pailp Ettegrafij HARRISBURG, PA Monday Afterillon, November VI, 1862 WOOL AB this cognominal has became familiarized to our people and readers of the Tsars, owing to its connection with some of the dirty tricks of power in seeking to vent personal spleen at the expense of official authority, any thing referring to the individual who bears the name must of course prove interesting. The Brooklyn Daily . Times adds its contribution of con demnation to the acts which thus disgraced the dignity of st ttion and authority, and emphati cally declares its abhorrence of those thus guilty. Few of those who are at all cdnver saut with military affairs in the Middle depart ment, or in other words, in Maryland, were surprised at Gen. Wool being censured by a Military Commission In tact it would be al most impossible to investigate any pottion of the affairs of the department which has depend ed upon him, without finding cause for censure; and the officer who has been declared incompe tent, and, by his imbecility, to have brought disgrace upon us at Harper's Ferry, is only one of several that Wool retains in responsible posi tions. When the "Forty-seventh," from Brook lyn, was mustered into the service of the United States by Col. Bell, one of Gen. Wool's personal rtaff, anti like Col. Milts, an old regu lar officer, he was at the time grossly intoxica ted ; a pitiable object, ridiculed by all the officers and men of the regiment. Had the officers of the "Forty-seventh" been inclined to defraud the government, they might have mustered in 1,000 men instead of 600, the actual number all told ; iu fact, after the mustering in of the men, the field and staff officers were mustered in at the 4,fficei's quarters, and one of the officers who had been assisting Col. Bell answered to his own name ou its being called, and then, out of mischief, answered to the name of ant.ther officer, who was out of the room. Bell was too drunk to notice the discrepancy, but gravely checked thew both on the roll as having an swered to their names. lie was i I the same condition when he 'neutered in the other militia r. gimente. It fact, it i- safe to say, that he was not sober any twenty-four hour: during the ti.. the Forty seventh was in Baltimore, and ides offiet r w ax in daily communication with Genetal Wool I If General Wool's staff officers are to be be lieved, he is haunted with the idea that he will be the next President, that the south should be conciliated, and that he is just the man to conciliate them. Acting upon this idea, his room was a levee of secession ladies, and Fort McHenry received many visits from him, at which time the whole of the rebel prisoners would he brought before him, questioned and examined, and, apparently, excuses sought to justify their release. This proceedure was the more glaring, from the fact that over two hun dred Union soldiers were kept confined in some filthy horse stables swarming with vermin, upon suspicion that they were deserters, some of whom had Ist their discharges, others Over stayed their time a few days, and were on their way back to their regiments when arrested by the Baltimore police. Yet these men were kept confined for months without trial, some of them evidently forgotten. They were only Union soldiers, nut respectable rebels to be conciliated, and therefr re, received no notice from General Wool. But their situation was brought to the notice of the War Department by some of the officers of the Forty-seventh, and an order was immediately issued to send them and all others in similar situations hack to their regiments. The treatment of the sick and convalescent soldiers at Fort McHenry received until the President interfered, was brutal and infamous. Eleven hundred sick, die :bled and worn out Union soldiers were sent to the Fort Grounds, and by order of Gen. Wool, not allowed to pass out, and for over a week the must of them had to sleep on the grass in the rain and dew, many of them suffering from typhoid feverand diarrhesa. They had no tents over them, no blankets to use, and their only cooking uten sils were a few mi es pane and kettles borrowed from the Forty-seventh. The first day these men arrived, a requisition was made OD Major Belger, Gen. Wool's Quartermaster, for tents and cooking utensils, and it was over a week before any answer was received, when