiot falter now. Her people
cannot misunderstand the purpose of Demo
cratic leaders. The position of our great State
cannot be a doubtful one. It must be etrauge
ly bewildered by hypocrisy and fraud to be
drawn into even apparent antagonism with the
Government in this trying hour of peril. Toe
sentiment of the state is not in harmony with
those who met rebellion on the threshold with
words of eucouragement, and held out Penn
sylvania as an offering to the desolation that
has swept over the south as the legitimate fruits
of treason. To this entertainment our people
will not be invited. They will sustain the
President, who, with a singleness of purpose,
has devoted himself to restore tee Government:
of our fathers ; and they cannot be seduced or
intimidated to approve even the shadow of dis
loyalty. They owe to this Government their
lives, their prosperity, their all ; and they will
preserve for themselves and their children this
great fabric of free institutioue.
They understand that he is- faithless who,
with proleesions of loyalty on his lips, hail
w rde adeounchttion only for the Government.
The man woo avows himself •as in favor of
prosecuting the war to restore the Union, and
complains of every measure wooed to give
success to our cause, Is not faithful—is not hon
est. To appeal to• ignorance and. prejudice by
magnifying tour-fold-our national debt, and yet
Claim to be in favor of paying our brave sol
diers. in the field and maintaining the credit of
the Government, is but an atilt to mislead
loyal men by taleehood, and to &tar& a gov-'
eminent by treachery. The truly loyal will be
earnestly devoted to the Government. He may
differ with the President on many lames, but
be will give' hie whole heart and energies to
crush rebellion first, and determine subordinate
issues when we snail haves united government
to enforce them.
• I rejoice that Abraham Lincoln is President
it this hour of gravest danger to our institu
tions. :The must unscrupulous dare not -to
question his integrity, and his disinterested
loyalty and patriotism ehalla'nge the severest
scrutiny at home and abroad, lie may err iu
the discharge of 'his solemn and complicated
duties, but to the preservation of the Union ha
makes all else subordinate, and to this great
Purpose every true heart beats responsive, and
Must sustain him. He has called men to lead
our armies, and to places of the highest trust,
regardless of political opinions, and tie has asked
Of them only what he cheerfully yields himself
!unfaltering devotion to the Republic.
; He has struggled until hope Limit' fled to re
call the rebellious &ates to obedience without
laying the strong arm of the government upon
slavery—the demon that has written its ven
geance against tree lossitutions in the gore of
every battle field. He has now issued the sol
emn warning that, if the Republic cannot
otherwise live, slavery must die. It is natural
fOr this every traitor should denouncellitim. It
is fitting that a rebel Congress, that spurns the
, protection of the natural government, and has
disclaimed he support for slavery, should trem
ble and rave because the President has with
drawn the power they affected to despise. But
he whose first - love is tor the National Union
Will rejoice that the lung, is made--that the
caressed and insolent fuo of our unity and pros
pinity can - survive only by, obedience to • the
laws, -
and by yielding to the progress and hap
pluses of a free people.
r. 14iavery made this war. It grew wanton and
Naked in power; and, from being the creature:
I of tolerant law, it sought to subvert the liber-
Ace of a continent. How nearly it has succeed
ed let the variable fortunes of the war declare.
Until now it had boasted of exemption from th
* us , o f battle. We might detest its armies:
bill it was sacred ; and, although it could rear
fortificatiohs fot traitors, clothe and sabots t our
fOt and yield every white men to meet us oe
tlle deadly field,:yet. It was regarded as more
sacred than thoConetitutionitself. The whole
Christian world will rejoice that slavery has, at
wrought its oWn-sloom+that it must yield
ofiedienos to-the republic or die a Wad/ death,
44 either stow is Oath, ' • .
ilattifigiudititrADnitu 4ittrigtaptivalitutiogy . -aftentoon, 111Yettibir 11;1862
It has been the haditipediable ally of the reb.:
els in this conflict,_anri. military- necessity- de
mands imperatively that it.must fall.- Traltore
may denounce—sympathisers may quibble, as
quibble they ever will—the timid may hesitate
—but, as a just retribution—as a measure in
volving the safety, of the government, and of
thousands of lives—it will be heartily sustained
by loyal men, who:see in it the brightest star
of hope that points to reunion and peace.
