Daily patriot and union. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1858-1868, August 01, 1863, Image 1

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    RATES OF ADVERTISING.
•
four lines or less ponstitute h ti ognove. Ten lines
'sore than four, comititute s square.
Eq, One .. $0 30 Our. sq., one dray.-- $0 00
one week.. 120 " one week.— 200
' one month.. 300 " one mouth.. 000
" threemonths 600 4.44 three months 10 00
"• sitmmthe..Boo " six months.. 1500
' *muter- —l2 00 " 0 110 / 016 r -.-- 20 00
tEr !holiness notices inserted in the toast. Gomm,
de ietan marriages 5
end deaths, TIM OMITS NIA LIWIL for
Usertion. To merchants and others adVertlaing
J sue year, liberal terms will be offered.
/1:7" The number of insertions motto designated on
ke advertisement.
Marriages and Deaths will be inserted at Wou nd ,
aseitaa regular advertisements.
Business garbs.
sil,A B WAY-cp.
NO. 11, NORTH THIRD ST., HARRISBURG.
STEINWAY. I S PIANOS-,,
HELOT/BONS, VIOLINS, GUITARS,
Banjos, Flutes, Fifes, Drums, iiccordeoss,
13781 M, win AND Boor. NOW, ite., /to.,
PHO TO GRAP H FRAMES* ALBUMIN -
Large Pier sod Mantle Mirrors, Square and Ovid tomato
of every descuiptionpnade to order..Regaildiug dons.
.AgeScy ler Howe's Sewing Machines.
ID- Sheet Mimic sent by Mail. ootl—/
JOH-N W. GLOVER,
ll[L
UCH INT TAILOR
Has just received from New York, an assort.
- meat of
SEASONABLE GOODS,
whist he offers to his customers and the public ci
now 22) MODERATE PRICES. dtf
W HARRY WILLIAM B,
CIIMNALIM ALGl'MWirig
402 WALNUT STRUT,
PHT.LADELPHIA.
General Malan for Soldiers promptly collected, State
Claims tekitletca inat20,4121
SMITH & EWING,
ATTORNEYS-AT-1.4.W,
THIRD WIRE RT, Harrlebtirg,
Pr:Lena:in the several Marts of Dauphin county. 001-
/actions made promptly. A. 0 . MTH,
J. B. EWING-.
0031 C, Merchant Tailor,
ff GaIIEiNUT ST., between Second and Front,
UM just returned from the city with an amortment of
CLOTHS, C&SSIMERRS AND TESTINOS,
'Which will be /fold at moderate prices and made up to
order; and, also, as assortment of. BRADY MUDS
Vlething and Gentlemen's Furnishing Geed..
BEN.TISTR Y.
B. N., NMI, D. D. 8.,
N 0 . 119 MARKET STREET,
-
SHY f lEUVW&L'S BUILDING, 13P-BTAIBEI.
janti4f
RELIGIOUS BOGS STORE,
rßicr AND SUNDAY- SCHOOL DEPOSITORY,
E. S. GERMAN,
!T 11017TH 2100 ND STRUT, sBOYIi OICIONIIT,
MAIAIIIDDAT, PA.
Depot fortlieeolo of Storeoseopea,Storoossopiolriewa,
*nide and Ilduoical Instruments. Also, subseriptlime
-dolma for religious publialtieno. nollpdy •
TORN G. W. MARTIN ,
d.
FASHIONABLE
CARD W . R.I.TER.
HEWS HOTEL, TIABILIBBtrEfk, PA.
Allmanner of VISITING', WBDDING AND BUSI
NESS CARDS executed in the most artistla styles and
most reasonable terms. deald-dtf
U - NION HOT-EL,
Ridge Avenue, corner of Broad street,.
HARRISBURG, PA.
The undersigned informs the public that he has re
cently renevat-d and refitted his well-known 4 . Union
Semi on Ridge avenue, near the Round Rouse, and is
prepared to accom•nodate citreous, at-angers and travel
ere in the beat style„ at moderate rates.
Ins table will be eupplico with the best the =whets
afford, ant at Me har wl.l be found superior brands of
liquors and nova beverages. The very beat accommo
dations for railroaders employed at the shops in this
fait au] HENRY BOSTGEN.
FRANIELIN HOUSE /
BALTIMORT, - liD.
This pleasant , sad ocmunodions Rota had been tho
soughiute-Aden end re-famished_ It is pialitastly
situated on liortb-Weet corner of Howard and Prastlin
litres* a few doors west of the Northern Central Rail
way Depot. Bvery attention pakd !Ohs comfort of his
;Rests. LB G, Proprietor, .•
012-13 • (Late of Sans Grove. Pa.)
THEO. F. SOHEFTIER,-
BOOK, CARD AND JOR . PRINTER
NO 111 DIARIRT WARM miutstBRIIRG.
Partiodor Wardle* paid to printing, ruling and .
Huang of Railroad Blank; Manifesto . , Inanranee Poll.
vies, Obeeks, &e.
Wedding, Visiting and Businesi ;lards printedUt very
low purees and Islam beet idyls: jan2l
ROBERT SNODGRASS,
ATTORNEY Al' LAW,
Office North Third street, third door above Mar
ket, Harrisburg, Pa.
N. B.—Pe ;Lion, Bounty and-Military elalma of - all
kind!lnn. - ..aCuttd and collected.
Au t ur so aims. John C. Kaulkal, Baal& Mumma, 3r.,
and 8.1. Lemberton. suyn-dBoillon
WM.: H. MILLER,
AID
R. E. FERGUSON,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
OFFICE IN
SHOEMAKER'S BUILDINGS
SECOND STREET,
BETWEEN WALNUT and MARKET SQUARE,
ap49wiral 'Nearly opposite the Buehler House.