without an assigned reason, Belger returned the requi sition, refusing the articles required, and Gen. Wool approved on the back of it over his own signature, the refusal. The matter was then brought to the personal notice of the Presi dent, when General Wool came to the Fort and censured General Morris, because be had not provided the sick with those things which himself had three days before refused to allow them. This is but a sample of many similar occurrences, and will illustrate his execu tive abilities. He surrounded himself with im beciles like himself, and designing men who were using him for their own purposes. That General Wool may be removed, and General Morris, or some other competent officer placed in command of the Middle department, is the hope and wish of every loyal man conversant with the military affairs of Maryland. A sim ple censure is not enough for such long con tinued and aggravated incompetency as his. Coutwouscs.—The town of Summit, Juneau county, Wisconsin, in 1860 gave Lincoln forty- six votes and Douglas thirty-two. At the re cent election it gave Ranchett, Republican, for Congress, forty-six votes, and Stoddard, Demo crat,- thirty-two. Since the exchange of prisoner began over twenty-five thousand have been exchanged. MORE OA VALR I' The cry now comes up from the Potomac, that the operatiOns of the Grand Army have been impeded by ..the want of cavalry. We must have more cavalry. The wily enemy, acquainted with his mountains and their tor tuous windings, cannot be pursued with suc cess without the aid of cavalry. The plains and the roads of Virginia cannot be traversed by men on foot. Mud and slush are barriers which human feet cannot overcome, however human energy may toil and struggle in the effort.— This is all true. Cavalry must do the work of this war. The government is begin ning to understand this necessity, and now some of the very men who, a year ago, rallied against the organisation of any considerable cavalry force, are the most urgent in their de mands at once to bring this branch of the ser vice up to a respectable force, and thus of course to s profitable efficiency. We trust that this wilt be i dorie immediately. Hada similar pro jest been carried out, and a force organized such as was suggested and designed when Gen. Cameron was Secretary of War, the government would have had a cavalry army such as the world never before saw in the saddle. We would have had a force sufficient to ride down and overpower all the rebel traitors in the land, if we except those who hide their treason beneath their corrupt and illiasinmed Democracy. A STRANGE RUMOR ♦ special dispatch from Cincinnati to the Chicago Ames, announces the following start ling fact: A strange rumor has currency here, to wit : that Jeff Davis and his Cabinet seriously con template the emancipation of all the slaves before the first of January, to anticipate Presi dent Lincoln's proclamation and secure recog nition from foreign powers, which is promised when that extraordinary action is had. It is further said that the slaves thus freed will im mediately be pressed into the military service as the consideration for their freedom. The report has considerable circulation in Ken tucky. It would be a bright idea on the pert of Jeff. Davis and his followers to "abolish" the insti tution for the protection of which (professedly) they went into the war. Have they become convinced that the Union cannot exist , perma nently "half slave and half free ;" and that as slavery has been the pretext for the rebellion, that its abolition will remove the cause of the war and enable the north and the south again to live in peace ? Should this event take place, will the Chicago Times and its Vallandigham co-laborers taunt their "erring brethern of the south" with be ing practical "abolitionists," or will they have too much regard for their feelings and in obe dience to Beitureeard's order, reserve, that epithet of reproach to those only who are unconditiondlly for the preservation of the Union. A Raw sao—Lrr IR NAIRE as NRIEREBREED. —Newspaper writers' of late, have haq 4a full share in the business of manufactirring h e roes from the very worst of material, and, therefore when a hero rushes upon the people, folly equipped in the glory of an act of real dauntless bravery, it is rather more refreshing to herald