The suspension of the writ of habeas corpus
Is naturally enough distasteful to Francis W.
Hughes and his coadjutors. There is no mind
nal who does not hate the avenging law. There
is no foe of the government who does not abhor
summary remedies. If there were no Union
men South, Jefferson Davis would not utterly
disregard ordinary channels of justice, and pun
ish relentlessly, at his despotic will, every aspi
ration for the Union of Our fathers. If there
were no traitors here—men who have invited
rebellion—who bid it God speed—who bold out
out Pennsylvania in their perfidious hands as gs,
free-will offering to treason—there would have
been no euepeneion of the highest writ uf Tight
by President Lincoln. Bat each men there are
in our millet ; few in, number, it is
,true, but
formidable power, because they have seized
the (Numeration of a powerful end loyal politi
cal party, and they would , betray it and a com
mon country together.. There IS bat one ade
quate remedy for such monstrous wrongs, for
such a crime against a country, an army and a
royal people, and that le summary punishment.
Let them but be earaestlloyal—true to their
own dear homes and - to 'the ennobling cause of
their government, and the suspension of the
writ of habeas corpus will bapractically void.
Therm men who, shield themselves behind
the Constitution, the more effectually to destroy
it, tell us they want.peaee. Peace who would
not welcome it if it brought not dishonor or
dismemberment to the Republic? It would be
welcomed as never was peace welcomed before.
But the foes of the government Want peace only
at the oust of national existence. They 'would
over the States with ruthless, ftatricidai hands ;
they would bring defeat upon our flag ; disgrace
upon our heroic sons living, and the foul blot
of dishonor upon the graves of our martyred
dead. They would do this e4ter to reconstruct
the government upon the demand of slaveiy,
and preserve Mr. Hughes' "natural- bonds" in
the revolted States for future - harmonious po
litical action ' • or they would _ do, it by dissolu
tion, and, as declared by the thimocratie lead
en in this hall, give Pennsylvania over to be
desolated through lingering years In the deadly
embrace of the southern confederacy. I want
no such peace l 'Every loyal, heart must revolt
at it.
As yet no State has faltered in supporting the
Administration and the government,: and Penn
sylvania, will not b.r the first to set the exam
pie. Oregon, California, Illinois, Connecticht,
Rhode Vermout and _Maine have spoken
—some of them ite the hour of deepest gloom ;
but neither disaster, uor faithless men, could
make them swerve from tueir fidelity to the
Union. California was . not untaindtui of her
lamented .Broderick, who fell, in advance, a
martyr to the cause that we advocate to day ;
and Oregon mourned fur her fallen 'Baker and
bteveue, and vindicated their el/erect fame.
Thus, from the Atlantic and , the Paciflo, have
gone up the emphatic verdict that the . Union
must_cud shall be Presirved and l'efinsylva
nia, When she thunder in her majesty on
behalf of a united government, will extiuguish
the last hope of exhausted treason in the south,
and point the world to the ultiMate triumph of
Republican institutions.
We owe this to ottr great Slate ; to the thou
sands of homes and hearts Veiled in _ sorrow'; to
our brave sons whe rallied around our flag in
the field ; to the -thouaands tit-devoted Maim
men now vict.me of noel desipolism n the
. i
south ; we owe it to these to la/stain .the gov
erunient and prosecute the irar.by the exercise
of every possible power; until it shall be satire],
successful. It slavery must OW, let It ;if
our credit must be strained Aid further, let us
stand shoulder to shoulder to • sustain it ; if
still more lives must be sacrificed on the altar
of our liberties,our heroic breihten have them
ready for the offering. , In short,_there id no
sacrifice so terrible as the sacrifice of a free gov
ernment; and, appealing to the God of - battles,
in oar holy effort for the preservation of the
Republic, let loyal hearts make common cause
in all things for our common country.
