Star and banner. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1847-1864, August 20, 1852, Image 2

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    TIN gni AND MEL
CIETTV'SBUIR2.
Friday Evening, August 20, 1852.
FOR PRESIDENT,
GEN. WINFIELD SCOTT.
VICE Pit ICSITnINT,
WILLIAM A. GRAHAM.
FOR SUPREME JUDOE,
JOSEPH BUFFINKON.
PDX CANAL COMMISISZONEOSI
JACOB HOFFMAN, (Berke)
FOR CONORROS,
SAMUEL L. RUSSELL,
or BEDFORD
WHIG COUNTY. TICKET.
ASSEMBLY.
Dirid atelllnger, (of sm4-ietlin.)
COM3IISSIONER
Aim Mickley, Jr., (of Hamiltanbea.)
A UDITOR.
John Dickson, Jr., Or Blrsban.)
DIRECTORS OF THE POOR.
=SWIM (of Moon tp!oesant)
Sally, (of Cumberland.)
"'NAVE SERVED THE UNION FOR FOR
TY-ODD YEARS, AND FEEL MYSELF A CITI
ZEN OP EVERT PART OF 11l ASID WHAT
SVEN OP LIFE AND STRENGTH I NAY mars
SHALL BE DEVOTED TO ITS rozsrava
rios."—Generd Scott.
s3..Court adjourned this morning.—
We will give a roconi of its doings in our
next. Peter Crabs, charged with man
slaughter, was acquitted. The case of
James Green, indicted for murder. 'welt
continued until the November term.
Causally CeavelatiOah
ICT" l nie Whig County Conventioa,
called for the purpose of nominating a can
didate to fill the vacancy in the board of
Dinettes occasioned by the death of Nich
olas Bushey, Esq., assembled in the Court
haw, in Gettysburg, ottlflanday last, and
settled, with grat numdmity; upon Jo
awl! B*ri.i, Esq., who holds the post at
prawn by appointment of the remaining
Directors. A more excellent or stronger
appointment , could not have been made. 1
' 6 "" 1 ... Nestle, of Motadaw might--
The IProspeck.
trZThe prooeedings of the Whig County
Meeting on Monday evening lest will be
found, in soother column. The meeting
waste every inspect most encouraging to
the friends of Gen. Scan, and its nun
/0,18%e macfor a County Meeting, the
aerial present, and the evident enthusi
' sana r betolcus a healthy condition' of the
"Young Guard." Not only have we no
disaffection here, but from every portion of
the County, the intelligence is uniform and
concurrent that nutshells of voters hither
to arrayed with the Opposition will cast
mill gee for the patriot Hero and
Sage,'Who has contributed more to the
nation's glory and its true greatness than
any ether nosn'living. Nor is this sitato of
things eibantmeristie alone of the rank and
ile:ofthe Opposition, but from several of
theturushipe we bare the names of active
and influential Democrats, who, familiar
wititGen. Scott's life-long services to his
cousitry, and indignant et the ribald abuse
and dander disgorged upon him by a big
oted perkien press, have made up their
minds to rebuke the slanderers by voting
• for bins. The "Young Guard," we repeat,
is in a heathy condition—everything is
propitiou—sad we cannot see why she
should notated a heaviermajority for WIN
FIELD SCOTT than she has ever before
cast for a Presidential candidate. She can
do it—and she wits do it, if the friends
of the Old Hero will but do their duty.—
And wby shall they not? fir many a fierce.
ly contested campaign has he labored for
You, when to labor and lead, as he did, a.
mid War's rod carnage, was no "child's
play." Freely has he devoted the bestial.'
ergies of his Youth, his Manhood, and his
Old Age, to Your' service, while battling
for the honor and glory of our common
country. The glories of Niagara--the
milder, but not less enduring fame of his
prioeless civics services as a "Pacificator,"
amid the Patriot troubles on the Canada
frontier, the Cherokee Removals, the NW-
Motion crisis, end the N. East ern Bonn
ary diffioultiee--the battle fields of Meal.
co--indeed, almost every page of the na
ticra's history attests his great services and,
achievements in youa behalf. And now,
as the Old Chieftain stands up before you
in Isis Old Age, his scarred and care worn
visagebetoktining whit ho has donator you
—and for the first time asks you to work
for my, will you, con you hesitate to re
spond ? Freemen of Adams, WINFIELD
SOOTY calla You to the field Gratitude
for services past—admiration for achieve
ments wonderful in themselves and always
indolent of true glory—every consideration
of honor, and duty, and patriotism,. bid
you respond to that call promptly and
cheerfully. Will you not do it ? Three
months hence, the poople of these United
States will have designated the Ruler to
whom for four years shall be confided
the destinies ofJhe Republie. Our firm,
undoubted persuasion is that that Mkt.'
will be no other than Wisrimas Scorr.—
Wo believe he will be elected, triumphant
ly elected, and that in his election a tri.
unsph will have boon achieved which shall
pronounce i bitter, burning rebuke upon
the ditegmeel4l spirit of partisan animosity,
whielt does not hesitate, in its grasping Af
ter Whited power, to drag down into the
tries et low personalities and deliberate
wilful defamation the noblest character
sad labia* merit Do you not desire to
paseleipate la Ikat triumph sad to do your
part tornado adaiehterleil that ifebake
101%p et, Indy sad it will toe year, !
It will be noticed that the meeting was
addressed by Senator COOPER, who hap
pened to be in town engaged in profession
al duties. Mr. C. made a most happy ef
fort—oommeneing by a handsome allusion'
to past associations, his long and pleasant
intercourse with our people as neighbors
and personal friends, and his deep debt bf
obligation to them for uniform personal
kindness and many favors—and then pee
ning to a review of the leading political
topics, especially the relative claims * L od
services of the rival candidates for the
Presidency. A strong contrast was drawn
between the eminent services and great a.
of &err, and the meagre re
cord we have of Mr. PIERCE'S history. One statement struck nos as somewhat sig.
nitieent, via :—.Mr. Cooper served as the
Representative in Congress From this din-
Wet dining the four years thatFaexxLm
Priam was in their. States Senate, and
yet such was the quietness of Mr. Pierce's
Senatorial eareer—such his standing with
his-feßaw-members, that Mr. Cooper states
publicly, and upon his honor as a Senator,
that he has scarcely any incolleetiou of his
personal appearance—and this, too, while
be has a lively recollection of almost every
other Senator of that period ! The same
statement we believe has been made by
Hon. Emma, STREET, and other mem
bers of Congress of standing. No wonder
the Opposition have so much difficulty in
getting together material out of which to
annufacturopolitical capital for their can
didate I
Mr. Cooper addressed the meeting for
about an hour and a half in a speech of
much ability, in the worse of which he
dwelt at length upon the services of Gen.
Scott and the evidences of his eminent fit
ness for the Presidency or any other sta
tion, and also pronounced a handsome eulo-,
mr upon Mr. GRAHAM, the Vice Presiden
tial candidate. The speech of Mr. C. was
well received and will do good.
Nisi*lomat Gratitade for Illustrious
coThe Locofoco papers, and the am
piler among them, insist that the paltry
pecuniary compensation allowed by law to
Gen. Scott has been more than an equiva
lent for the long and distinguigshed
services rendered by that great Patriot to
his country. These presses are not singu
lar in their light estimate of the National
Gratitude due to those who have perilled
their lives upon the field of battle, or poured
out their blood in defence of the nation's
honor. Their present candidate for the
Presidency seems to be of a similar way of
thinking, as may be gathered from the
Congressional records.
In the House of Representatives, on the
27th of December, 1833, Franklin Pierce
voted against a resolution for the benefit
of the old fighters in the Indian wars.
On the 11th of the following February,
Mr. Pierce voted against the bill extend
ing the operation of an act giving pecuniary
relief to "surviving officers, non-commis
sioned officers, musicians, soldiers, and In.
diji spies of the old Continental line or
Bdiffe troops, volunteers or militia," who
had served two years during the warof the
revolution, and had not been provided for
by the act of 1828.
In 1886 Mr Pierce repeated him vote
against an act "for
. the relief of certain
officers and soldiers of the revolution."
In the Senate, in 1841, Mr. Pierce op
posed a bill, giving five years' half pay to
widows or orphans of officers, non-commis
sioned officers, soldiers; kir., who had died
in the service of the United States after
the 20th of April, 1818.