the fact, than it would be to manufacture the hero. Powell Sharp, the engineer who so nobly risked his own life that he might be able to save the lives of hundreds of others, is this hero. No other man in this country, deserves a higher praise for bravery than Powell Sharp. His act of heroism was one in wliiob judgMent, skill, : presence of mind, devotion and pronaptneis were all combined to prove his greatness. In an instant he saw and comprehended a great emergency. He beheld the dashing train, leaping malt were to the destruction of hundreds of human beings, and in that instant he Moved to the rescue with his locomotive. There was moral greatness and Manly courage. If therti has been anything done on the battle ;field within the present century to equal this , feat we should like to learn the fact, that we may honor the hero. Powell Sharp stands, at the head of the list of heroes. Let his name be passed from lip to lip. Let it be blessed by the beautiful and honored by the brave. We point with pride to a relation of the deed, which has elicited this paragraph, as it appears in another column. THE WHOLE . IN A NUTSHELL Judge Bright, who is one of the most saga cious and earnest of English statesmen, and who has been one of the truest friends that the Union has found in England, describes our case in a very few words. lie says in a letter, which has just appeared, addressed to a Mr. Jewett : If you are for the Union, and think it featt be preserved by conciliating the South, I confess I am amazed. They have made war upon Yon, because they suspected that you would yield nothing more to them—are you to yield qtore under compulsion of the war, or because you can neither conquer the South, nor yet subsist as an independent State without her. If you love slavery and wish to continue it, and if you think you can build up with honor a restored and united Republic by humbling yourself to the South, I can only express my surprise at the dream which possesses you: Ton may separate—or you may fight out this contest and win—but to leave the slave still a slave will expose you to the contempt of the civilized world. I applaud the proclamation of the President, as does every man in Europe, who is not a foe to freedoln, or moved by base hostility to the American Republic because it is a,reirub lic, and becairse it is wirerfull. The leaders of the South do not want Uninn ; they will never again come into it willingly ; and they make a mock of all offers of peace. They know that slavery must be a subject of perpetual agitation, and finally of extinction, within the Union, and they are determified, therefore, to set up for themselves. They will be independent or they will be nothing. llNermerry.—The township of Dayton,: in Newasgo'county, Michigan, takes the banner. It cast sixty-four votes, and every one of them Republican. The Detroit Advertiser says an. in telligent Christian people live there beyond doubt. BEBIsL CONSOBIPTION.—The Newbern Progress says that the rebels raised about forty thousand men by the last conscription ; of whom More than three-quarters were declared the' kill geone to be unfit for military duty. permaptuania molly it tlegrapt) fliont_tap Afternoon, November 17, 1862. FROM. WASHINGTON. Capture of a liebel CONSUL GENERAL OF LIBERIA Information has been received here that on the bth instant Acting Master's Mate, Lee,; of the bark Restless, left Ball's island with a axial' boat, with two contuthands, artebd, and pro ceeded to Jewey's island, Palmetto river, IS. C., for the purpose of intercepting and capturing the rebel mail from Charleeton to Ghxugetown. He and his friends secreted thentielves, a awaited the carrier, when he was suddenly brought to a halt by their command in the name of the 'Tufted . States au th ority.: The carrier said he was glad of being captured, •as he had long wished an opportunity to escape the place. The party barely eluded the rebel pickets, and reached the ship in safety. Rev. John B. Pinney, for many yew con nected with the American Colonization Society, has been recognized by the Presldent as Consul General of the Republic of Liberia for the Uni ted States. Our Grand Army in -Virginia WINTER CAMPAIGN. ARMY OF THE POTOMAC REORGANIEED FOUR COLUMNS TO ADVANCE 'UNDKR SUMNER, HOOKER, FRANKLIN, AND SIGEL, AS RIGHT, CENTRE, IZFT,AND RESERVE--GEN. BURNSIDK'S