T HOS. C. .IgeODOWELL,
ATTORNEY AT L*W,
MILITARY CLAIM AND PATENT AGENT.
Office 62 the :Exchange, Walnut at., (Up Stairs.)
Having formed a . oonneetion with parties in Wash
ington City,_Wno are reliable loudness men, any busi
ness connected with any of the Departneids Will meet
with immediate and aatefal Mutt*
IP C-
WEICHEL,
SVRGRON AND • OCULIST,
ILIBIDENON THDLD MR NORM
Sets now folly prepared to attend proMPAT 110 •
age* of premien In all It, Inspathee;
A Lode AID ealiT ISIMONSOPM, MEDIUM. NEMBIRIFOP
puddles him in promising full and ample satisfaction tc
all who may favor him with a eon, be tko disease arm&
or any other nature. mlB-d&wly
TAILORING.
3E Co. 8. 3HC. la la GI- H.
The enbseri&V le reedy at AO. 94, MARKET ST,
four doors below Fourth street, to make
ME-r$ AND BOY'S CLOTHING
In say desink atyle, and with skill and promptness.
Persons wishing cutting done can bare it done at the
shortest notice. - • - ep2l-ely
CHARLES F. VOLLMER;
UPHOLSTERER,
Chestnut street. four doors above Second,
(Ormuz WASHINGTON Rom Housn,)
Is prepared to furnishto order, in the very best style 01
workmanship, gyring and Flair Mattresses, Window Oar
tains; Lounges, and all other articles dfiNtrniture in bit
ni r
line, on short notice iond moderate terms. Sari ez
parlance in the business, he feels warranted in as , a
Alma of public patronage, donident of hisability to - T•
satlafaMlon. jasslT,-atf
MILITARY CLAIMS AND PEN
SIGNS
The undersigned have entered into an association for
the collection of Military Olaims and the securing of
Pr=one for irolwdest and disabled soldiers..
Mostar-in siut Maxtor-out lions, alma' Pay Bons,
Ordnance aud Clothing ranso4 and all Palma pektm
big to tip military service will be made out properly
and rrpeditioody
Office in the Sxchangeo Walnut between
&cowl atka Third streets, near Oulithi Hotel- Harris
% r, Pa. • PROS 0 MAODOWFI9I.,
Ja26 dtf 7110X441 11“.017111.11.
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VOL. b.—NO. 285.
rebtrat.
41%-*Avf
DR. SWEET'S
INFALLIBLE LINIMENT
GREAT EXTERNAL REMEDY,
FOR RHEUMATISM, GOUT, NEURALGIA,
LUMBAGO, STIFF NECK AND JOINTS;
SPRAINS, BRUISES, curs A WOUNDS,
PILES, BEADAOHE, , and ALL RHEU
MATIC and NERVOUS DISORDERS.
For all of which it is a, speedy and certain remedy,
and never fails. This Liniment is prepared from the
recipe of Dr Stephen Sweet, of Connecticut, the fa.
mons bone setter, and has been used in his practice for
more than twenty years with the moat astonishing sac.
ease_ .
AS AN ALLEVIATOR OF PAIN, it is unrivaled
by-any preparation before the public, of Irbil:Ai - the most
skeptical may be convinced by a sinea trial. .-;
. This Liniment will cure rapidlyand radically, 14,HEII
MATIO bISORDIIIIB of every kind, and in .t housands
of cues where it has been used it has never teen knoWn
to fail.
Fan ATEI7RALGIA, it will afford immediate relief
in every ems. however distressing.
It will relieve the worst cases of Iirrs'ADACHE in
three minutes and is warranted to do it.
•TOOTHACHE aleo will it cure instantly.
FOR NERVOUS DEBILITY - AND GENERAL
LASSITDDE, arising from imprudence or excess, this
Liniment is a most happy and unfailing remedy. Act
ing directly upon the nervous tissues, it strengthens and
revivifies the system, and restores it to'elasti.city and
sive.
FOR PILES.—Aa an external remedy, we claim that
file the Use known, and we challenge the world to pro.
duce an equal. Every victim ca this distressing com
plaint should give it a trial, for it will not fail to afford
immediate *elle; and in a majority of cases will effect
a radical cure.
RVINSY aied SORE THROAT are sometimes ex
tremely malignant and daeproas t but a timely aßpliea
tion of this Liniment will never fail to cure. •
SPRAINS are sometiame very obstinate, and enlarge
inapt of the Joints la Dodge to occur if neglected. • The
worst ease may be•compered by this Liniment in two or
three days. -
BRUISES. CUTS, WOUNDS, SORES, ULCERS,
BURNS and SCALDS, yield readily to the wonderful
healing properties of DR. swzzvs INFAI A LIBLD
LININUNT, when used according to directions. Also,
CAMEL ATN.s. FRoSTED FEET, and INSECT
BITES and STINGS.
- EVERY HORSE OWNER
should have this remedy at hand, for its timely use at
the first appearance of Lameness will effectually pre
vent those formidable diseases to, which all' horses are
liable and which render so many otherwise valuable
horses nearly worthless.
Over tour hundred voluntary 'testimonials to the won
derful curative properties of this Linithent4Lave been
received within the last two years. and many of them
from persons in 'the highest ranks of life.
CAUTION.
To avoid imposiVon, observe the Signature and Like
ness of Dr. Stephen Sweet on every label, and also
" Stephen Sweet's Infallible Liniment » blown' in the
glass of each bottle, without which none are genuine.
41IDSON & ' CO.,
£ble Pioprietore, Noririeh,Ct.
For sale by all dealers_ •
JUnting.
T.
F. WAT . SON,
MASTIC WORKV.II,
AND
PRACTICAL CEMENTER '
Is prepared to Cement the exterior of Buildings with
he New York Improved
Water-Proof_ Mastic Cement.