Mr. McClure's speech was intarupted by al
most incessant applause.
FAMILY FLOUR.
SITE INVITE the attention of families
who
; BAKE THEIR 'OWN BREAD,
to our stook of Flour. We have' just received
SEVENTY-FIVE BARRELS
of the Choisest (White Wheal) LAMB flour tha t
the eir W e r' rn tt ar ee et :Ti att grti or bag we sell to be *ldiot
super or. Ugriej WIC 1.10011., JR., & W.
BEAUTIFUL,. TISSUE FAFNIR,
yOR covering.L(3oring Glasses.,:f!iottire
mange, orsampsmig CtlGnga , trimming Gas Pipes
~ and out so as to mug over
I krloirtt the shape o
vans, pekoe, cirtle3 Or A ,COods, sale it
• IPI 6 / LIVS 'WORST° S E.
-
- RUBBER GOODS
Rubbe
Rubber Watches,
' Rubber Rattles,
Ru*r,..lbys geaerally at
BERGFNRR'B OHRA.P BOOILSTORL
CIDER 11 I VINEGAR I 1 l
DURE older vinegar. warranted, for sale
low by
NICHOL'i & B 'WHAM,
1 , 21. Corner Droneand Marker streets.
OLARET WINE
U/}.: are olosiiig out &VERY SUPERIOR
Lonalesschon awl.
r.k CIQ
COA L oil . and coat. oil laiaps, of all
styles and Oros, for salik by . •
_ szosoLai Bowicay,
4 , 49 . weer Bront.and, In *troll.
B,GARS of all kindal Igthite-4BiL brown,
lower than wry house hi toMM.
NICHuLti al BOWMAN,
ale carom ()mina sad Aii4cst •treet
0r1i.6811 every•Taaadayan4 Friday
at JOHN WISE'S Stant, corner ot - Mrd'
t coyly
.
VO'FIONS.-- , 44uite' 'variety ot , . :tteefol
rinie'ttninisi4 ' - -
• Ai Rllll4lllll r.- piximwriika
I-30AL Oil I amp Shave 'Wkiks - Ohirn:
.. .
Nj , neye, for gals low by . •
1 , 1101101. Ci BOWMAN, -
? o afs Corner Front and fdszketeriete.
•
. .
ALL and Earamine 4 mar o u p er i er , wen .
aitaosio• coal ...i Nt salelow by 7. 7
iCLIQX•d - WSIMMAN,
coed Ckirder Ficinrind Market streets
IjLTARDELL &Picskie# ond
NV Count*, for tali at 10.101 ,
1.3 , m
,
UGARI3 for preservjogiAmil ' ; 4 pd exam
0 Inv isojKINILIOTz
11Y7.• Curlllertroilit
'l r e.r7. , "WOO! " 1 14 9 1Orsilika , aßkilllielne •
5
FRF.Sti .Unkori Iliad glaiiine put re
9
- barmy boatasd Market luso a.
LEMONS, rilions,;ooeoal4 just
s .
received and tar ode. b riiaicBll)ll4l424
.thealrootantkise4rireew.
F;T; bi lo i ?.18:1011W8TOILS I,_l
New lbrationnents.
PENNSYLVANIA RAIL ROAD;
FIVE TRAINS ; DAILY TO AND
FROM PHILADELPHIA.
OSeliieA=
MONDAY MAY 6th 1862.
Hi. PiMenges Trains o, tha Pennsylvania Railroad
oeuipmay will depart tram. and arrive at Harrisburg and
Philadelphia as follows
EASTWARD.
•
THROUGH ICIPRES.I. TRAIN taw Harrisburg daily,
at 1.16 n m„ and arrives at oast Philadelphia at 6.10'
a. M. •
FAST LiNE leaves Harrisburg dally, (except Monday,).
al 5,30 a m., and arrives at West Philadelphia at 9.45
a. m.
FAST MAIL TRAIN leaves Harrisburg daily (except
Sunday) at 1.20 p. m., and arrives al West Philadelphia
at 5.25 p. tn.