These votes of Mr. Pierce illustrate the
magnanimity of hispßlitical career. They
show his friendship for the few remaining
patriots who bad purchased our liberties
with their blood, and the strength of his
regard for women and children whose pro-
tectors bad sacrificed their lives in the set ,
vice of their country. Mr. Pierce's prin
ciples of governmental economy recognised
no claim on their part to consideration at
the hands of Congress. The idea of re
lieving soldiers disabled in war, and of ime
coring soldiers, widows and orphans, has
no place in the creed of the present Demo
cratic candidate for the Presidency.
Fatal Accident.
Chas. Hergikleagar, one of the workmen,
employed , in working the copper mine, in
this place, lost his life in a very shocking
manner on Wednesday night last. He
was desoending the shaft in a bucket,
which, catching and lodging upon the aide
of the 'haft, became disengaged from the
book by which it was held, and the unfor•
tunate man will precipitated to the bet
tom, & distance of some eighty feetr—eans
lag his death almost, instantaneously.
Peanailvaatia Cones&
• 07'% find upon our table a Catalogue
of Pennsylvania College; for 1852, from
which we learn that this institution is in a
very flourishing condition. There were
104 students in iittendince during the last
Iyear—being we believe a larger number
than that of any previous year. We are
glad to see efforts are about being made for
the endowment of the College. A. sines
scholarship is offered for $lOO, which will
secure six years' tuition for one pupil; and
a perpetual scholarship for one pupil an
be obtained for $B5O.
liat-Tho "Free Democratic!" Stay? Con
vention, which met at Pittsburg last week,
nominated William M. Stevenson of Mer
cer, for Judge of the Supreme Court, and
Jones Wyman of Philadelphia, for Canal
Commissioner.
togs..Tbo d. A. Salm, at present
pastor of the English Littitiesa Church of
Cumberland, Mi., has nteeiiidandateept.
ad a call from the Beecod butherautiburob
of Baltimore.
• New Nrauespeblrs IhWeFemme%
In an article upon the subject of the An
ti-embolic test, retained in the Constitu
tion of Nerrllamplishiie, and for the main
tenance of which it fields the Democratic
party of that State responsible, the Wag.
ington Ilqatblie says :
"Tt may tootle ittisaits this connection horofot
le the e,ll dills New Bompohlto Senators twa
in Congress, oo a iiitostloo penalising to the cam
olio religion.
On tbe 26th or March last, the Senate. whea in
Committee of the Whole, had under consideration
a bill for the Miff of the Carmelite Nunnery of
Beldame. That bill was of • elliameter similar to
many that have at different periods been adopted
by Comeau, and merely presided far the 'remits!
Won of a mite *meant of duties upon a box of
church vestmentsimported into *Wryer* of New
York in Amulet, Ism, being ri donation from &r
-eign Catholic, to the Carmelite nunnery of Bat
lima* for the ine of its clergy. The amount of
duties to he remitted in favor of this religious In
stitution was fortpfire des .c,, but trifling ask was,
it sufficed to ese forth the anti-Catholic instincts
of the Democratic tionators from New Hampshire."
The bill OW fflOSlly rejected by re vote* against
21. In the majority by whom the , mousare was
defeated, we end the votes of Senators NOltrig end
Hale, both of New Hampshire; mese( thass...Me.
Nonio—being puticularly relied spots as a wit
nem in Mr. Pierce's favor in another aim
mud add, parenthetically, that the Carmelite nun
nety bad soother opy.ositiuse in the person of Sen.
*tor King, the Democratic Nossiorrs fee the rim
Preridoety.'
"If Gen. Pierce la the miser& t h at a portion er
the Whig press are trying to make the people be
lieve, it is something very tuneable that emocg
all the Miners who served in the Mexican *sr,
not one by yet Wan found to back up tke ammo
tion."—Compiter.
Irrlsn't it &little singular, that not one
of the witnesses, whom it was thought nee
ecstasy to cell up to establish the gallant
ry of General Pierce, has undertaken to
deny any one of the facts published in con
nection with his military career in Me:-
ico,—namely, that he fell with his horu,
and was obliged to leave the field at San
Antonio,—that he was absent from the
battle of Contreras,—that he fainted in the
action at Cherubusco,—that bo was too
late at Alolino del Rey, and that he got
sick oral retired from the field before the
battle of Chapultepec ?
.The Constitution of New Ramped,e was a
dopted some forty years ago, while the free/a/per
ty was in the ascendency in Mat &ate. It was the
constitution of the Wend party, was FRAMED.
ADOPTED. and for many years administered 6y
THAT PARTY. All its odious katu reit sue the
work of the old federal pony of New Hampshire."
—Conipikr.
111:j'All of which only proves what we
always maintained—that lifodersz.Democ
racy is nothing more or less than the
spawn of Ancient Federalism. The old
Federal party of NE .W Hampshire (of
which BENJAMIN PIERCE the father of
FRANKLIN PIERCE. was an active and ack
nowledged leader,) engrafted the odious
Religious Test into their State Constitu
tution; while the Dernoeracy of that State,
who have had the entire control of her
councils for the last forty years, (with
FRANKLIN PIERCE, the son of BENJAMIN
PIERCE, as an acknowledged leader,) have
sacredly clung to that same 'rest and pre
served it as a part of the Constitution to
this day !
Try It Again.
t•_ ' The Locofuco papers have been
parading the name of lion. Garret Davis,
who had been nominated as one of the
Whig Electors for Kentucky, and subse-
quently resigned his candidacy, as a bai
ter and a convert to the ranks of Pierce
and King. .The Paris Citizen publishes
in explanation of his position the following
letter from hint in George W. Johnson,
Esq., the Democratic candidate in that
District :
George W. .toluurns, Esq.
"DIM" 81/I:- Your favor, inviting me to a dis
cussion with you of the relative merits of the two
candidate+ for the Pnnidency, was duly received.
Neither professional engagements nor my health
will authorize me to accede to your proposition;
but 1 beg you to be amured that I decline from no
personal discourtesy to you. On the contrary, if
I had the leisure it would afford me pleasure to
hearths ingenkrus efforts of s gentleman of ac
knowledged abilities, in support of s week candi
date and a bad cause. lien. Nest, in legitimate
claims to the high office, and in acceptability to
the American people, I deem to be about as su-
perior to lieu. Pierce. as he is in age, military ex
perience, genius, and renown. I admire your
spirit in wishing torus!, to the combat ;but I think
magnanimity would require of the fiiends of Oen
Scott to give up the debate wholly to the friends of
lien. Pierce. I have the pleasure of • slight per
sonal acquaintance with your candidate, and I en
tannin a very high opinion of him as a man and
a gentleman. I seem you I was gratified when
I learned that the hill of his hone on him in the
Mexican war did no permanent injury to him;
hut I do not entertain a doubt that he is now a
bout to receive a shock from a thundering war
horse which, politically, will put him Arse du
combat furever.
Very respectfully.
Yaw bumble fermis,
GARRET DAVIE
"Mr. Polk tendered him the colonelcy of the
9th regiment of Infinite,. to which commend the
New Hampshire companies were attached. Ignor
ant of the minor details of the service, and know
ing that the regiment required iminediate prepar
ation for the aim, be modestly &Wood tlts lip
pointoant
"Gen. Pierre was efterwirde offered the appoint , -
mot of Hnpdier amend, whieb he reaped. end
hninediendy entered, upon the detain of hie new
position with silseritj and deehion."—Ownpikr.
Itet..The above paragraphs we find in a
letter of Col. Wyneoop, published in the
Compiler. It Bernell from this, that after
60% modestly declined the. proffer of
a oolonelny, hp accepted the higher ap
pointment of Brigadier General with
alacrity! Modest, very!
an. Philadelphia News (Whig,) awl it is
'surreally remand, and bollived by Wasp, that the
&whey of Friends will, as a body, vow far Frank.
lhz Planah—Weespile r, •
11011-Tba Compiler misquotes the Arews,
and spoils the paragraph by Making a pe
riod too soot, omitting the very plausible
reason' assigned. " The paragraph, w it ap
peared in the. New, is es follows:
"It is cortently rumored, and believed by many,
that the IgneartY of Friends will. as a body. vote
for Franklin consideration of his evi•
dent abhorrence of the spilling of human blood.