STAFF BURNSIDE AND SIGEL IN CONSULTA TION, &C. HEADQUARTINN OF TIM Al= OF TIM POTOSLILO, Noveatber 15, 1862. The following order was published 03 day: 11.11ADQUARTER0 ON THI ARMY OP THU P0T0740, NEAR WM:MINTON, Vs., Nov. 14. GENERAL ORDMI NO. 184. Find, The organization of a portion of this army into three general divisions is hereby an nounced. Three grand divisions will , be forme4 and commanded as follows: , The Second and Ninth Corps will form the right grand division, and will be comsesinded by Major General E. V. Sumner,. . The First and Sixth : orpa will form the left grand division, and will be commanded by Ma jor General W. B. Franklin. i The Third and Fifth Corps will forni the centre grand division, and will be , commended by Major General Joseph Honker- The Eleventh Corps, with each other troops as may hereafter be assigned to it, will consti tute a receive force under the command of. Major General F. Sigel. , 1 ‘algiimentti of cavalry, and .further details' will be announced ill future orders. • &cowl lu ~,.., or,' mitic.43 with • iltgi,r1,10110•14:1 UM t4e War Department, the commanders of (NMI, gialAdiViEliollei will, have power to 4ecitle *rich questions relating to the interior *meg tent of their commands as are now forward to these heAdquarters' him final actio n . Major General Sigel will exercise all the Pow: ers in respect to his command above assigned, as the cothinander At Ali *arid divhdian P Mime) cases which can only be decided, by the d ~ ments at Washington, they will forward dout: er ly to those departments, without referee too- these headquarters. All matters relating to the movements of troops, together with returns, reports, &c. will be forwarded to these headquarters as liiihal... Third, The commanders of these grand divis ions will retain with them their respectim staffs. Iburthlt34° fleiltri rice*. of AB 444 11 1th, sthanti 6tn corps wil retie command of these corps, and will forward to these headquortierg a list of recomiuendatiOne of Officers te Mlheil. staffs. Pifth, Brig. Gen S. Williams, A. A.-`4. , is appointed Inspector General of theAlliljritant General's Department ~in,this army,-, Liebe. Col. James A. Hardee, A D. C., 4eting Adju: taut General, will act as Assistant,lespector general i u the same ApPEOIPt4, i 1,1, , - . Sixth, The heads of the various sta ff depart= molts at these heridiparttire, other tea, the Adjutant General's Department ,' will re 4s heretofore until further orders. , ~, Seventh, Lieutenant Colonel Birthmark 4 ,A. General, is announced as A. A. Generalatihelle headquarters. Eighth, All orders conflicting with this are hereby rescinded, • .' • : . : , By command of Major General Burnside) ' S. WILLIAMS, A. A. G. Gen. Sigel visited Gen. Burnside at his head? quarters to day. . _ ,, , ARTILLERY FIGHT NEAR FA' -F UM% GP GiN. STURGA 4ko:' Watuterroe, Va., Nov.. 16—Evening.,At about ten o'clock this morning, while the Sec ond division of the Ninth corps, under General Sturgis, were passing from-Sulphur Springs to Fayetteville, at a point about: four miles front the latter place, where a email stream, a branch of tie Rappahannock., Onvuse the road, and leading through a deep gorge, a re* battery opened epon the ctoltunn` from all elevation on the opppeite bank of the river. The attack was sudden, and tepid 444 en sued from a twenty pound, gun and sayersl lighter calibre. Captain Durch's Pennsylvania battery, which was paakg at the time, was at once placed' in position, and replied to the re bels. His ten pounder rifle guns soon convinc ed the rebels that they, had a ed the wrongAssenger, ias his Sting to and poweffullyallective. The artillery...duel lasted for more two hours, when the rebels withdrew, with what loss is not yet known- • The firing of the rebels was, however, effec tually silenced, and the column continued: it s march to Fayetteville, which p lace it method without further molestation, The casualties on our 'side are a the h oes ! of First Lieut. Mc.lilvyine r • Durck's bat ry, who was struck by a shell while galbatly di recting the working of his guns. He ed a wound in the abdomen, and another from the same missile in his arm. He cannot long Sur vive. Several of the men were slightly wound ed, but none seriously. Several hougs were killed, and two wagons. destroyed by the enemy's shells. General Sturgis