-ACCOMMODATION TRAIN, via Mount Jel, maves
Harrisburg at 7.06 a. in.. and snares at West Phila
delphia at 12.25 p m.
RRIBRURD .M.COMMONintQJ 111ALS, vie Colton'
, :a. leaves Harrisburg e.l 4.1 n . - =^A .i...rtcrs at A'..10.
SOSAAMMS•aI 925 p. m.
WESTWARD.
THROUGH 11XPRE8s TRAIN leaves Philadelphia at
i 0.55 p. m., Harrisburg at 3.00 a. m., Altoona 8.10, a. in.
nd arrives at Pittsburg at 12.85 p. m.
HAIL TRAIN loaves Philadelphia at 715 a. at., and al ,
rives at Harrisburg at 12.801.. in.; leaven Harrisburg at
100 p. in., Altoona, 7,00 p. in., and arrtves at Pittsburg
at12.16a.m.•
TART LINE liMves Philadelphia at 11.80 S. in., Harris
burg 8.46 p. m Altoona en 8.20 . in., and arriving at
Pittsburg al 12.45 a. In.
lIA.IVISBURG AOOOlll4 +DATION TRAIN leaven Phil.
delphia at 2.80 p. m., and arrives at Harrisburg at 8.00
P M.
MOUNT JOY ACCOMMODATION via Mount Joy leaves
Lancaster at 10.50 a. in., arrives at Harrisburg at 12.40'
9.
SAMUEL D. YOUNG,
Supt. East, U.. T'..Smt Railroad .
Garrishorr. May 2, 1882
SUMMER
W .' 1 AIR. LINIII'•111)UTE,
•
jammomm ilmi.‘
MIMI TRAINS' DAILY 't l / 1 4* YOBS,
AND,
P 1-11.ILADP, 14 1-
.12N AND AFTER MONDAY, MAY 6th,
1962, the Passenger Trains will leave the Phila.
Ida and Reading Railroad Depot, at Harrisburg, for
New York andPhiladelphla, folloWs, Vs •
E4LEITWARD.
INPRWE LINII leaves Harrisburg at 1.28 a, M. 02 ar
rival of Pennsylvania Railroad' RlPreed Trainfr om the
Witd, arriving ip NeW.TOrk at 5.15 a. in., and at Phila.
:Aiekkplng gait ts..Mrsehen to the
thibblikfrom Pitts Nita' Withinat change.
TRAIN leaves Harrisburg at 8.00 a. m., arriving
In New York at 540 and Philadelphia at 1.26 p. m.
FAST LINE leaves Harrisburg at 1.40 p m. , on arrival
of Pennsylvania Rallroadt Fast Wall, arriving in New
York at 9.50 p. in., and Philadelphia at 8.40 p.
. WESTWARD
FAST LINE leaves New York at 6a. m. , and Phllade l.
prila at 8 a. a. arriving at Harrisburg at 1 p. m.
RAM TRAM Mayas New Stork at 12.00 noon, and Phil.
adelphia et 8. 16 p. arriving ot Harrisburg at 5.10
P- m.
2SPHIS3 I.INII lease' New York at 8 p. m. arri.
Ting at Harrisburg at 3.00 a. in., and connecting with the
Pennsylvania Express Train for Pittsburg. A sleeping
ear is alba attached to this ruin .
Oonneetionstire wedaablfarrisbugg with trainmen the
Peausylvant4.Nosthern Matra! and:Cumberland Valley
Railroads, and at 'goading Ins Philadelphia. Pottsville,
Wilkasbarre, niientown, Easton, &e.
Baggage checked through. Faro between New York
mid Ha. rleburg, 85 00 ; between Harrisburg and Phila.
lelphia, 68 25 in No. lears, and 22 10 in. He. 2.
go- swept,. Or rens. information ap='iy to
J. J. 01, I' Dlt,
myladle General Agent. Harrisburg.
1862. SUMMER 1862.
ARRANGEMENT!