Inenilested by his minterons fainting fits in the
banks of ifeeleor
"Gen. Noma Native Amorkattival foie ales*
estataialied as net t• loam room fora imetarrat
- •
"flea. &Nat eaa never restive toe supports( the
alive Ameriaana"—Philaivitaiii Bips, organ of
the Nada* esericatta
Nea•Stniiiiet iaiet it •
ate.tdPs opinion of Clement,
Geo. Shields; as is well known, is a Dem
attratio kern Illinois, and, u might
otrAilvally supposed, kaartions that his
PortY shouli wailed at the next Presiden
thd slsptiop. Dad he is , a brave soldier
aatitt go. _ minded and honorable man,
who woetlii scorn to join his party organs
in the ruthless crusade now waged against
his brave old commander. In a recent
letter written by him, and published in
the Washington Union of Wednesday, he 1 ,
frankly says that he admires Gen. Scott
as mach as Ae dots any mu living. and
that he considers Aim entitled to the grati
tude of his country. Ilia only reason for
not supporting Gee. Scott is, because he is
a Democrat and Gen. Scott is a Whig.—
Here is the extract from the letter :
It is my good (tenon. to be personally acquaint
ed with both the dietinginiet . oil citizens whose_
names have been presented by their respective par
ties as candidates fur the highest office in the gift
of the Alf . people. Gen. Winfiski Scott is
the candniate of the Whig party. For him I ea
ter:win the highest personal. regard mid eeseetti.—
I admire him u much as I du any man living for
his gnat militar7 talents, and I consider him en
titled to the gratitude of his country for his great
militate services. But (Len. Scott is no Demo
crat. His political convictions are different from
mine. He is true to his convictions: end fur this
he has my respect. I mean to be true to mine ;
and such in my knowledge of his character that I
know this will not lessen me in his estimation.—
If the principiesef the Democratic party are those
that ought soprani' in the conduct antis govern
ment, then Gen. Scott himself would admit, with
the frankness of • true soldier, that he is not the
man to repreneat these principles a• Chief Magis
trate of this ir , spublie. lie this ea it may, howev
er, I stand where I have always Wood—in the
ranks of the Demucracy.
Doestila of Mr. Searight.
ipt.We regret to announce the death of
Mr. IVituatis SILARIGHT, the Locoloco
candidate for Canal Commissioner. Ile
died et his residence, near Uniontown.
Fayette county, Pa., on the 12th inst., af
ter a severe illness of several weeks.—
His ,disease was chronic diarrhea.
The Locos are exceedingly fortunate in
the death of their candidates. Mr. Mutt
lenburg. their candidate for Governor in
1844, died when his defeat was a foregone
conclusion ; and now Mr. Searight, whose
defeat was equally certain, has also deceas
ed. This w ill give them an opportunity,
of which they are no doubt heartily glad.
to select another and more available can
didate. To the Whigs, however, it makes
but little dilFereace whom they may se
lect. We anticipate but little difficulty in
beating their strongest man.
The Democratic paper that has fairness
enough to print Gen. Quittuan's letter
eulogising Gen. Scott.
An argument showing why Catholics
should vote for the leader of the N. Hamp
shire Democracy, who brand Catholics
with a stigma of loolitical and civil infe
riority.
An argument showing why an Irishman
should vote for the leading Democrat of
a State whose Democracy played falsely
with non-natnransed Irishmen.
A single voto or declaration by Gen.
Pierce in favor of appropriations for the
rivers uud harbors of the West.
The miasinir. Demeemtie "plank" on in
ternal improvements.
The course af reasoning by which the
true friends of Vlestern interests can re
concile themselves to the idea of support•
itig Pierce and King.
The reason mhy the New Ilampshiae
Democracy, wh• supported unanimously
the Wilmot prodko, are now to be regard
ed as friends of thie South.
Nam July 3, 1832
The Science Of Government.
The Whig Review compounds locofoco
statesmanship ant policy of nine political
1 vacuities :
I. No help to the farmer, to get his
gain to market ; so canals; no roads.
2. No aid to foteign commerce : no im
provements at the outlets of great rivers.
3. No aid to the sailor and merchant, on
the lakes : no harlors.
4. No increased the home market for
grain : the farmer must send his produce
to England.
5. No use for our own iron and coal :
we must ride and roll'on British iron in
order that England may ride and roll on 1
American gold.
6. No protection to the ingenuity and
labor of Americans. Prosperity to none but
the capitalist. "To those who have it stud!
be given."
7. No expression of the national will,
no government by majorities : a Veto.
8. The constituticn cut into a straight
- jacket for the Whigs, while the Democrats
are suffered to go at large.
S. Foreign policy of the nation restricted
to irritating the Merlons.
The high estimate in which Gen. Scott
was held by that friend of feedom and hero
of Poland, Koseiusio--one of the few
names not born to die—may be learwed
from the following extracts from a letter
to Baron Bottingeur, during Scott's visit
to Europe :
*Sir _Vey I bog you to otpreto to pea flootaloy
great regrets that, owing to a severe isorispookkror
low unable to leave my !Wart • otherwise it
would afford me the highest grotilkstioa to 'met
him hal( wayhotwosa this owl Paris to wake his
aegasiatanurt the won so, oohs is chimed by his
Goutraessoi with the eels** Infireetation
upon **soy subjects,'!. • • 'Pk POINti
to convoy ,my compbasoato to Gan. &WI, awl e I
pickily' lei his victories in Cosi& I bop. the
Ammiam will lolfew his alarytkki* away, his
urns,. semi hit Wilma KOSCIUSKO."
The 'Democrats have already olumd
Gen. Scott with beings 'traitor,' a 'coward,'
a 'swindler; a 'fool,' and a 'Hit.' To all
each obarges we hive no response to Aurke,
except forty years of glorious deeds. 4 life
perilled for the independenee And happi
ness of IM eennUy—a body riddled by
British bullets-4 character which had
passed the ordeal of envy and malice, and
moeived the endorsement otTelfemton, Med
ium, Monroe, Jagkook Vag "hue% 'tar
ring and Taylor.
Wanted.
Somelurks and &milt.
A 'Pastorely AIMS,lit.
In hie so puritu qualifkatione as a statosman,
rots the difference between Him and O. Senu•
No Whig will deny , dot even the !Untwist:" editor
of doe iheetfe, of thi "notoreeiwrint" edihir of the
Joarusif, that be ii infinitely sefierier in experience
and talent to their mere soldier, and that the only
"qualification" accottllng to *Mt notions In which
he bee dot eurpswied their favorite, is in failing to
have killed as many barman beings as is chimed
Sean hoe butchered , sines he ornamented himself
with the eathera.—PitteOurg Post.
We have read many outrageous, we may
say infamous, assaults, made upon the fair
name of (len. Scott, by the Locofoco Brit
ish Free-Trade journals ; but the above
which we copy from the Pittsburg
Pest, is the moat brutal and villanous at
tack we have yet seen. How any man,
who claims to be an American freeman,
can so far degrade himself as to denounce
Gen. Scott, as a butcher of human beings,
we are at a lose to conceive. No man
but a traitor to his country would thus
speak of one who fought and bled in its de
fence. Not content to rob Gen. Scott of
that which is dearer to him than life, the
editor of the Post is base enough to add
insult to injury, by cooly denominating him
a butcher. He who willcarry British lead
in his body to the grave, and who bravely
met and repelled an invading foe which
would have despoiled our homes, when the
editor of the Post was nursing in his moth
er's arms, deserving of no other name for
his patriotism and bravery than that of a
butcher! Oh shame, where is thy blush.
How can inch a recreant look an honest A
merican in the face ? The man who can
thus speak of Scott, would rob a hen roost
if it was not for the fear of being detected.
Daily , News.
Brownian? on Pierce.
The eccentric editor of the Knoxville
(Tenn.) Whig, Parson Brownlow, has been
one of the great guns of the Democratic
press since the nominaiion of Gen. Scott.
He has been cited from week to week as au
thority for the statement that 10,000 Ten
nessee Whigs will follow his example, and
vote for Pierce. The Whig of the 7th inst.,
however,
shows that the Parson is not to
be relied upon in this particular, for, after
reciting certain of Pierce's votes in Con
gress, he remarks, fire cannot vole for
or support such an unfeeling and cold
blooded Yankee us this ." "Cold-blooded
Yankee !" That, be it remembered, is
Parson Brownlow's epithet as applied to,
General Pierce."
---
A Locolbco Recommendation.
The merits of General Pierce are being
gradually developed. The subjoined fact
cannot fail to make an impression. It was
gravely announced by Charles L. Wood
bury, President of the Granite Club of
Bedham, Mass., at a recent convention in
that place :
..Gen. Pierce is a man educated like them (the
members of the Gratin+ Club) in the common
schools of New England—who hats his whipping
!eke whir boys, and was taught by the acme school
"Zen)."