narrowly escaped death. A ricochet shot struck his horse, and missed close to the General's person. Yesterday four companies of the 6th New York cavalry, under the command of Lieut. Col. McVickEr, proceeded to Salem for the pur pose of interoepting and capturing the party of Dickinson's rebel cavalry which has beei l h igig .. log upon our rear, capturing its - where end otherwise annoying our forces, and irltiaMlad the recent raid upon Markhall, which theY however made their escape, tad no armeddeht were found. Our cavalry .remained ? em last night and returned this morning. i - A number of unarmed mounted men were found upon the road, probatitif, attente4te rebels, although claiming to be Peectiful . Having no orders to arrest sack persons, they were permitted to proceed. WASICINGTON, Nov. 17 NAILtow ,I.llPbaymes HOUP.OH, Nov. 15. The. United Metes mail' steamer Collins, ar rived at Fortress Montoe "this' morning! ,from Beaufort, North Oitolina, bringing large mails and , bound for New York; after taking in coal. The Newborn Progras'of'Nov. 18th says, Maj. Gen. Foster arrived home on Wednesday morn iag•looking none the worie for hie journey. ARRIVAL aIMULGiNBOAT iIARSACIE Bosses Nov 17. Thell guobbat Keariage, froth sMadeira, alrived at Gibraltar on' -25th ultv 'She reports that she chased a side wheel steamer for Sixteen hours but the vessel escaped during the chase. She threw overboard her cargci in boxes and balsa. The date or .locality of chase not given. PFIODILPHIA, Nov. 17. Flour rather 4uu and sales of 1,000 burets, mostly extra *illy, at $7 . 7@, superfine at $6 25; small sales of rye flour at $6 60, and corn meal at 8 40; demand for wheat is limited and sales of 4,000 bus. red at $14441 46, white $16641 6b; rye commands 90496; corn in fair request and 4,000 bus. sold at 74 for yellow and 75 for white ; oats steady at 40 fur Dela ware and 41. i fpr Partusylorania ; no change 4n g roceries and provisL,na; whisky firm at 40. rIIO DRAFTED MEN. Any drafted man wishing to procure a good substitute for the sum of $250 in cash, will please address with full particulars to G. E. ODIEN, nol7-14* Harrisburg P.s 0. STRAYED AWAY, -- EisoM the Ilanieb7nri - Stork Yard, on Friday -A. night, Novetfibbr 14, TWO HORSES--one a strawberry Fonn,,liad no shoes On bind feet and is about five years old ; the other is a bay ,a rse ; nine or ten years of well. rift* glint, gets up very ' welt. ne raturabtir.tiktbonlas to 'the Subsaribers,ll . the 0-001, yrals,t.Wirikbe:liberelly THOMAS MAYES, or nol7-Bta HENRY S. FRANK. Great Battle . At Bayou . Lafourehe. SUCCESS 01 WOllOlOl lapedltlolk Complete DEFEAT OF THE REBELS. Rebel- Oolobel MePheeters --Killed 200 Killed, Wounded and Prisoners =1 1 Nsw YonK, Nov. 18 Advicee from New Orleans report that the expedittorr - minlet — Oetteral - WORM . met the enemy at Labadieryille, and defeated them after a brisk fight. Upwards of 200 of the enemy c i tu were killed wounded, or to eu prisoners, and o . FAI iilisteloartillyi was Mi. ' ThiS: rebe l s were pursu towards Berwlcks Bay, where Gov, Moore wee supposed to be. UOur loss was eighteen killed and seventy-four wounded. ' r ' - 4 ' 4. ' ' ' - , . The rebels }Allured were paroled. From We liei4 Orleans Della Oct. 30.] The steamer Idisturice !suited at moon yester day with eighty of the.wisoners taken at the battle of laiuileville. These men mostly be longed to the Crescent regiment, raised among the elite , of this city,, and so soon as it was an ` outioedonqmibulletiii''board 'that they had arrived, Iftisidii3ds 'begvir to wend their way towards the levee to see them, and, perhaps, to recognise old friends or acquaintances, or relatives. When we reached the steamer, the *hall wits' croided and 'the prisoners holding uninterrupted eon dnunication with all they re cognized on shore. A battalion of infantry shortly made rte appearance, and cleared a wide space on the levee in front of the boat, but it was soon withdrawn, and the crowd was again allowed freely to talk with the prisoners from the wharf. And many were the joyful recog nitions that took place. Everything, however, was done. in the most orderly style, and with the greatest decorum. The prisoners looked very well,, were dressed 413 finely aa could be =peptid under avyq circumstances, and appeared quite cheinful. Late in the evening they were