This Material is different from all other„ cemenhi.
It forms a solid, durable *thee:Diane:se 'Seedy mesa,
Imperishable by' the actiosrof water or , frost. Every
good building should be coated withthis.Oement ;it is
& perfeet preserver to the walls, and makes a beautiful,
fins finish, equal to Eastern brown sandstone, or may
Color desired.
Among others for. whom I have applied the Mastic
Cement, I refer to the following gentlemen :
J. Bissell, residence, Penn street, Pittsburg, finished
five years.
J. H. Shoenberger, residence, La4tencieville, finished
five years.
James DVOandissii, residence, Allegheny City,lir&hed
live years.
Calvin Adams, residence, Thiid at set, finished four
years.
A. Hoeveler, residence, Lawrenceville, finished - four
years.
J. D. M'Oord, Penn street, finished four years.
Ron. Thomas Irwin, Diamond street, finished four .
St Charles Rotel and Wised House, finished five.
years.
Itittanning leurt House and Bank, for Barr & Moser,
Architects, Plttabarg,finished Ore years.
Orders received at the. Mee of 11, Window:soy, Paint
Shop, 20 Seventh street, or please address
T. F. WATSON,
mayl6-tf P. O. Box 13.4. Pittsburg, Pa.
MESSRS. 0 HICKERING & 00.
Jury Ap Apr. pl ump rm .
GOLD MEDAL!
AT THJ'
MECHANICS' FAIL BOST,ON,
0 Villit Ag rE l7r7r m arirp7Pi rosiii
Warortiom for tho OHIOHIRINT PIANO& at Harrhi
bods-trMarket W. kNOctiLiTi =RIO BTORA.
j AWES ! YOU KNOW - WERE YOU
.1
can get floe Note Paper, Envelopes, Visiting and
Wedding Oarda t At SOH itINERIII BOOKSTORE
KIIPERIOR STOCK OF LIQUORS.--
kJ WK. DOCK, Js., & 00.. are now able to offer to
their customers and tee public at large, a stook •of the
puree! liquors ever imported into thin Market, compri
sing in part the following varieties :
WHISK -IRISH, SCOTC H.. OLD BOURBON.
WINE-PORT, SHERRY, OLD MADEIRA.
OTAED, DUPEY & CO. PALE BRANDY.
JAMICA SPIRITS.
PRIME NEW ENO' LAND RUM.
DRAKE'S PLANTATION BITTERS.
These liquors can all be warranted; and in addition to
these, Dock & Co. have on hand a large variety of
Wines, Whisky and Brandy, to which they invite the
particular attention of the public.
WEBSTER'S ARMY AND NAVY
PfiCHET DICTIONARY.
mot received end for sate at "
80HHIPPRWS `&3O MORN.
feLACKING I I—bitsoWo "GUAM/Axes
siitsilia.) , -100 aseartai arm , 'just r•
°dyed lasa for as", Witmilaalf 1/1!"11
WI ' WM: DOON. hi.: 'a
4e; '
UTDINDOW SHADES of lines, gilt
y. bordered; and PIPIR BLINDI ol an 400.
n th,* of dilifigni and °nauseate ; water
Iv
illribllol sod TASSELS very low WOW. id
' - Schiller's Boolliaterit:',.
MEI
HA. it KIS tilt Pit... : SA.T.U . RDA Y. A.UGFiI!ST, I<sn3:.
T H E
Meekly "Patriot St, Union "
Tili-431111APEST PAPSIt TtrßLldlrliD -IN
PENNSYLVANIAI
'
THE ONLY DEMOCRATIC .PAPEII PUBLISHED AT
Ell BEAT OB GOVERNItheNi!
IMF-FOUR COLUMNS OF BEADING? EAT
- TER EACH WEEK 1
AT THE LOW PRICE OF ONE DOLLAR
AND FIFTY GENTS I.
sufssoRTRED ITJR IN CLUES - OP' NOT LESS
THAN TEN COPIES 10 ONE ADORNS:it' -
We have been compelled to rapes the chib anhsmxiption
price to one dollar and fifty cents in order. to save
selves from actual logs. Pape! hie risen, including
taxes, about tirenty-five . per cent., and hi rising„;
and when we tell oar' Democratic friends, candidly, that
we can no longer afford torll the vireehii Passer Ann
Union at ono dollar a year, end moat add fifty cents or
atop the publication, we trust they will appreciate our
and;' instead of withdrawing their eubscrip
lions, go to work with a will to increase out list in every
county in the State. We have endeavored, • end shall ,
continue our efforts, to make thepcperusefal his party
organ; and welcome ass news meinenger every fail:i
lly. We flatter'ourselves Diet it has not been without
some influence in produeing,the glorious revolstiOri ii
the politics:of the State aekieved at the late :election election;
and if fearlesenese beim digehargeof duty, Oddity to
the prineiplee of tha party, end an sexiousdesire to pro
mote iL interests, with some experience and s moderate
degree of ability, Op be made servieeable hereafter, the
Weekly.P.avvizor WED Union ertli not be hen -useful to'
the party or less welcome to thelanilly circle in the fu
ture than Likes been is the past. , We'conlidently leak .
for inereased encouragement in this great enterprise,
and appeal to eviuyinliaential Democrst in the State to
lend us' his aid is mining' our sapsoriptifin list up to
twenty or thirty thotutaud., The expense to each indi
vidual is trifling, the benefit to the party may be great.
Believing that the Deumensey of the State feel the ne
cessity of sustaining a' fearless central organ,' we make
this appeal to them for assistance with the fullest confi
dence of memos.