A ZEALOUS SCOTT MAN.—The
Vincennes Gazette gives au account of a
man who said : "Gen. Scott's the great
est man in America, the greatest man liv
ing, the greatest man of modern times.—
Why, sir, if he and I were standing at the
gate of St. Peter, and there was room but
for one of us to pass, and the other had
to be excluded forever, I think so much of
that man, sir, that I should say, General,
731 r. Stevens made a speech in Con
gress during the evening session of last
Thursday, which is this noticed in the
Congressional report published by the Na
tional Intelligeneor :
Mr. S'l EVENS, of Penn's, alluded to recent
political 'vents in rererence to the Preoidenoy.—
He replied to the speech of Mr. Tousles. made
some time since, and in the course of his remarks
declared that the Union wax never in danger
Outside of this hall there was no excitement except
such as proceeded from it. The object of all this
disgraceful turmoil and false clamor and excite
ment was to compel both political parties to incor
porate into their party creeds a defence and props.
plain of slavery, and this he proceeded to prove.
tr:7•Amon g the speakers at the great
Whig celebration at Lundy's 'Lane, were
John H. Bradley, of Indiana; Gun. Wm.
Larimer, •of Pennsylvania; Denial R. Til
den, of bltio ; and Charles Quin, of Mich
igan, all of whom opposed the Whigs
in 1848. Besides these there were three
hundred old Soldiers who have left
the Locofoco ranks to join in the universal
shout for Gen. Winfield Scott.
Thomas 11. Clay and Gen. Scott
MrThomas H. Clay, Esq., a son of the
lamented Henry Clay, in a letor to Col.
Pickett, of Baltimore, denies the report
which has been circulated that he told his
father that be would not vote for Gen, Scott,
and that such remark received his father's
approbation. Mr. Clay will vote the whole
Whig ticket. The Compiler having pub•
limbed the report alluded to, we presume,
will make the correction.
Electlout*,
IcrlntelligetteePlion3 lowa confirms
the announcement in our last of the elec.
lion of one Whig Congressman. The
Legislature will be locofoco.
The majority for Reid, in North Ciro-
Una, is about 5,000. The Locofoco pa.
pers of that State do not• claim the result
u a party triumph.
SAL] 1 OF BEDFORD SPRINGS:—
The Ocunberhiud Journal mays that the
contract for this celebrated watering place
has been' cancelled, in consequence of difi•
enlace thrown in the wal Ally one of tho
partt! Who were to hese prams/
pc:7.Th° President bee appointed Ns
thauK. aH, primal Pot limner Gentspd,
Jude of the 11. S. Circuit Court, ',in place
.of Judge Onddin, appointed Minister to
Mexico.
Kr.',ltr. Webster and Mr. Corwin barn
returned to Washington, and roomed their
positions at the Lead of their resimtive
Departments of State and Treasury. .
' story of the mamore of Copt.
Manly, with 80 men under hie commatxli
by the Comanche haw. WWI out at his
to be s boas.
COUNTY MEETING.
PC7Pursuant to a mil of the County
Cominittes, a very large earl oodauslastio
wasting (tithe friends of Seen and Graham
convened in the Court.botase en Monday
evening last. Every portion of the coun
ty
, seemed to be represented, and the en
thusiasm that characterized the meeting
furnishes a guaninteethat the Whigs of
the Young Guard are wide awake, and
will do their whole duty in the Campaign
before them. The meeting was organ
ized by the appointment of the following
officers
vaxstnior,
JOHN L. OUHERN ATOIL of Conowago.
TM. racatostrrs,
Nathaniel Grayson. of Liberty.
Joseph Kittinger, Ham iltonban.
David Holfmger, Hamilton.
Abel T. Wright, Menallan.
811 as M. Homer, Mountjuy.
John Noughtslin, Butler.
Jacob Diehl, Oxford.
Isaac Wolf, Berwick.
Jonathan C. Forrest, Germany.
John McCleary, Freedom.
Ephraim D. Newman. Franklin.
John D. Becker, Huntington.
Daniel Minniab, Latimons.
sacasrmitio,
Robert O. Harper, Borough.
Jacob Alabaugh, Reading.
0. N. Buehler, Borough.
J. F. Koehler, Abbottstoten. •
The organization havingbeen completed,
the "Scott Glee Squad" of Gettysburg,
who were present by invitation, entertain
ed the meeting with several very appro.
priate songs.
On motion of R. G. McCreary, Esq., a
committee of five was appointedi to prepare
and report reeolutions to the meeting.—
The Committee consisted of R. G. Mc-
Creary, Maxwell Shields, Solomon Wel
ty, David Beecher and John L. Sadler.
On motion of Dr. C. Horner, a com-
mittee, consisting of Col. J. D. Paxton,
R. M. Hutchinson and Geo. B. Hewitt,
was appointed to wait upon the Hon.
James Cooper and the lion. D. Durkee,
and invite them to address the meeting.
The Committee having retired, soon re
turned, accompanied by the Hon. James
COOPER, who, in response to the call of the
meeting, spoke for an hour and a half, in
a most eloquent and effective manner—e
liciting frequent and enthusiastic applause.
The Committee on resolutionai.through
their Chairman, IL G. McCreary, report
ed the following resolutions, which were
unanimously adopted:
I. Whereas, the time is near at hand when the
people of the United States will he called upon to
exercise the high privilege of avlecting a chief
magistrate to preside over arid control the desti
nies of this great and glorious Confederacy of free
States—and whereas the Whig Convention lately
assembled at Baltimore her prreented to us, as a
candidate, one who has frequently - on - former 0 , e•
sions been nominated by the Whigs of Adams
County as their lint choice for that high office,
and whose name is identified with the brightest
pages of the history of our country fur full forty
years; therefore,
Resolved, That in Winfield Scott we recognise
ode who not only possesses in an eminent degree
the qualifications requisite to a proper discharge of
the duties and obligation, of the office of I'resideett
of the United States, but who by a long life of ac
tive and patriotic devotion to the service of his
country, has justly earned her highest honors. as
a hero aid patriot, upon the battle-field, and has
poured out his blood like water in defence of our
nation's rights and honor ; and though he has
borne the stars and stripes aloft and onward through
many • scene of danger and difficulty to glorious
victory, he never once ha■ turned his back to the
enemies of his country, or trailed her colors in
disgrace ; whilst the mom atatteiman like quali
fier) of prudence, firmness, knowledge of men, and
enlarged and comprehensive views of national
questions, have in him shown conspicuous upon '
many occasions of delicate and responsible trusts,
when their exercise was of the utmost importance
to the pesos and honor of the nation.
• • .
Resobsd, That in William A. Graham of North
Carolina, the -stag candidate for the office of Vice
President of the United States, we bare • man
worthy of our support, and every way qualified to
discharge the duties of that office—a truly nation
al Whig, superior to all merely sectional views
and prejudices, who has been constant in his deco•
tion to principles calculated to promote the inter
ests of the whole country; and he therefore deserves
and will receive an enthusiastic support from every
part of it.
Re o lard, That we now as heretofore testify our,
admiration of, and adherence to, those great
principles for which, as a party, the Whip of the
Union bare so long and ardently contended—es
pecial!, the doctrine of Prorediese to dfrierrirea In.
diutry—belleving as we do, that our oountry ono
never be either permanently prorgerroese, or may ia•
dependent. until, by a judicious system of promo
tion to our agricultural, menufactoring, mechanical,
and commercial interests, we are enabled to corn.
pets successfully with the pauper labor of the old
world, and produce within our own borders an
abundance of every article necessary for our com
fort in peace, or our defence and protection in
war.
Rooked, That the thinks, net only of the Whig
party, but of the whole country, are due to Millard
Fillmore for his wise and obis administration of
the Government ; and that a grateful nation will
'emelt - her his services during ■ period in which
the hearts of many patriots were full of apprehen •
sion for this safety and the permanently of our
noble Union.
The meeting, having again been en
livened with songs by the "Glee Squad,'
on motion. adjourned.
LOCOFOCO LIKE.—.The Daily Argus
orSaturclay publishes an artiole from the
London Chronicle, ridiculing and abusing
Gen. Scott, and says that everything con
tained therein is true. Looofocoism must
be bard run for reasons to urge against
the election of General Scott, or they
would scorn the aid of British journals to
defeat him.
Death of Dlr. Datthtall•
iffirkion. Benjamin Matthias, member
of the State Senate froMthe city of Phila
delphia, died in that city on Saturday last.
Mr. Matthais was well known throughout
the State, and untrerially esteemed.
Death of Mre. Taylor.
03.1dra. General Taylor, reliot of tbo
late President of the united .Statez, died
st'East Pascagoula, Miss,, on' Saturday
evening last. Thus has paned sways v 4.
arable woman, who hadlong been the boa,
om companion of one of the most' tried ;Iv
triote and eminent aoldieve of the land.