CUMBERLAND VALLEY AND FRANKLIN
RAIL ROADS !
RANGE OF H0UR8. ,, -On and after
- litonifty, Mak 6tb, 18478, Pasteniges Trabia will ran
=For
follows,
,(Bwidttrytacepted 0 2
!. , For Oblimberoburir and Harrisborir
A. P. al
IA. o
eave,Hagerstown. 100 246
4,
_likeenotatle.....„,„ . ~. 787 ' 8 87.
at
{ Arrive 817 420
abantberatiarg, -.1......
Leave at II BO 12•411
. 4 Stlippeaßbral ........9 00 137
41 Nowaville ........... ' • 989 SU.
, “ 'Carlisle 10 80 240
, . MeChaDJESbnrg 10 as .$ li
wi n Ve at Iliwrbithiirg • ..... ..........
R .. ... ll 16 840
-
! For Chambersbarg sadßage 1
Heave our -ug.. E or
• -.... ..... 11. P. 34
L
-I 06 1 86'
- -
---..
1 14- - Mechanicsburg •47 216
~ Carina. '9 :4 •2 MI
t ‘.Nines'llo. ....1
.. 1 0 CM k 2.
tg • au•penebuig ........ - ..0 88 .4 90
ILt ch0mbenibui5.....,.......Arr?44.:1k .00 11110
f a ob4sabsisburg ......as •,I siiiTer• '•// :UV •4 40
eireencastle - . .., . ,
.1:1:114 ' 620
Airivestapiensto' wn ' IX XX: .' 010
! g•itilt.4o!; el ,F4k,! l thuN• mi." 1 1 A 866-, ..7;-.- ... ~
, -
rimiks,..*AtirauxwE
1 , ) pTC 1141:14:Z i pii!
Leiga iNr I°
for 011.
filebicaL
HELMBOLD'S GENUINE PREPARATION
00NCONTRA r*b - •
COMP' , uzio FL* Errilscrißuogil,
A Positive , and Spode Remedy
For Disown of the BLADDira, KIDNEYS,
and 3ROPSIOAL SWELLINGS.
This Medicine inersams the power of Digestion, and
excites the ABSORBENTS int , healthy action, by which
the WATERY fOt CALCAREOUS dsposdUons, and aU UN
NATURAL ENLARGIUNIR are reduced, as well as
PAIN AND INFLAXATION- and Is good for
YEN, WOJCIDI OR CHILDREN.
lISLICBOLV9 =TRACI' smart,
For Weaknesses
Arising front Meows, Hittite of Dissipatkno, Early In.
discretion or Alltise. _ •
ATM DM' WITH THE roLLowENRI SYMPTOMS
- -.- -.- -
Indisposition to Exertion, LOSS of Power
toes of Memory, Dtmcuity of Breathing,
Weak Nerves, Trembling,
Horror of Disease, Wakefulness,
Dimes& cd Vision, • - Pain in the Back
Universal Lassitude of the Mtumular System,
Hot Han* Fluabbig Of the Body
Dryness of the Skin, Itruptions cm the Pace
PALLID 03IINTENANOE,
These symptoms; if allowed to go on, which this med
icine invarisbly removes, soou Pillows
IMPOTENCY, YarßiTY, EPILEPTIC PUS
IN ONE OP WHICH - TED P A TIENT MAY EXP IRE.
Who caw: say *hautboy. as sot frontal., tty tbllowed by
those "DIREFUL lEREERIEr
• "INSANITY AND CONSUMPTION. „
Ratty are aware of the cause of their suffering,
HUT NONE WILL CONFESS.
THERECORDS otTRIDDSANS ASYLUMS,
And the Eeinrchay Reagii by OlatnoWtant,
• ems Ain." *risme TO ute mune eerie Anteemen.
Tale CONSTITUTION ONO AFXECTRD WITH
ORGANIC WRARNEtiI
,
Rewires the aid of thedlehie to atreegtheu and
• • • - • Inv%prate the Rystem,
Which WILTITIOLD I O RITRACT invariably doe
TILL WILL CONVICI TES iffai2lllollllCllL.