The mine ressani which indneeas to 'raise the pries
of the Waiikl7, operate in regard tothe Daily Oilier; the
price of which id also !amused: Theadditiobilisositol
Fedi anhecrilier will be - but and,, while weraiii;
•not permed. ourselies tha,tthe change necessarflymMia
will result in any diminution of our daffy
yet, were we certain that such would be the 'Musa.
gamma; we should still be compelled to Make it, or inf.
fer iminoat low. 'Under theta* dreumetabees we must
throw .ourselvei upon the generoidty,` or, rather; the
Mortice of the public, 'sad abide their verdict, irliatiiiey
it may be. . " . •
The period for which many of our subscribers hale
pibtfor their piper being on the eve of expiring; We
take the liberty of issuing thhinotioe, remilidingtheis
of the same, in order that theyMear •
ItENEir THEIB CLUBS.
We shall also take it se an medal Diver if our present
subscribers will urge upon their neighbors t h e fact that
the Pilaw: MED Mem is the only. Demooratic paper
printed in. Harrie►arg, sad cosuddering the large amolutt
of reading matter, embracing all the warren;_awa of
the dey, apd
TBLE.GRAPHIOr.DISPAVOILES
From - Rewriters ap.to the' acemeat the paper goes tci
pram, :pen goal, miseellsamme, mmerel mad. local neve
market reports, Is decidedly tie
CIIEV'SSZNXWIPAPIfit PDBLISHBD IN
TSS IST42W f , •
•Theititia actively a village or toirOo 1144, PIOB in
which a club cannot he ruined if the proper vizertion be
lnisi eiwinisnWn.ars few pinion's in whiebrinie or
more energetic ram cannot be foundwbe are in favor of
the dissemination of sound pemolwatio doacrlues, who
would be willing to wink, the effort to raise a club.
DEMOCRATS OF THE INTERIOR 1
Let us *pa- from:you. The existing win', and the *
prom:ming muttons of Congress and the Btate-Legieler
tare, are invested with ennens.l intoned,. end every man
Oman have the some.
TSRM6.
DAILY PATRIOT AND UNION.
dingle eopy for one year, is sdvaaos $5 00
eines copy during the mud= of the Legislature.: 2 00
00y imbsoribera ten cents por week.
'Copies supplied to ideate at thd rate of $1 60 per bun.
WRIRLY PATRIOT ARP ITNIQN,
;Pub otterrofittartd4./.
copy tint year, in advance 82 00
Ten copies to one address ltf 00
Onblorlsitions Islay commence at any time. PAY AL
WAYS IN ADVANON.• We are oblimiCti make thin
.
imperative. In every instants task Must accompany
subscription. Anj person sending WI Stillb
' of'twent
sabseribers to the Weekly wip be otitis(' to a copy ior,
bia services. The prick', even at 'the adtaneediatel is
im ley that we cannot . *offer greater indueemente. than
this: " Additions may toimide at any time td a club of
sabiaribers by remitting one dollar and fifty tents
for each adattlonal mune. It is not neteMaryto send
ee tb r io siiinet of these eonetitating a club, all we cannot
=Waitaki, to address each paper to club subscribers
separately. ilpeoimeneeples of the. Weekly will be sent
to AU who &Mrs it.
0. BABBITT & 00., Harribburg, Pa
N. B.—The following law, passed 871:leaves' In 1860,
MUM the duty of Postmasters In rslatten to the do
lionry Of newspapers te elnb snissribers
ISM Lair/6, Brown or Co.'s edition of she Laws oflB6ll,
rage 88, charter 131, section. 1.)
"Provided, however, that where packages of new pa
pus or periodicals are received at any poet office directed
-to die address,, and the names of the club nabsaribere to
which 'hey belong. with the poghw for a quarter in ad
vance, shall be banded to the pOlftistter, he "Phan de'
UM* the same to their respective owners."
To enable the Postmaster to *empty with this rapist-
Von, it will be necessary that he be furnished with the
list of names composing the .club, and paid a ettart‘es
(or roes) postage in advance. The unifeina courtesy
of Postmasters, affords the assurance that they will
eheerfuliyacoomroocate club subacribers, mid thelatter
&mild take care that the postage, which is ilat tride
in each case. be paid in 11111161100. bad en ilta dabs
A . SPLENDID ASSORTMENT
OF
LITHOGRAPHS,
Formerly retailed et from $5 to $5, are , now offered at
50 and 75 cents, and $1 and $1 50.—rublished by the Al , '
Union, and formerly retailed by them.
Splendid Photographic Album Pictures of all distin
guished men and Generals of the army, at onlylo OM.
For aide at SOEIEFFER'S Bookstore,
15 Market street. Harrisburg.
BASKETS!
LADIII SI TtzAitNG ,
MARKET,
•
SEHOUL,
PAPER, '
KNI FR,
CLOTHES,
ROUND,
• CHILDREN'S,
CAME,
Sor vale /9w, by
WIIITB B RANDY ! I !-FOR PRESZRV
e Pusions.-11. very superior article (serial,
- puve) just received and for sale by
3 1 07 1 WM. DOCK, Jr, & Co.
MEW. ORLEANS SUGAR!-FIRST iN
!-Nor sale by
ill 2 WM DOCK Jai. 1 x Co.
vi A 0 - K E It'E• L I
LTA -
MAOIIIIIIIL, Nos. 1,2 Ana & In sit sited paokagee—
new, and each ragbags warrastsd. -Just Waived, and
for gale loir 1w - - arti. - botm j r ., &CO
gIIV—L'GHT GALLER ' Tbo. roonis,
I I on the corner of Market nacre and Market wrest,
oppocite the Jovial Rona, occupied I a Gallery for-
DariterreOtype. Phittogioph and Ambrot7pe parponen,
are TOIL Rh M Y iron tliti 9th of Beptenibe* next.'