0010. Ge 4. Scott "la burped in edgy
Delphi, on Thunidil night , fast. , Whs
do his old Soldiers think of that 1. It is
all right. Go ahead, gingPageP.--Zarq-
Nis L 1.44 Journal.
11[7•A greatsouthwestern mess Conroe
tion is to be held at .Louislrille, Ky., on the
14th of September, the'enuirestary of the
march of Gen. Scott into the oily of Ales.
100,
Free 101 l Coaventiela
Ic3 o .Tbe National Free Soil 00'moat%
have plsoed in nomination Hon. Amy P.
HALX, for President, and J. W. &muff,
of Indiana for Vioe Preddent,
. .
rum, PASTE, AND MMUS,
Loarn to loos thyself.
Ties l'ist4 war hr wised the price of meek
"A great boob is a greet here." tto think the
Loons of the "Lira or Sco+Y."
The Wheat crop in Oormany is better than it
bee been honors in twenty year*.
The Whig. - of 11 . 41er, Onondaga county,
have formed an "Anti-leainting Scott Club I
The young lady who caught cold by drinking
water from a damp tumbler, is convalescent.
Wu*? things increase the more you contract
them 1 Ana—Debts.
Our de.il soya thag the British interference
with our fishermen, is a awry sway business.
Jon. 80.--He who knoweAthing doubts noth
ing. and goes it blind.
Why is a good advice like a sickle 1 Bees'ese
it goes spins.. the grain.
No one can tell how much he can secompli,h
untill hs tries.
A late bull fight ■t Madrid, fur the benefit of the
poor, mallard 511,1100 franca.
A boy and girl, •pd rospoetisely 18 and 14,
were married last weak at (Sincinnati.
"The women all go foe Pierer," says the
Boston Post.
Wonder if his old friend, So/ Volatile, is among
them 1
Three thonsend donors worth of liquor we.
seised and destroyed at Fall River. Mass. on the
The greatest 'Wino speaker In the West Is said'
to be a candidate for Congress in Illinois, who has
two wooden legs.
Oren 880,000 hogs will be marketed from the
eta* of Kentucky alone daring the coming
winter.
The Whig popery hold it as • qualification
for tbe Presidency that everybody knows °anent
Scott.—Demorrarie paper.
The Democratic papers hold it at • qualifica
tion for the Presidency that nobody knows Gener
al Pierce.—N. 0. Ca 171/•01V1 Republic.
Eggs train China, pat up in pickle, in large
sized jars, are now retailed in ttan Francisco, at
one dollar per dozen.
Abernethey's prescription for the care of the
gout, was, "Live epos a shilling a dty and earn
Paine.-Bsid • little girl on beholding a
snow storm, "dee, mother, the anvils are ailing
flowers from the sky."
To be able to beer proenration is an argument
of great wisdom ; and to forgive it, of a great
mind.
Why are Mada m L cheeks like sixpen
ny calico? Do you give It up I Because wash
ing fades them
Hest thou power 1 the week defend ;
Light I give light, thy kuuwledge lend;
Rieb 1 remember Him who gave ;
Free 1 be brother to the slave.
"Pa, how many legs has • ship ?" l'A shit*
has no Inge my child. ..Why pa, the paper says
she draws twenty fret and run, before the wind."
Beauty is a rock on which many a man makes
shipwreck while in scorch of the pearls which a
dorn it.
Why io a roman's tongt:e likes planet 1 Be
muse nothing short of the power that created it is
atilo to atop it to its court..
Was'? Stays.-- Geo. R. INVMPI I hoe declined
to s er v e nn 1h• I,ocofo ri n Klectorial ticket in the
Congressional District in Teitanesace.
The potato, crop of Kentucky, this season, will,
it is thought, exceed that of any season for ninny
Yearn.
SLAVRII Eettlran.—The liflferAoWll (Md )
People's Own states that footteen mettles, the
property of Mra. Pendleton, of that piece, rau uhf
on Saturday night last.
Timon says that when the men motif ,tow
days, they get inoro whalebone than woman. and
more colE.e Sags than “tin.“ About these days
Timon should avoid broom-handle'.
We cut the following advertisement "ilrom the
New York Herald t--: . taut rat We.tnenla v last,
a brindle plap--with a switch tail—belonging to
Patrick M'Neil with his em
French' I. hosing asked Castellon. Diahop of
Orleans, whether he was of noble ex biart.on,
replied he, ••Noah NIA three sons in the ark ; I
cannot soy (ruin which of theca I dew:rented."
Nowa!! H . u —Thegreat Goethe, nn his
death-bed, at eighty-four. Berle red that he had nev
er, during all of his life, experienced Twenty-four
hours of real happiness !
A fellow down in klasatehunektoo t. ho ProhahlY
drinks nothing but "oonmuors rum," want+ to
know what's the use of three cows, nowt tboNtaino
liquor bill has been pawed 1
An Irish Epitaph:-
- Here I lies,
And my heart at site is,
Wid the point of my nose
And the tope of my tore
Turned up to the roots of the daisies
Pause Woven.
Gen. Scott wool& no doubt, run better in Una.
ads than in the United States—,Cohotanto (Ohio
Stateswein.
History informs us that when Stott was a young
man, he did some pretty fast running in Canada
—alter the retreating Sritiah. On any soil, how,
ever, he can "run and not weary, walk and not
Joint r". . -Dayton (Ohio) Glautie.
Tax PSCIIMIAIIIITIZS OF P501 . 1.1..-.-h said
that a native or chins, when he is sworn, thinks
it part of therrenriniony to break • saucer ; while
the French President when he is sworn betieve•
It necessary to break his oath.
A Goon Ore..-"I say," inquired a Whig of
Democrat a few days ago, "how do yoa like the
nomination 1" "First rate," was the reply, "had
in, eye on that man Price for some
Chraiirk,
The bast way to avoid retains cold is to or
custom yourself to the usa of sponging with told
water every morning on first getting put of bed.
The Catholic University of Ireland has really
edsl6,ooo from the United &etas.
The new Planet discoverd by Mr. Hind on
the 24th ot June bag received the name of Melpo,
men.. the Muse ol Tragedy. This planet is be
lieved to be the seventeenth now known to exist
between Mare and Jupilet.
"Does Pa kise you because he fusee you 1" in
quired a little enubby.nosed urchin *flue maternal
ancestor, the other day. "To be sure, sonny,
why 1" Wei, I guess he loves the kitchen girl,
too, for I MD biro kiss her more'n-ferty times last
Sunday, when you wee gone to meeting."
John K. Wilson, formerly sheriff' of Seder
county, Ohio, end slims a Democrat, wee otie of
the vice presidents eta late 800tt demonstmiloa
in Hamilton county. He dealers* his determina
tion to support the Scott ticket, and sets Mat •
large number of Democrats lo Oki Butler will go
fur Scott.
Dorrsto, Aug. 1 O.—About midnight a dread.
fill murder wee perpetrated M thiscity by two elvv!
gouts. They entered the room of Joseph Hart
man, Jr., and•with a bar three feet long int* hint
over the head. He must hevebaen kilted Inidenb ,
ly as his skull was completely broken ie. The
fiendish murderers then beat Mrs. Matiniani over
the bead in 'dreadful manner,: ' ;
,
0:7•31a. Wx. Snort, a conaucter,o4
.
one of the passenger trains, qa the Salo- .
mord and Susquehanna 4ailroad, met with
a serious accident, on Sunday
iut, He was on the top "of one •or iltia
curs, when De trainpassed through a
bridge, wijh which he oiin r e hi tonna,'"
receiving - o very severe gash in 'lite fort k",
A SAteir Lot
mane Ohlo . eltste 'omit siyifit lirde
bean shown a list of NINETY4IIVMPt.
MIME*, in' one single county, prow
heretofore voting the ..neofoerrt)ab i ttell'OPl ,'T
arP going for Scott. And so it 4oe
PARDONBD , —irmideoC!Wore hilt
pardoned Drayton a nd
. goyim.; mho w0r0, ,, ,
ocationo4 two your 'go to Ilk yaws ,
prison ti ii Wookiogion, for atio Woks
Lb* abduotits of oovesty dare, le 144 ,
solumer Purl.
oe.
Aik osieeisegot r lroung Whigs
of N ew York, wrong the speeches, wade
iiitofil °he 'tit' Theodore E. 7 owifens4,
tfiteh' clintitien Outlay
,ixeellent points.—
Nye gi we, ail el. tract :
Dentooratic Platform' is a cold,
cheerless sod barren platform, made of
kon, heated by ,firiliek coal. rivet
eteby &Wei labor I its great champion,
i~e!,of don 74ntes. Thera is no living
thin g upon it. It sustains the coilin of
Me& sod Harbor and great internal Ira
petteemeti ta.