FEMALYM—TRBIALES—PRGALER,
Li) OR YOUNG, SINGLR, MARRIAD, OR CONTEMPLA
' TING MARRIAGE,
.IN MANY AFFICIIONi PSOULIAR TO FRMALIGI,
the Rittraot Dacha is anequadled by any other remedy,
as in Ohkocals or Retention,lrregularity, Painfulness, or
Wppppressfo nof Customary 111vacustIons Ulcerated or
Seirrhous Mate of the Uterus, Leavertwer: Whites, Wert'
ity, and for all complainer Incident to the ens; whether
arising from Indiacregoa, Habits ' of Dissipation, or in
the
DEOIJNR OR MANOR OA MIA
NO FAMILY SHOULD BE WITHOUT IT
Pass MO Noss Mous, lisourr, on U
OMB 1 , 01 O9PLIMOAI6 am ISMONIOIIII maim
ILEAMBOLD'S EZTRAGT steam
wise
SECRET DISEASE&
In all mew Stages,' .111 , Iltile .111xpeiuse
Little or no change In Dig ; No inconvenience;
Awl we litepontre.
It muses a frequent desire sea epee strength to Urinate,
thereby removing Oblernetlons.
preventing and Coitria StricLurem of the Uretbra,
allaying .Pain and Intik ~,t,tlon, so frequent in the
class of dleretrate, and all P•11110/1011111, Deseased
end morn-ont
viormisne UPON Tnotrininne
*HO FIAT'S BESET nib newts oP QUIVIES,
end Who have paid as vv vane 10 be eared in a abort
time, have found they were deceived, and that th e "
SuN , ' hna, by UM no Or"POW111017L MITALWOI3IIII, " been
dried up itt the :system, to bruit out iII an aggravated
form, and
FERILIPE AFTER MARMARA
Use Boahsch,Vo Imam Bow" for en .493001121 sod
amazes et the
itittIINAILY ORGANS,
whither extolls in
JINAIgE. OR FEMALE, •
from wtuthever came orheinating and no Ratter • I
HUM 11.0111131 B AIDING.
Disegfes 01- these Ot paa reqatre the aid of DIU RS 10
BILtdBOLDVIITRACT WCHU
, t Li THE GREAT
And ontaln to have the dealred edema la ail
Fox wawa IT 114 ESCOIIitEND6O. •
Aridascrof Ms moot reliable and Mposuribig Mars:ter
will sooompaprthe.
OKATIFICATO Or masa,
• • AyronB 020 yearn gawking,
WITH WAILMILINAIIirin ,
MINIM AND FAME.
Price $1 00 per bottle, or six for $4 00.
Delivered ‘e •ny address, racurely, posted from obeez
ration.
DlikittßlEGl SYMPTOMS IN a LL COMMUNICATE:OM
Curs. Guaranteed I. . Advice Grants I
AFFIDAVIT.
Personally .appearol before me, an Alderman got !tho
city of Philadelphia, 8. T. fimmamo, who being duly
sworn, doth say, his jireimatione contain 'AU narcotic, no
mercury, or other bdUIiOUJI drop, bat ard purely vege
table •
H. T. HELYSOLD.
Sworn and %%Mouthed before me, this 255 day of No
votaber, AM. WM. P. BI D, eldervems
Ninth - St above Race,
.addrees letters for information in confi dence to
EL 7. ECELMBOLD, C hemist, DePeNIJOS *nth Tenth St. bel. Chessman, Phi
ty
NOWAY/A OP COON/POOP/14Th*
. AND UNPRINCIPLED DIALERS,
Who endaaverto dispose ...or mom own. and onus"
Alumna MI ens assurenos sresnoso yr
Helmboldte Genuine Preparation a,
, nrwn Durbin, •
• $. • " Ilaresparttle,
" Improved Rom Womb.
Sold by .