APP I 7 td -' - • . JOHN WT
ZTTI..
k 154 / 1 1 7 3 ! 4 .r. 4
, sa
Wm_ DOCK, Jr., & Co
t e
t 411 I
...L.,1!
. ..;A: ti o iii , l ••• ' ;.?, :
1 4 UM-, ,•fj • 1
4 ;
. . .
SATURDAY 'MOWING, AUdITSI"
DAY AND. NibaT!
When early morning lifted her sweet head •
From ten the bill tops blushing rosy red;
While through the eternal portal of rho
The sun resplendebt fang his cheering ray;
And Iseult the forhsts''greedenaluell'd shade •
The gaidote beams, with quivering luetre played,—
Swept scented violets frnm their slumbers woke:.
And itird's soft enrol ibe deep silence broke. ,
Then midst the downy aad balm-breathing grove,
Betide ale Wandered• forth my blight-eyed lave,
Ron_ ad ber soft lintha the olustering branches twine,
To Was her 013dt:bends the pink eglantine;
The yellow primroses embrace her feet,
And low toed winds, - altfilled wit# odors sweet,
Breathe round enamored through the shadowy dell,
Glithering'fresh sweetness from my:Bone. bell.
Yet dearer still when, ruddy daylight &dee
Before the , silent and swift footed
Which dark-eyed Night,Cleeked in her starry crown,
Brings in her train to chnie the innbeains do4e,
Then'' math the darkness 'close einbraesii to stray
And'whisoer sweetly happy hours swiy.
In day or night thus found,' dearer charms,
As day v,r night,. thus brought her to my arms:
, •
.
Oh jlayle"too, bib:isle), skies eo softly bine,
trig ti - nf laving, bow I !tong for you,!
How whin day,',lllglories Eaeteka bills adorn,
Pant for her Who : mademy spirit's Mourn.
And when the sleepless warders of the night
LoOk4ontiopon us girt in armor bright,
-How do I sigh for her,•alas in vain,
And eleep)n tears to wake in tears again,
GpVES; .ANLY-Ap.rikaotvropti
[CONLIJoED.
In 1002 the bishops of Paderbord and Mon
earn , were put in possession df (heir sees by
'receiving a glove as the sign thereof. But the
custom gradually became, A mere fee to the
land stewards or bailiffs_ on entering into poS
session'of tine's land: pivoting from this. syn . ],
boll& to a money payment celled glovemeney,
which then become
. an nrdiusry fee to oilier- •
vants—glove money. for a pair , of gloves pre
sented or service rendered. This has been
spoken of before. - .
This manner of payment, too , is the arc haic
and original meaniogef the white gloves gi
ven away at - weddings- 'they i were ftes given
to the bridesmaids antfbitifeafro*:p4acull'Or
services rendered. The Belgic enkoni, at wed
., .
dine is odd. The print asks the bridegroom
for a ring and a pair of gloves ;• red gloves, if
they can be had ; with three., bite of - silver
money inside them.
Patting the gloves into this . bridegroom's
right hind, he joins this with, the right hand
of the bride, and then;, dextt:ionsly, loosening
them, he leaves the gleves_ia the bride's grasp;;
as a symbol, doubtleeti,4hat she is taken pop-:
ensign of, bought and paid for and conquered
like any other vassal. - We needle do strange
thin" with gloves at' weddings. , In 1785, a
cart surgemistid apothecary was married in
the. o wnof Wrexham ; and the eye-witness,
i
Who tells the anecdote, Baia i '‘l saw at. tie
doors of his own end neighbors ', holism
'throughout the itrpag whare.4 livtid,. large
boughs_and parts of tree that Witt 1046 cut
down and tied there, titled with white•paper
out tilitiCitimille of *wpituin'n
. gloyes; and of
wilt% flak - mil , lfttether:ank "Pitiia l -blililliAld
on the feminine part of the population was egz
patted to follow, remains-untold. 4 pleasant
custom, too ; was that of giving gloves full of
money at *eddings : one of the feW obsolete
which it would be an advantage to revive.
But gloves are also used as symbols of;quar
rel as well as of possession ,; and Co throw down
the giuntlet bas.elwaye meant to challenge, to
assume the right to defend both in chivalrous
times, 'and before . and after. Even we have
still the ehamtsion in our Coronations, with his
well-trained steed, and the beautiful manor of
Serfvelaby, held on the easy °condition Abat - he
shall ride into Westminster Hall—the riding out
again, backing, it not quite so Pleatlata--Cilitil
lenge the assembled universe to di/44e the ti
tle of the threne, and fling down a;gage on the
Boot; whieh, in Proceas of time, one of• the
royal footmen perhaps, or perhapti.,a beadle,
or one of the hodeiheld brigade, wiltplek, up,
;rid return to the spe.cial-bymoko performing.,
Who does not know that beautiful story of
Bernard Oilpin,..v!lten. he_went_inte the church
of the quarrelsome,aTid saw the gloves bung
ep as a• general 'challenge to all enters who
would care to take an' ill-conditioned, fellow's
.
insult on their Shoulders ?.