The Whig platform is made of Ilmeri
,ewe iron, is heated by ihsterican Coal, riv
eted by ilmeriestt ksbor. It has two
,ohninpions—the living and the dead--
HENRY CLAY and DANIEL WEBSTER.
But Free-Trade is right. So Peace is
right. We require Protection for Free-
Trade, as we require fortresses ancl ships
of war for Peace. - Names are thins.—
There is musts thrilling in the word Free !
Free Lands. Free Homes. Free Men.
Free Trade ! But death to British Free-
Trade ! All hail to American Free-
Trade ! •
Labor is not so material a thing as a
ship—it is not as visible. It is down in
the mines, and up in the garret, or far a.
way in the factory,
The Democratic Congress protected the
Collins line of steamers by a direct mon
ey grant against Free-Trade, and the
Congress did right. They would not see
our gallant craft borne down by British
ships, with Free-Trade at the helm.
Then why permit Labor to be destroy
ed by the same Free-Trade. disguised in
British bales and it-. British freight ?
There is no hope for American Industry
from the Democracy.
In. this contest there will be no tempo
rary delusion of Polk. Dallas and the Tar
iff of '42.—no noise and confusion to hide
the abandonment of River and Harbor Im
provements.
Franklin Pierce is the living embodi
ment of his platform ; the histOry of his
political life consists in his refusing to do
anything for his country. His policy
was so cheerless that ho voted against
beneficent measures that Jackson main
tained ; his constitutional temples were so
nice that he opposed relief to the widow of
President Harrison, that the Senate
granted.
A Good Hater or omco.
We have been vastly amused at times
by the excessive flounders of the Pierce
journals, in telling of his lofty triumph o
ver ambition in declining the office of Gov
ernor, rattail* an Attorney Generalship,
and resigning his post in the Senate, &e.
AVell, the truth of the mailer was, that we
4hunie4t Pierce was impressed with the
.truth of the old adage that -small vessels
,should keep close to shore"—that he was
am more fit for a- statesman than he after
avards found himself tit for a General,—
We thought t h at something of this sort put
a curb to the vaultings of his ambition,
lint it appears after all, that it was a sick
wife', for which we commend him, but
will not award him the tribute of "a triumph
of mind over glory and ambition."
Gun. Win. 0. Butler lately made a
speech in Kentucky. in which we find the
lolluiwuig passßae:"
"He (U it. Pierce) +served, in all, about
ten years in Congress, three of which
were in ihe Senate, but roam compelled to
resign his seal in Mat hod!, in consequence
iy the ill health of his wife."
"There !" says Prentice, "A gentle
man was compelled to resign has seat in
the Sensle consequence of the ill health
of his wife, and the Liicoloco organs call
upon all creation to admire the art as the
loftiest, the moat alll petidouo, the most a
mazing triumph over vain-glory and ambi
tion ever exhibited to the "world and the
rest of mankind." Isn't it funny r'
The tll4ll/on Bribe.
"John M, Clayton. in his Wilmington
speech, extols Gen. Scott for refusing a
bribe of a mil:itm of dollars from the Mex
i,tint Government. and a royal diadem.—
NoW, what evidence is there, written or
unwritten, of this in the history of the
war ; and if there should be any, it adds
nothing to the fame of Gen. Scott, as pure
men are seldom neared bribes."—Demo
(role Union.
Upon this the Susqueibanna Register
remarks :
"We suppose the Union has doubted
the purity of Gen, Joseph Reed ever since
'the (Wish commissioners. in 1778. offer:
ed to bribe him with ten thousand pounds
sterling; and any Ace within his unties.
ty's gift in the colonies; to which offer the
General nobly replied : I am not worth
purchasing, but such as I am. the king of
Great Britain is not rich *tough to do it."
Vire find another remarkable instance of
an attempt at bribery, recordered in an
ancient volume in our posimion. As it
would appear, Irom the reflections they
eeek to cast on those to whom the bribes
are offered, that the Union editors are not
familiar with this portion of ancient his•
tory, we will make a short quotation for
their benefit:
"Again the devil taketh him up into an
exceeding high mountain, and showeth
him all the kingdoms of the world, sod
the glory of them ; and with unto him :
All these things will I give thee, if thou wilt
fall down and worship me."
St. Matthew's Gospel,
A GROSS FABRICATION.—Here ie anoth
er Specienen orthe style in which the war
is cariied on against Gen. Scott by some
of the 6euiocratio papers
'glad / the power, I would erect a gal
lows, upon every wharf in the city of New
: tort[, sad hang every Irishman as
feet as they come on.ahnrc."
Matthew .14. Davis made .the a.
boveilaclerAion id, Washington. on hear.
ing of a Jetnocratic victory in New York.,
De in tsdu i ppdrtke of Seolt.'r
Now this will go the roindi. and, bar.
ing been oneep,rinjeii in .apemoemtie pa.
per will naterbe retraeted.oriontradicted
thprein, though ,the foals tlmt./iinglAsig
D 'APO 4 8 . 4.effi,i3lOkin 41 . graPC 'fin.;
urchyvd, NOW .rork r :ikon ism
years I—u.Norfilk
Wllig MEWLING Ark FREDERiCK.
—The Whiga held * large noels meeting'
"Billh'fiqk.,P4ef a° 40#7, whioh
adt. l ,l l 7 l4 lPittiilAwso,o,4loeisis„
!81.441Y, mid Boai Jo 44 '
MoratefO of Noah Wallas Call
loan; bf ; Heap) , *War DaVis;
of BaltiOoo, 'Oa )1e41%; Schley, s4;vrio,
Salm and others'.
. .5
e ,„; yawed to
• The following
a gentlemen during a
.Dig ar m in e
few years
farce house in Vazia. som e
ago:
In December, 17—. towards the dose
ors dreary day, a woman with an infant
child were discovered half buried in the
snow, by a little Virginian seven years old .
The lad was returning front school, and
hearing the moans of some one in distress.
threw down his satchel of books, and re
paired to the spot whence the sound pro
ceeded, with a firmness becoming one of
riper years. Raking the snow from the
benumbed body 'of the mother, and using
means to awaken her to a sense of her de
plorable condition, the noble youth suc
ceeded in getting her upon her feet ; the in
fant, nestling on its mother's breast, turn
ed its eyes towards their youthful preserv
er and smiled, as it seemed, in gratitude
for its preservation. With a countenance
filled with hope the gallant youth cheered
the sufferer on, himself bearing within his
arms the infant .child, while the mother
leaned for support on the shoulder of her
little conductor. "My home is hard by,"
would he exclaim, as her spirits failed ;
and thus fur thrt4 miles did he cheer her
onward to a happy haven, the mother and
child, both of whom otherwise must have
perished, had it not been for the humane
feelings and perseverance of this noble
youth.
A warm fire and kind attention soon re
lieved the sufferer, who. it appeared. was
in search of her husband, an emigrant from
New Hampshire, a recent purchaser of a
farm in the neighborhood of t near
this place. Diligent inquiry for several
days found him ; and, in five months after,
the identical house in which we are now
sitting was erected, and received the hap
py family. The child grew up to manhood
--entered the army—lost a limb at New
Orleans, but returned to end his days, a
solace to the declining years of his aged
parepts.
"Where are they now ?" I asked the
narrator. "Here," exclaimed the son, "1
am the rescued one; there is my mother,
and here, imprinted on my naked arm, is
the name of the noble youth, our preser
ver." I looked, and read "WINk:IELD
Scorn!"
THE RELIOIOUS TEST or NEW HHAttr•
sitiait.—We commend the following to
the notice of the Pennsylvanian, being a
reply to a paragraph which was transfer
red to its columns on Tuesday. It is from
the Alban) Journal:—Daily News
We cannot persuade the .drirus to
publish the vote on abrogating the relig
woe test in New Hampshire. It contents
itself with constantly reiterating the asser
tion that the responsibility of the non-re
peal of the test lies with the Whig minor
ity in that State. This assertion is flatly
contradicted by the official vote, which the
Rrgus is careful not to publish.
We submit two or three general facts
for the consideration dl our neighbor.—
They have been alreatimoblislied in de
tail, but they were doubtless overlooked
by him.
"In the ten towns uniformly Whig the
vote stood: for the repeal of the Religious
Test, 1,923; against repeal, 29. lit the
same number of uniformly Lueoloco towns,
the vote stood : for repeal, 135 ; against
repeal. 2,468 ! This was on the first trial.
in March, 1851.