O. R.. oiler, D. W, Orou, J. Wyeth, 0 4,
Baravart . •
ALVD Dfirroirsrs
•
ASH FOR RELIAIIOLD'S. TAKE. NO OTHER,
Out ont the advertisement and owe for 11.
AND AVOlDlieoarnoN AND VOVHDRA
TIRE INBUBANOE•
nu: igramtlirAJlE 'MUTUAL
bAJNITT lutsgsmfol COltrAfilL
iggo.lippiLaTDD,l4l4ll.
capital and limetli $440•126 47
, puusaroits. .
orm Martla,"Amund A. Sander, ThawWWl =mg,
Jae Peareee,Jao. C. Duda Tniquair,wat 4
Jams Cakaa t viLlltam,st Ludwig, Jompli R. Seal, sr
RI • awes Lebow, Hugh Craig, Char
Sally, Samuel S. Acker,. J. I. , Pettuiston, Henry dean,
Ildward-Parluallory Jeamarradra, Spencer li'lltalne e
Mamas C. Haat, Sobers Durum. Jacob fs. Amiga, Jams
D. IVTarlaid, Joukue r. Syre,7bha B. Semple. Rata
burg, D. T. laorsaahi= A.l4„ lt rgi. Pumaamg.
• Ag ri &
Tr 101414 0. &OW, ;rlei President.
EKNRT LTLBUBN, swam*
The underiMpled at spat tar the above mimed Gom
m), , emalnass o take Me Ebb la Darrlaourg sot
wuaajui :1 : :4:
row rglelQB
WSITING -
TRAVELING BAGS,
rustogs, '
PORTMONMES,
And s general assortment of
FANCY GOODII
have just been =Mead at
OEFEAP BOOKER°
SUGAR CURED HAMS.
WED. SKEF
SELOULDIfES,
BILGE* SAUSAGE.
fo biro sad fresh oßpAylootroodroci br
ablWO. DOCK Jr &Oo
. •
601.11T.00C1 :WOOL 6111 UP,
intriNutuAtEtia,fitaur, wawa I
wtinay Anetabl9 ,ita oolupeattlee, has
been assiffed wi& 11 westleritd, Somme for
many torn in the cure of dim*" for the Alit
maiatti end LiusGm of the
diatom soo.h Po COUQR, TIPWANfit of the
THROAT BPITTIbtO- OF .lILOQD, DIFFI
OLT HOARSEN /Mk LOl3lll OP
VOIOE, and HBO 410 FBVIiBti , lb/ nee will
be attended. with the happiest: results. It is
one of the- :beet - and esfesi, medicines, for all
canna of ,15}10WILUIlk and _01)ASIIIIIPBObi.
Es wok** or WON** tr Opines* Mgr
tru
1151QE _EEO RIR:BOTTLE.
For es 4 at BEAGINX/F8 CHEAP BOOK
11Z3r,'1% ' k iietoirtnielit of irlsoowOro
follaocoPivi, sad ice sole low b 7
•
-
I sA,LAI).I.IIL. t _
• • • • ;
A 94 110 suPPIY Of : 8'o& Sailkf, Olt, hi"
faro and mall bo fW, atall of allaraut dawdle
itat mob/ad sad It. ,
_ If. MC Daeig..ll4.*CO.
-
LIME ti'li-XES by oixest or
Just ramostaio bir • 1)(4.
64.13AV4ftreilli.
in. Gross
D W. GROSS & CO.,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
DRUGGISTS,
MARKET STREET
BARRIBBURG, PEAN'A.
DRUGGISTS, PHYSICIANS, STORE.
KEEPERS AND CONSUMERS,
We are daily adding to onr assortment of
goods all such articles as are desirable, and
would respectfully call your atention to the
largest and best seleeted stock iu thus city, of
DRUGS CHEMICALS & PAINTS.
Oils, varnishes and Glues,
Dye-Stuffs, Glass and Putty,
artist Colors and Tools,
Puss Ground Spines
Eltaronts Plaid and Alcohol,
Lard, Sperm and Pins Ofla,
Bottles, Viala and iLdamp Glebes,
Castile soap, Spongss and Cosa',
asc., aw. , die., die , soy
With a general variety of
PF:I2IINIBEY & TOILET ARTICLEs,
N=
selected frotu the beet Qaaufecturers and Ft
terriers of Europe and this country.