The sexton would not fob the life of him touch
tha gloves q but Besuarci Qiiipin c tutting along•
pole, lifted them off their hook, and ,took both
them and the quarrel on himself;* drawing
them forth during the sermon and rating the
parish soundly for harboring such evil thoughts
and suffering such unchristian practices ,to
abound. Yet it wee a very cowmen thing in
chivalrous times to hang up the gauntlet in the
church ; when woe to him who touched it or
took it down I. 'Nothing less than a quarrel a
outranee for a cause as silly , as the mode of de
fending it was barbarous. The last challenge
by means of a glove was in Queen Elizabeth's
time, in the year 1751; On fhb Occasion' of a
dispute concerning some lands - in Kent ; when
a trial by single combat was demanded—the
disputants meetingjn court, where one drew
his glove and threw it down, and the other
picked it up with the point of hie sword. For
the honor of humanity and common sense the
stupid fools were' not let. to fight; and-the
rightful ownership ef the Keatish Uncle was
settled some other way
tiometimes a glove was used as the symbol
of protection, not of quarrel and,insult : and
even to this day it is hung out in some towns
during fair times, in re_meMbtallee of the time
when it was a sign that all, who gathered there
were safe from those annoying things called
duns, and need be under no apprehension of
sudden seizure tw living shoulder knots, more
startling than pleasing. 'Hoisting the glove' is
still practised at Easter, devias the Lammas
Fair. It is a glove of immense eiZe, which is
stuffed and carried through the city, hoisted
on the top of a long pole all beflowered and
beribboned attended by music, the beadles, and
the nobility, then hung out of a window at the
Guindhall as a sign that the fair has begun, and
when it is taken in, the fair is ended. At the
Free Mart of Portsmouth, a glove was hung
out of the window during fair time, and while
it hung no one was arrested. So. Maccles
field, Cheshire, Newport, Isle Liverpool, on the
fair days of the 25th of July, and -21.1 of Novem
ber.
At Barnstable, too, a large glove decked
with dahlias, is hung out from the window of
the quay Hall,, the oldest huilding of the city,
and while ii hangs the fair hi going on, and
when it is withdrawn the fair is at an end ;
and at Chester so 'famous for its gloves, they
do the same thing. The glove, in alt these in
stances, meaning the symbol of protection.--
Was it protection or possession that the Ro
mans symbolized , b7,their standard of the
winged band of power ? And which did the
kings of Ulster mean by their device of the
hand upon their shields and banners? What
is the secret reading nf the baronet's bloody
lives TWO CENTS.
4
hand: What:of -the 'kid hand` of the North
Amerman Indhinirwiltieth-thleifegarl so sqn'er
stitionely A symblii yet more kuperetitiopaly
,regardettin MesiCol.l,ll4ll the f. 04 MO &lab
ed on the monuments of Yucatan" and Guate
mala is believed' to have 'all !Mite tit hidden
power. In Lyda, toe; on the .iontbs there, an
-open hand is a frequent.emblem -;;and ‘ the- tiirks
and Moore regard it as a- preservative against
the evil eye, provided it be, open enough..
To wear a glove 'in one's hat or'cip meant
one of theee things, silt the old writers:
a favor of a niietress, the memorial of a friend,
and as a mark to be challengedby an enemY,"
As a favor of a mistress it was always a popu
lar donation. When Queen Elizabeth, that
rampant old coquette, gave her dropped glove
.to the E./A of Cumberland who picked it up,
that - benighted individual set it round with
diamonds and stuck it in his bat as the greatest,
and highest, and richest, and royalest favor
man could show ; and Shakespeare, and the
other draniatists,of his date speak of gloves
worn in the cap:as ordinary' evidence of a
lady's favor and a knight's deserving.
In Troilus and., °reside, gives the
lady a sleeve and she gives him a glove, and
Helen is made to swear Venus's glove,
which we should not, in our days, thin k quite
sulloiently true to the local color of Olympus;
besides many other weeps where gloves are
spoken of as favors, as well aa. for an oath; 'by
gloves," occurring ai often as by Jove._or by
George.
There was "a very, pretty invention of old
'times, called Draw-Gloveg y pretty, that Is, in
its consequences, for no one knows exactly
Aim draw-gloves means, or how it was plqyed.
Ralliwell, in his dictionary, calls it talking
with the - fingers, but it was scarcely that;.and
others make it out to have been a kind of mo
ray but it was scarcely that either; whatever
it was, however, the mode of playing and the
remits of the game were graeions and enti
cing; according to rich and winey Herrick's
eiposition in the Pleasant Grove of New Fran
eies;*hen he 'says: • ' '
At Draw-Glossa we'll play,
And preethse let's lay
A wager, and let it be this :
Who drat WU% snmme
Of twenty doth come
Shall have for his winning a kiee
Was this the origin of "winning glovesi , " by
. kissing in the sleep ? In .the abseeee of all
`knowledge on the tatbjeat, one guassls is good
as another, and draw-gloves may have been a
delicietis bit'of feigning with its MI comple
tion in thin. There was a pleastult custom too
oonseeted with the new moon, and gloves, and
kissing that deserve's a word.. In some Coin:
try'places it was—perhaps is—the custom for
a number of young people to assemble together
to watch for the:new moon, when whoefer saw
it first gave his or her neighbor a kiss, and got
a pafr of doves as the reward.
The perfection 'of a modern shove, is its
smoothness and elasticity; its 11IICECrptiona
ble fit, the delicacy and uniformity of its tiht.
and a sewing , that shall be at once fine and
strong ; while anything like embroidery or ad
ventitione ornament, or mixture of polors, or
incongrnoui materials does not count as the
beat taste in these modern days of luxury and
-n'tility combined. But in olden times gloves
were esceedingly - costly. That story of Coeur
de Lion being . discovered on his fateful jour
ney by the jeweled gloves which hung at his
page's girdle, shows how- magnificently they
were-sometimes adorned; while oven the Holy
-Mather Chdreh did- not disdain the use of these
mundane vmdtlea for her reverend -kande ; the
gloves of all the prelates of England being be
decked with precious stones as parts of ordi
nary prelatical pomp and useful glory.