transferred to another vessel, which is to be their prison, we understand, for the present. They are receiving the beet of treatment, and have no cause, to complain, other than that of being ilgigriyed' of the freedom of the city for the Mint, but soldiers are used to privations. Colonel McPheeters, who commanded com bined fragments'of rebel regimeniii, and was killed, we believe was iorinerly a laWyer.of this city, and left here as lietenant colonel of the Crescent Regiment,,,. He pas educated at West Point, iiiitif-AviP 1W Midrib) , did riot toUtinue long there..' enure.. ..... eitismaan TANEN gi~~~.,.,..... ; ., :. fiokal .. These. wen , all that'fell into Aur hands. The other Confederate wounded were carried off by the enemy In their retreat. The wounded were eased for in our hospital with our men. Sabbath fter beaidont Lincoln itRMdNI thelikrican Army mad Navy ittriet Obairvittor of the Day of leg Enjoined tind illtelereillheintghout the Service. WASHENGLION, NOV. 46 The tolidwing general order has heen4tteued reepeetieg the ebeervence - ofthe Sabbath day in the army and navy : . • . Mamma ititvonox, WeidOMON, Nov.. 16, 1862. f The President, 'Oommaoder in-chief of the army and naiy, desires and enjoins the orderly obaervanCe Of the Sabbath day by the officers and men in the military and naval service. The importance for . man aid beast of the prescribed 'Weekly rest, the sacred rights of Christian soldiers and sailors, a becoming defer once to the b4t,sentittpit of a Christian people, and a due rtgilitli ffirtha Divine Will, demand I t ht o t e rt ottalt WA 'levy, be re to measure qf strict necessity. The dideliffine(iiiindAftitliiitini of the national forces should not- differ, run , the cause they defend be kinpe „liked by, tbn.profanation of ,the day and niAna,clf aka Hpet High. „Atthis time of public diStrees, adopting.tbo words of Washington, in 17711, . " Men . ,may AM enough to do in the *Oka of' . God and their country without aban doning themselves to vice and immorality;" The first, titufeblil Order leaned by the Father of biaSnuntry, after , the ,Declaration of D.der petulance, indhudtai the apiriton which our insti tutions. werefoundedand should over be defen- "The General hopes and trusts that every ogler out Plan =draw to ad as becomes a Chrtatian vidier defeeding .the dorsal eights and liberties Of Ad Magri/ . . ABRAHAM LINCOLN. FROM FORRESN MONROE IIAIIKETii TILLEaltAnt. Sao -Abu:Moments. NOTICE t Aura Wit Ilitttt FOR PALE. 'HE County Rights of a new and complete 'll. CORN SHELLER, wanted by every farmer. For particulars address WM. CLARKE, nol7-3to Harrisburg P. 0. MALL WI:101411T MAY CONCERN. "XTOTICE,is hereby given to all persons not to pay Samuel W. Freeborn, Sr., any money fur the rent of the Restaurant under the Dau phin County House, corner of Third and Walnut streets, as he has no authority to rent the place or receive money any for the same. Parties about to rent the place are hereby cautioned to have no deilings with him. nl7-3to SAMUEL FREEBURN, Jr. FOUND—at large, on the night of 14th, a large Dark Roan Horse. The owner can hive the same by paying charges and proving property, by calling on J. E. FOUGHT, Co. A, 127th Regiment, Provost Battalion. nols-Bto CAUTION. A LL persons are hereby warned not to pur chase the following voncheroot the Penn. sylvania Railroad Company, issued for conduct. ing Transportation on said road, in September, 1862, viz : No. 2,296 No. 2,402 No. 2,408 - No. 2,404 Said vouchers having been lost in transit between Baltimore and Philadelphia on the 16th or 16th of October, 1862. MAGRA W & KOONS, Agents Penn's B. B. Co., Baltimore. BALTIMORE, Nov. 14, 1862.-d2w MASONS! PLASTERERS MOULDERS! TAKE NOTICE!! BEST LOAM SAND Sold and delivered, for cash, by HENRY BLUMENSTEIN, Broad Street, near Third. nols 1w a PARTNERSHIP WAN rED. AGENTLEMAN, with a cash capital of abou , $5,000, wants a partnership in some plea sant and profitable business in the interior o this State. Addrubs, with mull particulars, I . care of this office A reply will be given, i satisfactory. [nl4 4t] " INQUIRER." NURSE WANTED WANTED a respectable wowau (whitc) as 1111111t1, and to assist in sewing. Apply at the BUEHLER HOUSE, between 11 end 12 o'clock, A. M. References required. [nl4-tf FOR RENT. TWO SMALL 110IISES--in the Fourth Ward Enquire of nl4.3t] ALDERMAN