•• On LIM lie rund Wel, twelve Whig towns
voted : for repeal, 2,681 ; against repeal,
791 ; majority, 1,890. This was the pre
cise majority (into one vole) received by
the Whig candidate for Grivertror in the
same towns : showing that the men who
voted for the Whig candidate fur Gover
nor voted to repeal the Test, and vice ver
sa. This fact is sufficiently significant to
justify a word of comment from the dirgus.
"At the same election twenty-one Loco
(two towns voted as follows; for ropes',
340 against repeal, 2,986.
"We leave these facts, without com
ment, to be digested by the .Irgus. When
it shall have succeeded in doing so, others
equally indicative of the character of the
democracy of Locofocoism will be sub.
DR. HOOFLAND . II GRRIUN
Br TERa.--
That this medicine will cure liver corn
plaint and dyspepsia, no one can doubt of
ter using it as directed. It acts specifically
upon the stomach and liver; it is prefera
ble to calomel in all bilious diseases; it arts
as specifically upon the liver as calomel;
calomel prostrates die system—the bitters
strengthen and never prostrate the patient.
and will give renewed life and health to the
delicate invalid, and restore the liver to its
functions, and give digestion and appetite
in those severe cases wherein the ordina
ry medicines lail in producing any eflect.
LIST OF LETTERS ,
Remaining in the Poet Office at Gettys
burg. Augmt 16ds, 1852.
Allison Elizabeth Hausdcerfer Peter
Arndt Daniel John' Samuel
Baltaley Joseph Kephart Peter
Black Mary or Asia Lawrence Aloystus M.
Beecher John Lehman John
Black Robert MundorirJacob
Black Mary Miller Mary Ann
Butler Thomas McElroy Adam
Black John MeA very Thomas A.
Brinkerhoff John Miller Msgdalena
Banner M. C. Miller Peter 1).
Bonner Joshua MeMurdie David
Conrad F. W.' Moore Jane
I Camber Jahn McCreary John F.
rowan Marie, Mackling Maria
Deardorff Isaac Miller Isaac
Diehl lease Nis Meleher .
Diehl Jacob Noel Jacob
Dupe John Orr Thomas
Erin Samos! Plimsoll Henry D.
Eakins CidlonAuickle John
Ebert John , fßoberts Wm.
Epley 0.. A.. 2 B. J.
Freyburner Menem Stough Ann Eliza
Fehl Vilentine S. Stick Caspar .
Faithful Joseph Steigers Barbara.
Fetzer C. ' Swisher Louisa
Fick.. William Stoner Henry
Fillweiler Jacob Shanibrook Wail
Gimbel. Peter '- /Study - Arid Dr.
'Glenville , Seib 9 i Stoner Divid S.
Gettjs 'James Schleider Joeials V. W.
`Hanaway Ephraim, ' Smith Sin* .. , ,
Harifttilohn ' ' Shrive, Aliquot
Hunter Elisabeth ' ' ' IShiliti Mr..'' . '
Habenoehl Charles .' ' Spangiel lbeitith ''. r ' '
Hoffman Sarah A. ' •Spinetleir Samuel
HumPbtlrf. Ftvfliltle : Tictello eatkarinii J.
Haldeman Margaret , Weaver Martha E.
HavvMeryi ' Whit* bitheilla' ' •' '
- , - • •A. D. MIERLEE, , P. M.
OTTerattna milling for letters Is thir Alm List
Pill plasm say they ere ndevertiemL ; • "I',
EIS=
CAMP MEETING.
A calni'aiietioi.oritia pi*
agßon Ott ta grAtev. ,
lumig , ALONAT. theta st,pni . nor* .of
Pmemborr o ,vw G. lONIA Church, eon
menoing
On MalditY alf 2ll (r - in*W.
and cani!isig#
in t.
Meeibsn udjoiaiwthieuits. and the
public morally, are cordially invited to
intend. CQNMITTEE,
_ _ ,
. - :: - ir,.?..H . :•%;.•'
11U1.7 1 1111MMtE ',MARKET,
„,trim, Tx” , lairmas ,or xlisTUDO.]
jl l 3lLr—erbst trannactione are Moderate; no
Alitanigain prim. • •
.FLOWL—Thir Flour market Is quiet. No
sbange.in prime. Ws note sales today of LOW
bbl.. City Mills at $4 per bid. Nothing rime in
Howard street breeds. The last sales were as $4
I per bbl. Rye Flour 8 75 a 3 81, and Corp Meal
142 • $3 18 per bbl.
GRAIN.--The receipts of Grain are to a fair
extent. We note sales, of good to prime red
Wheat at 85 a 90 eents;white wheat 90 • 99
cents per bushel. Rye 79 a 74, cents per bushel.
§able of white Corn 81 aV3 cents. yellow do. 04
1144.05 cents per buiehel. ' Oats 410 a 84 cents per
bushel. Seeds quiet.-.no channo in prices.
GROCERIF.S.—There is a ateedy demand for
Cornee. 'Salm of Rio at 9 a Of cents per lb. At
suction, to day, 120 hhds. Porto Rico Sugar of
fered, 62 sold et 4 85 a $5 75 per 100 bble.; also,
17 naives Cubs do at 5 25 a $5 50 ; and 45 bbls.
do. mid at 546 • 'ss 65 per 100 lbs. Also 19
hhda. Porto Rico Molasses offered, 10'seld at 23
a 24 cents per gallon. Rice 4f cents per lb.
PROVISIONS..—There is a steady demand.-
Bales of Mess Pork at $l9 60. Prime Pork $l7
50 per bbl. Western Mess Beef $l6. Bacon
shoulders 8 cents. 107 cents, and hams 11 a 13
cents per lb. Sales of Lard in bids. at Ili cents,
and kegs at 12} cents per lb. Cheese 7a 9 cents.,
Butter 12 a 16 pet lb.
MARRIED,
In Chestertown, Kent county, Md., my- the
11th inst by the Rev. Clement F. Jones, D. D..
Rev. WM. M. PAXTON, of Pittsburg. and Miss
DETTIE V. 11 WICKER, deughter of Cul.
Joseph Wickes, of Chestertown.
DIEIL
On the 311 inst., in Adams county, SUSAN
STONESIFER, aged 6 years II months and l 4
days.
In Oda borough, on the 14th inst.. FLOREN
CINE, infant daughter °flames A. and Margaret
Ogden, aged 2 Years and 4 days.
On the 16th hist, MARY LAVINIA. (laughter
of Mr.. Alexander Riggs,of this place, aged 1 year
and 11 months.
Obituary
On the 15th inst after a brief but severe ill.
news, Mr. WILLIAM 61:Orr , in the 60th year
of his age.
"Well," said an aged citizen, after retiring from
the grave of our deceased friend, 'Well, we have
buried a good man." The large concourse at his
funeral rites, notwithstanding the inclemency of
the weather, attested the high regard in which he
was held by friends and neighbors. He wag -a
man of quiet and uniform disposition. In the re
lations of husband, father, brother and neighbor,
he had a' good report. He was a member end
Ruling Elder of the Presbyterian Church, and
prompt in his attendance, and literal ter hie Np
port. Tuwanla the clone of his illness he suffered
much, with some aberration, but had lucid inter
vals. Ilia last rational utterances were protesta
tions of his regietration to the Divine will; a re-
pose and hope in the promised grace nfiegus—
••W hen heart and flesh fail me, God is the strength
of my heart and portion forever.' Ile found fa•
vor, we trust, with God as well as man. “I have
lost," said a gentleman, on the morning of his
death, "OUP of my best friends." We lender to
the bereaved and so , rowing family, the consolation
of liumac6ranaL-Disine friendship enjoyed by iheir
loved and lamented one. We commend them to ,
the sweet sympathies and pledged protection of
the omnipotent Redeemer, with the devout aspire- i
Lion that they may find ..
'Tech care and ill of mortal birth
Is sent in pitying love ;
To lift the lirgering heart from earth,
And speed its flight above."
Aug. ftl. FAIRFIEI.D.
OWThere will be preaching in the
Associate Reformed Church on
Sabbath next. (the 22d inst.)at 3 o'clock,
by the Rev. MATTHEW CLARK. lie Will
Also b reach ut the Hill Chinch as 10/
o'clock A. M.
TO SCHOOL TEACHERS.
PROPOSALS will be received from
competent Teacher s , * for takin g
char g e of six Schools in Tyr'rine town
ship. A meetin g of the Directors will he
held for the purpose of examinin g said pro
posals, on Saturday the 28th instant.