In the beginning of the ninth century they
were even legislated on; and in the lima of
Louis le Debonnaire the Council of Aix or
dered all godly monks to wear sheepskin gloves
only. The eMbroidered glove was purely epis
eopal, like the ring and - sandals; and - when
some abbots in France presumed to wear , thetn,
the. Council of Poitiers sharply reproved them
for insolence and encroachment. Later, WA'
find them more Universal', and by no means ,ss
'ruinously expensive, though still costly enough
considering -the comparative value of money;
witness the bill of moneys spent for Peter Mar
tyr and Bernadino Ochin, when they came
over here to delight the souls of the Reformers
by their godly zeal; where we find bs. 3d. for
Bernadino's bait and gloom" 139. for - "a
-pap* of furred glovys for P. Martyr," 11, Hs.
.3d. for " a peticote, glorys and night-cap for
Julius," and Is. for "one payrs of glow .for
them."
in Henry the Eighth's times, the chqrchsiar,
dens of Kingston• upon-Shames paid , three
pence for "two payre of glovys for Bobyn
Hood and . Mayde hjuryan, ' the morris-dan,
sera employed by the parish. Which was
pretty well of the parish, and showed a decent
spirit.
Gloves, too, weremsed in witchcraft, as when
Joan'and Philip Flower stroked the cat Rut
ter'e bank with Lord Henry's gloves, saying
" Mount Rutter and fly ;" and Rutter mailed
but did not fly, though Lord Henry fell sick
unto death. Then there is the story of the
lady whO threw her glove into the arena where
the lion stood to test the.worth of her lover's
vows, and who received as her reward the
glove flung scornfully back into her face, with
the applause of king and court to the daring
and disenchanted lover. This is a story which
has given two of our poets occasion for very
lovely, if differing fencies—Leigh Hunt siding
with the lover and King Francis, and branding
the lady with the shame of heartless coquetry
and most unworthy pride; Browning taking,
perhaps,' the nobler rim, and maintaining it
to have been a mere test of truth and sincerity,
which failed in the application—to the bring
ing forth of a higher joy. Then there is the
monkish legend of Saint Gudule, the patroness
of Brussels ' who flourished, as the date books
say, in the beginning of the eighth century,
and who one day came praying in•the church
with naked feet; praying with such fervor and
with feet so naked, that a charitable priest put
his gloves under them for shoes to protect
them from chilblains and the damp of the
stones. . .
But Saint Gudnle kicked the gloves away,
and went on with her prayers, while the gloves
hung suspended in the air for upwards of an .
hour, to the great marveling of the beholders,
and the testimony, by a miracle, of the Saint's
true character beneath her cowl. There is
another older world story about gloves, in the
adventures of Asa Thor, on his way to 'Totem-.
Mem ; and how, on his way thither, he, and
Loke, and the swift young Thialfi who had
sucked the marrow of the goat's leg-bone, so
that the beast went lame for the rest of his
natural days—unnaturld, rather—how they all
got lost in a. forest, and, slept in a spacious
hall, with a smaller chamber branching off.
Which hall they found afterwards was nothing
but the giant's Bitrytoirie glove, witb
thumb, where they had'taken refuge from the
wind, for the smaller, chamber. Then there
were Thor's irop gloves, , without which he
dared not attempt to grasp his mighty hammer,
ltijolnir-rgloves which -we may, .preaecia: to
have been a speaks:4f , oelestiek, kauskle due
ten,. a 5 knuchleAlaaterry are. our nineteenth
century version of the cesti ‘ whigh the old •li t or
and wrestlers gistlieters were. •
ptrivi3ll*DCßT NOTagiNas.
shm4Yll ZILOBTVID
BY 0. BARRETT
TEN DAILY Fangio PO tinservill br
critiors mooing in the_ Orli/gun rumpig,
moue to the - Carrier. 1 subicribera, grvic "raw*
PER 1.3111411. ' i •
Tan
Wincum Pacator e i rD US W , IU riblishei &two
DOLLARS Pll linnlY, izvarisbly In adrocii• Tea mole
to
•gicraddroms. Arta= dorars
ckaggetod wit h this edisbnaniess, a .111 " 111 "
JOB 017.108, containin g a •rariety of plass sad haw
1 1 ootabliohouniumakojaidor of
itM U Stt i t igiaa rMPth US Patronage of the intlidlo it no .
Indeed irongloves or gauntlets--those
.
of armor which came in between ,the .daggtz'
in liec l o p g
,I,;,,efiime the peace n 1
and the.;_erettraec.. before the Aral and aftez.the
last—were
glot"-tie:'Arigle-Sixons
and which were made at-first unflogered, like
modern bahit a' mit* aid- the gloves of all rude
peoples everywhere; Were tic 4n - the gamitlets
or the gloveh Waft wheel taken "'firm
a recre
ant knight when hisepumitere hacked off and
his sword broken, and-his knightly shield rz
vbreed, in token of his hel/1410ffolteltan claim
to honoi and chivalront,t„bea l riags-1
Earl of Carlisle was iropes'atk in flTe thcad
Edward's reign ; and condemned - A° die as a
_traitor, for holding treasonable.corre
With the Scots, "his spurs w ere
, cut 4 i -with-A
hatchet, aid his shoes and gloves' ire taken
off ;" gloves or gauntlets ?. The old annalists
are seldom correct, accuracy being an intellect
ual virtue of quite modern parentage: .
There were some curious niceties about en
tering into the presence - of royalty with or with
out gloves. t , This week the Lord Coke, with
his gloves on, touched anti kissed the king'h
hand, but whether to be confirmed a councillor:,
or cashiered, I cannot yet learn," said a letter
in the Court and Times of Charles L, publiiheli
in It_woulp seem more decorous,±o enter
the presence.glove.d ; but perhaps there .were
good reasoris . Why not; , something akin to those
which made •itAdvisabie to see the hands -of a
judge at court; and those of ' - a vielthr rota train
ing stable just before - running
In Burke's Vicissitudes,there is a very curi
ous story of a glover nobleman. William Mai
lellan, sixth Lord Kirkeubright, who was: ut
terly rain ed , retaining nothing_of eaeldom
save the right to the name, and so became a
glover for -his daily bread. He used to standtin
the lobby of the Edinburg Assembly ROMs; in
the old town, selling gloves, which were then
wanted in greater profusion than now, it being
the etiquette to wear a new pair for each dance.