MeGLAUGIIIIN. STERLING'S AMBROSIA FOR THE HAIR. AHANDSOME HEAD OP HAIR le a crown of glory. With proper care and culture it will last as a protection to the head as long as the nails do to the fingers, or the eyelashes to the eyes. S' . IIIIILING'S Ammon& is the only article yet discovered that will bring about the desired results. It is a preparation the result of science and experiment ; the science point ing out what was needed, and experiment find ing the required properties in certain roots,barks, and herbs. It has consumed a long time in its preparation, has been tested by persons of most undoubted reliability in this city, and is by them pronounced perfect, and the only satisfactory article, and is now offered to the public. The proprietors, determined to give it the most thorough tests, practical and chemical, and now certain that it will make the hair grow luxuri antly on Bald Heads, Preventing Grayness and Baldness, Reinvigorating and Beautifying the Hair, rendering it soft and glossy. Da. Sramanct's Amnesia is a stimulating, oily extract of roots, barks, and herbs, and, aside from its neatness, permanency, and gloss, it is medically adapted to preserve and add to the beauty of the hair. The only article yet dis covered that will Cure the Disease of the Scalp, and cause the Hair to Grow. ti DO: 4 IW 4101110 DL. This is to certify that about eighteen months ago, 1 commenced using Strass,me's Alamos's. My hair was short, thin and rapidly falling out. I had tried many Hair Tonics, Invigorators, &c., without receiving any benefit. Soon after using the Ambrosia, my hair ceased falling out, and commenced growing so rapidly as to astonish me. Now my hair is thick, soft, and glossy, and is five feet four inches in length—when let down, reaching to the floor. This wonderful result I attribute solely to the use of Sxsarnro' a AMBROSIA, as since I commenced using it I have applied nothing else to my hair. MRS. LUCY A. BROWN. worn to before me this 15th day of April,lB6l H. N. PARKER, Corn. of Deeds. City Hall, Hew York. llle' For Sale by IX W. GROSS & CO., Har risenrg, Pa. nl4-d3m] SEQUESTRATOR'S NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby gAyen that the undersign ed, residing , --of Harrisburg, Dauphin County, Perimifint. and 'doing bu siness as an Attornervbr-Inw, in Third street, in said city, has been Oppointed Sequestrator of "The Commonwealth, Insurance Company at Harrisburg," and all persons indebted to said Company, or holding property belonging to the same, are hereby required to pay and deliver all such sums of rnonpy and property due, and belonging to said Company, to the undersigned sequestrator ; and all Ireditors of said Corpora tion, are requested to ;present their respective accounts or demands fpr settlement. - 1. W. SIMONTON, Sequestrator Haaatasuacr;'Ncv. 10, 1862.-dlaw-4w. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. N - - - OTIOE is hereby given, that letters testa mentary have this day issued to the sub scriber on the estate of John Gingrich, late of Conewago township, Dauphin conunty, dec'd. All creditors of said estate will present their claims, and those indebted make immediate Payment. HENRY GINGRICH, Executor, oct3o doaw6w Conewago township. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby given that letters of administration were this day taken out of the Register's office of Dauphin county, on the estate of Jeremiah Kelly, dec'd., of City of Harrisburg, Dauphin county, by the undersigned. AU eredhora to said estate will :present their claims prbperl authenticated, and those knowing themselves to be indebted will make im molate payment to the undo ragas' . et7-6w-doaw* CHABLK:_= KELLY, Adm'r. ~POTATOES. &TOES. 4 B USHELS of "Prince Albert" .000 Potatoo3, equal to the cele brated Mercer, for sale by nol7-4t EBY Sr. KUNKEL. GAIETY MUSIC HALL! WINTER SEASON. Admission, 25 ets. Private Boxes, 60 cts. Doors open at 61, perf ,, r , rame:l commence at 71 IMMENSE SUCCESS CROWDED HOUSES SHOUTS OF LAUGHTER. SOMETHING NEW EVERY NIGHT THOUSANDS DELIGHTED. EVERY BODY PLEASED WITH 808 EDWARD'S STAR STATE CAPITAL TROUPE. MISS MOLLIE FIELDINGS. MISS KATE FRANCIS. MISS LIZZIE FRANCIS. MISS KATE ARCHER. MONS. PAUL CANE. YOUNG AMERICA. TOM BROOKFIELD. MR. and MRS. 808 EDWARDS and PROF. WEBER'S SPLENDID ORCHESTRA. To Conclude every Evening with a COMIC PANTOMINE. Characters by the Company. 