Being very lel% • dealers In
PAINTS, WHITS LEAD,
LiNBE3W OIL, VARNISHES,
WINDOW GLASS, Alill.ST'S
COLOBS, PAINT AND
ARTIST'S BRUSHES
IN ALL THEIR VARIETIES,
OOLORS AND BRONZES
OF ALL KIN M,
We respecthuly invite a call, feeling, ,onii
dent that we can &apply the want& of all on
terms to their estisfacticet.
TEETH I TEETH I t
JON E'S AND WHITES'S PORCELAIN IKETit,
PATENT MEDICINES AND HAM
:4 r'fzio (1/ VIVA :q-;
Of all kinds, direst from the Proprietors
Saponifier and Ooneentrated Lye
Wholesale Agents for Saponifier, which jwe sel
IS lOW as it can be purchased In the cities,
PRAYER'S MEDICAL. FLUID EXTRACTS
COAL OIL 1 OARBOA? OIL I
Being large purchasers hi these ON, we can
offer inducements to claw buyers. Coal Oil
Lanape of the most improved patterns, very
Cheap. All kinds of lamps changed to bum
Coal Oil.
FARMERS AND GRAZIERS,
Those of you who have not gives our HORSE
AND BA.T.ELE PO WDSEIS a trial know no
their auperlority, and the advantage they are
In keeping Horses and Cattle health/ and in
xxi consaion.
Thousands eau testify to the profit they have
derived from the use of our Cattle Powders by
the increasing quantity and quality of milk,
peeides huproving the general health and ap
immune of their Cattle.
Our long experience in the business gives us
the advantage of a thorough knowledge of thc ,
trade, and our arrangements in the cities ero
inch that we am in a very short time furnish
waiter appertaining to our business, on the
twat of terms.
• Thankful for thefiberel patronage beetowe
bn our house, we hope by strict attention to
business, a careful selection of
PURR DRUGS
at fair prices, and the desire to please ell, to
iaerit a ounthnuatee of the favor of s (Hoeft
fiatiog eplB-cily
TAOKLI
OP ALL HINDS.
Atfee,lo,oo and Ave lobo Trout Rods.
iike4 Hair Troia Lines. from 10 to 00 yanilaldotg.
~Tiottututfillent Troug Law, " " •
=tlink Front Dar, if Is 1, , "
one LinesS 44 41 44 41
ORM moo Cotton mum, a 14 44 t$
Bloat Lines tarnished witb Hoolto,Vorioli, a n ,
'Aar multiptpog Rota i t: to 60 You'd*.
A Id of Gboien Trout
. I lk Worm " Gut
etr Lendian, bottom kto - 0 feet.
6 " llaseits,-Linterlolt Moons, ain't., No. Ito
Trout Nanksts, liteby . Troot and giver ants, ilmer
idk Trout sad intriel3oolie; Floats. - Times and O ' l OE O 4
9,1P1• APal$110) /KO AND FANO t eroßs,
B 1 Marked Onset.
d: round and i3ole bpioo,
Oltatimoo, Nutmegs sad Macs, at
.• NICHOLS & AMMAN'S,
Coder Front and Marketr ,wets.
us
..,.. .
Hr. d W. W.O. TAYLOR'S Nla.W SOAP.
•11 is sointoadcat and highly detersive. It era
' no loin and wlh not wage. It is warranted not
its Wore the hands. It will impart an agreeable Om,
and ir Muratori ioltabui for every purpose. For
le V . wbf. Drrg. Jr. a CO.
TT
itA.tiAih; sod exteneive adbortment of
asegyrstv, including Tumblers, Goblets, Mabel
4 , in mid trrr t itor ' rrin._*
• , 6 HOWmis
wrier FilloS lisrlail U*S
Iffl
NO, 19