But the glove seller was a lord nevertheless,
and an earl in his own right Why his father's;
and, Moke than Ode, he Was the aneeetoref that
General across the Atlantic who was to hate
crushed the Southern Confederacy in ninety
days—but Mitt do itie:Mehoili. -
The son of the gloiei-earlbecamea colonel,
and, eventually won the recognition. of his
condition' froth Parliament, May the 3d, 1773.
And there is the epigram—or what would is be
called in the scientific poetry books?—passing
between the lady and her aged lover, one Mr.
Page, when he sent:l/era glove with this die
tick pinned to it : " '
`lf rim Glove you take the leiter 0;
Then Glove is Love, which I do geed to thee.
And she answeredhintitatioily with,'
Aid' IT from Page yon take the fetter P, ' •
Then Page is Agb, and that won't do for ale;
to the eternal confusion-of the ancient. Philan
der, indignant at ridicule. Then , there are
Woodstock and its dusty, powdery, sheepskin
gloves,: its :traditions of Fair Rosamcind, and
its present practical skill in letter Work ; and
the Chicken gloves of timerick, not now to be
had, packed upin a walnut-shell, fastened with
fairy ribbon, and sold for five, shillbigs, the
pair; sad the pocket gloves• of a few years
back, which had a pocket in the-palm, which
ppened when the hand was closed, and shut
when the hand was opened ; convenient enough
for timid ladies who carry their.omnibus six
pence in the palm. of their baud" islippOd , up
inside the glove, but of no great..reputation
among the public in general„and dyingout in
a stifled asphyxiated- kind of way.
And thernara .the Ntlipaltina' of. Switzer
laud—the skims or yout4ide prematurely
brought. into the world by mine 1110ot/to-rad
tices of the goatheris,and which, marvellously
smooth and fine, go to Make ever/fine lady's
very fine gloves. An,d there are all the old
petitions and remonstrances addressed to Tar
liament against• -laying on duties bete, and
taking off duties there, with the inevitable cry
of "gloves are so many and gloves are so
poor," as the milieu for unsound political
economy and fault/ legislation.
And there are the board of trade statistics,
showing what number of the made article we
import, and where we get our- best. glovalea
ther from ; with raspy other curious and inter
esting particulars* too long to be fully , detailed.
Bat the history of gloves and glove-making is,
like all things whatever in human life andilo
ciety —a very interesting matter when looked
into and thtiroughlytraced from &Mite to Out
fall ; a thoroughness to 'which this mere sur
face sketch has no pretension. A
•II MiaRT 121TIMIMATM DileaSTlON:—The
Wa4hington, •Pa.,.Relyieto says:,
"We are told that it is not.i:ight for the peo
ple to -hold Democratio meetings to denounce
the aiministration or the war, beettuse some
peon present might have a son or, brother in the
army, and night write 'to that 'son' or brother, in
cortoeqnence of the effect of what he hid heard
upon.. his own "mind, to desert, and the son or
brother tnight.dssert in consequence of that let
ter ! In that was the meeting would produce
evil influence Upon the army This is like
the girl Who built eut . orying because she had
been thinking that she, might get married, and
might .have a baby, and that baby might 101 l
upon the stove and burn itself up. "
Loss oz REBEL GBNIIIRALS.—In the late bat
tle or Gettysburg, and in 'the eavalrY fights
subsequent to it. seventeen 'rebel general *M
oen were placid Nora du condone, as follows t
-Gene. Bsritsdale, Garnett, Armistead and Pet
tigrew are killed; Gene. Archer and Robinson.
were captured ; Gene: Kemper and Trimble
were wounded _and_ captured; Gene. HOod,
Pender, Heth, Anderson, Semmes, Jenkins,
Scales, Hampton and Jones were all wounded.
Of the five cavalry 'brigadiers whom.PleaSon
ton first fought at Beverly Ford, butOthie re-
mains in the field—Fitzhugh Lee, tzepitew of
the General. Robinson and W. F. 11. Lee are
in our hand's, and Jones and Hampton are
wounded.
TROUBLE IN BeRGIIN VouiilT, 3.—On Sat
urday a meeting was held in Hackeniaok, at
which a series of resohitions were unanimously
adopted, denouncing the Conscription act as
•unjust, unconstitu,tionah and slavish in its
provision.'! and that they will throw 4/emotive*
up6n the Cowie 'for.''protection against the
wrongs and outrages which .the,
.government
seeks to inflict," anti`redress there, they
intend to '•repist with till the means that God
has placed in our power, any attempted in
fringement of our rights and privileges as free
men in a free country, determined at all has
ardo to pvaintain, their freedom." ' A copy of
the enrollment was also dememded of the en
rlldang officer, which was refused, and. tlio
meetin -ad'ourned. .*,
Tin BLACKS CoNTleNryisa Son EQUALITY.—/11
a recent address by Fred. Douglas to a.Pbilii
delphia, colored mass meeting, litv told! them
dietinetly what negro military 'organisation
meant. Said he :
"Remember that the musket means liberty
—the United States musket; with its bayonet
of steel, IS better than 'all tlitipareliMant gnsx 6
matzos or citizenship. lira& hands that Man
Yet moans liberty, eguaytu. iluttaßlarg. " ,
This - is nor, apparimtly, :the. main, if net
the Ede,
_object okthe-war :
12E1