808 EDWARDS, Sole Proprietor. Moss. PAUL ()ABB, Stage Manager. $42 88 49 60 39 67 3,71830 $3,845 26 JOHNSTON'S PARLOR ENTERTAINMENTS SANFORD'S OPERA HOUSE WITH THE ARMY DRAMATIC COMPANY, Prima of Admission 50 and 25 Cts. Collection of Pensions, Bounties, Back Pay and War Claims. OSleers' Pay Rolls, Muster Rolls, and Re exulting Accounts Made Out• rBE undersigned, having been in the em ployment of the United States during the last eighteen months, as Clerk in the Muster ing and Disbursing Office and Office of Super intendent of Recruiting Service of Pennsylva nia, respectfully informs the public that he has opened an office in the DAILY TELEGRAPH Building for the purpose of collecting Pen sions, Bounties, Back Pay and War Claims ; also. making out Officers' Pay Rolls, Muster Boils and tiecruiiing Accounts. All orders by m attendee to promptly. SULLIVAN S. CHILD. Eir Blanks ol 211 kinds turnisho Lids ißic n• nnvl-di f QEALED PROPOSALS will be received at my IJ office in Harrisburg, Pa., until 12 o'clock, noon, on TUESDAY, tue 25th day of NOVEM BER, 1862, for supplying the Camp of Rondez vous of Drafted Militia, at Camp Simmons, with Uncooked Rations. Bids will state the price at which each Ration will be furnished. The Ration is as follows: Three-quarters of a pound of Pork or Bacon, or One and one-fourth pounds of Beef ; and Twenty-one ounces of Bread or Flour; or One pound of Hard Bread ; or One and one-fourth pounds of 'Corn Meal. And at the rate per hundred Rations of eight quarts of Beans and ten pounds of Rice or Hominy ; ten pounds of Coffee or one end a half pounds of Tea ; fifteen pounds of Sugar ; four quarts of Vinegar ; one and one-fourth pound Adamantine Candies ; four pounds of Soap and two quarts of Salt. • In addition to the above the Contractor will furnish twice a week one gallon of Molasses per hundred Rations, and three times a week one pound of Potatoes per Ration. Good and approved security for the faithful performance of the Contract will be required, and the names and places of residence of the proposed sureties, (two in number) must be stated in the bids. The lowest responsible bid will be accepted, but the right to reject all bids, should they be deemed too high, is reserved to the Government. Bidders are requested to be present at the opening of the bide. W. B. LANE, Capt. 8d Cavalry, Chief Mustering Officer HAIIRBBIrBO, Nov. 13, 1882.-dtd DESIRABLE HOTEL PROPERTY ON MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17th, 1862, IRE undersigned will sell at public vendee, on the premises, his Hotel Property, in West King street, in the city of Lancaster, known as the SORREL HORSE HOTEL, in the first square of the city. f This Hotel is one of the best in the city of Lancaster for regular business, having always had its full share of custom, and for the several last years has been increasing largely. Its proximity to Fulton Hall, (being the nearest Hotel,) gives it advantages over any other in the city. Possession and an indisputable title will be given on the first of April next. Sale will commence at 6 o'clock in the even ing of the said day no7-dts* 20 DOLLARS REWARD. WAS lost, mislaid or stolen on the 26th of of October, a $lOO note, of the Bank of Delaware County. The above reward will be paid for its recovery. If any person not likely to own such a sized note has been seen with one, such information may lead to its recovery. Apply to W. SANDERSON, nolo-dlyr At the Eagle Works. CHECK No. 134, dated Harrisburg, Nov. 11, on Assistant Treasurer 11. S., Philadelphia, for $143 56, drawn to order of Lieut. B. R. Robinson. (Signed) THOMAS H. NORTON. Capt. 15th 11. S. 1., D. C. Banks and bankers are cautioned against paying same. nollt NOTICE TO DEALEIt4S IN GUNPOW DEII.—Mr. James M. Wheeler hiving withdrawn from the agency for the sale of our Gunpowder in Harrisburg, we have appointed Major David IrCoratick our agent, who will be prepared to furnish all Mr. Wheeler's cus tomers as usual. ABIIBTS, Tubs, Brushes of all kinds, for sale by NICHOLS & BOWMAN, ov6 Cor. Front and Market Ste. ZMUseitittito 808 EDWARDS' WALNUT ST., BELOW THIRD, OPER FOR THE 1=33E1 EVERY NIGHT THIS WEEK SPLKNDID ENIFERTAINMENT rte 2thertistments TO OFFICERS AND SOLDIERS. NOTICE. FO ii SALE. JACOB LEKA.N STOLEN K I. DUPONT DE NEIKOUR & CO octlB-d2m