S. L. DUFFIELD, Sec'y.
Au g . 20, 1852—1 d.
TEACHER WANTED.
riPHE Board of school Directors for the
Borough of Gettysburg, are desirous
of employing a male Teacher for one of
the male schools of said borough. Ap
plicants for the same will please present
themselves for examination before the
board at the office of Dr. Horner, on Sat
urday the 28th inat., at 6 o'clock. P. M.
By order of the Board,
H. DEN WIDDIE, sec'y.
Aug. 20, 1852-21.
AGENTS WANTED.
AGENTS wanted to operate for the
farmers' and Mechanics' Mutual
Health Association of Harrisburg. Pa., in
the counties of Cumberland, Franklin.
Adams, Perry. Juniata, and Huntingdon,
to whom good encouragement will be giv.
en. Address the Office of the Company.
Ni. 52, South Second et.
WILLIAM D. WARD,
General Ag't. for Company.
Aug. 20-2 t.
REGISTER'S NOTICE.
NOTICE is hereby given to all Lega
tees and other persons concerned,
that the Administration Accounts of the
deceased persons hereinafter mentioned,
will be presented at the Orphans' Court of
Adams county, for confirmation and allow
ence, no Thcsday the 21st day of Sep
tember next, via :
67. The 6rat Bement of Jacob Smyers,
Executor of Elizabeth Kinard, dec'd.
08. The first account of Charles
Wil
liar. Administrator of Michael
dec'd.
09.. The frost and final account' of John
Hoover, Administrator of George Goul,
den, dec'd
70. The second account of James H.
Flukes and Peter Orndorff, Administrators
of Valentine Flakes, dec'd.
71. Tim first and final nccount of Wit.
!km' MMus, Adininistratdr With the will
annexed. of John Hoßetinue, deed.
72, The first and fin — al account or David
M. M'yers. Administrator of Relay Slagle,
deed. ,
,
73. 'nig fitet'and final account of Cath.
arine Carkirmoottirix of filo:Oath ddc'd.
74..The_ fi rst apnoea; of Adam Sowers
and John oblim, Administratom al John
13 °werts,deci r d• A
• 70. • The first aecouot of Harman Wier. ;
Atlininlitratera ,
de begin non with the will annitztti of
Philip MUM deed. ; ' '
76. The first account of Samuel Miller,
Adittiniatiator stianoiltilth . the wit
anintiedl'iir JacobMiley, denid.
•
77. The Oat *Muhl of Simnel 01(1 , 9p,
ldminiatrator of /obit Miley, deed.
70. ,The Oro and final immant„ of ,Ri n „ .
.John Wile, Administrator of Jacob . 'kn.
der, deo'''.
•
•
DANIKL PLANK.
Register's Once, GeUysburg, Register.
Auf• 20, 1 beg. tc
- P Oki = A
OF 'PAZI7.BI4,R
Real' 'Estate
TI-1 E subscriber, Assignee under •
deed of voluntary assignment of 14.
cos PARK and Wife, will offer . at Public
Sale.
On Tuesday the VIM day of September
next,
On the premises...o ♦aiueble Tract of Land,
situate in Swaim township, Adams coun
ty, Pi.. near the State Road leading from
Gettkaburg to Harrisburg, containing
160 ACRES,
and adjoining land* of John Gulden. Da
vid flyers. Adam Yeagy, and others,—
The Improvements are a ONE AND A
HALF STORY LOG
DIVELLINGIIOUSE
9
a double Log Barn, with Sheds' attached,
%Vagon•shed, Corn-crib, and othei out
buildings. There are two wells of water
on the premises; a thriving ORCIMRD
of young fruit trees ; and the land is In a
goo d a i s l e of cultivation.. There is a due
proportion of world-land. It is supposed
that copper is to be found in abundance on
this farm, being in the neighborhood of the
mine already opened on the land of Mr.
Utz. Person. wishing to view the prop
erty will be shown the same by calling
on the present occupant, Mr. Joule HAR.
NMI, or the undersigned,
ALS o—On Saturday the 2d of October
next,
on the premises, a valuable PROPERTY,
situate in Mountpleaaant kownahip, Adams
county, Pa., on the road 'eliding from Bon.
a ylitown to Litticatowtt. containing 23
.4CRES, more or less, idjoining lands PI
Henry Weikert, Rufus Weaver. and oth
ers. The improvemenls consist of a
TIJ'O—STORY LOG
a s DIMITZILLXM4IIO I / 6 11,1
a I with it one-story Log Kitchen at-1
tacked, a smoke-house, a Aar), a log Barn,
with sheds attached and 'other out-build-I
ings. There is a well of water will, a
pomp in it near the door; and a young
ORCHARD on the premises. 'l'he land
is well improved, limed, and in the high
est state aeultiontion.
111CPSale will ennimenmit 12 n'elork.
11/.,0n each (Weald days. Wien attendance
will be given and tering .nistle known by
JOHN RIDES, Assignee.
Aug. 20, 1852—is.
BEIM EST.ITP .97'
PITB r, IC SIALE.
T HE subscriber, Administrator de bon is
non rum testament() Sone No, of the
Estate of Herm' HIMLER deceased, will
expose to Public Sale, oni Saturtlnt, the
181 h of September next, at I u clock, P. M.,
the
of said deceased, situate in Mountpleasant
township, Adams Co., Ps., lidjoining lands
of Daniel Diehl, Win. &Mk and others,
and containing 9 acres . andl64 Perches.
The improvements are a giedONE AND
ONE H A I.F—STORI
~
DWELLING H U U_,, ifif '
a good Barn, and other ont.ho .
hugs. Convenient to the do is a never
failing spring of water. Thee is also on
the premises a gond ORC BA D of choice
fruit. A reasonable portion i it is in good
Meadow. At the same tim there will he
sold a lot of PERSONAL 1 OPERTY. 1
consisting of one Bureau, B s and Bed-
ding, and a variety of other niches. At. i
tend:ince will he given and terms made ,
known on day of sale by
PETER DIE
Aug. 20—te.
EZ . ZII'Zik
riviE first and 'final acco
NY DEARDORFF, Aiggigl
tate of JOHN THOM4S, Itavu
the Court of CWIIIIIOII Ph
county, the Court have app
the 21 at doy of Septernbe
Court-houtte, in the boron
burg, for hearing and cupful
account, Deices cause to
shown. By the court. I
WM W. PAX
Prothonotary's Office,
Gettysburg. Aug. 20. 1852. S
.
F r HE First Account of Masa PIIit.IPS;
JL, Committee of Anaanall(trongsh an
Habitual Drunkard. having been filed in
the Court of Coninion Min of Adams
f .
county, the Court have sp tinted Tues
day the 21s 1 day (f &pleat west, at the
Court-house, in We borough l'Hott:osburg.
for hearing and confirmation of said ac.
count, unless cause to till contrary be
shown. I
N OTKE
By the Cow.
WM. W. PAripi, Pr lBll. Y.
Prothonotary's Office. ' 3t
Gettysburg, AEI. 20, 1862.
.5
XOTICIE
F IRST and final account
TtigAe, 41 1 11411013 of Jots
Wife, having beim filed 'in
Common Pleas of Adams co '
have appointed 71tesday th l
September next, at the Cotir
borough of Gettysburg, fcq
confirmation of said Attcouni
to the contrary be shown.
By the Court. '
Witt. W PAX I
Prothonotary's Mee,
Gettysbutg, Aug..20,:62. S
NOTICE
Fln
and final Aceyixtof .Iroar.rn
LILLY, Assignee of t o, M. L 14•104
having been filed in the
,Cosrt Copmon
Pleas of Adams county, Court, have
appeleted Tireaday the 21n Ay of Sep.-,
[ember next, at the Couri•house..in,,the
borough of Gibuytrburg Or hearing and
confirthition ofsaid Aceobut, unless cause
to the obi)
By , the Court. •
Wht, W PiilFrOtoli . P • nitit'y
Protnenelarfe 01Pee; 21,
Oettysbeni,• Arie 24242 f ' •
TEA HERS. WASI I 4IIi.,: -
, . ,
will be received for la
,fig ing charge of eigittecho4to,the to •
111
4i o q l OWN 4 1 ,0%! CO.U4Y. ThosAggo
tore will raiset tor ikko purpoOe ior,,epause.
inhig 4 o42,ooo4lsAyk -
, Sailiriky 'me, lat_of SiOteOce.ni#, ; . ;
at the sdhool-houie in MiOletewo• 40
clock A.' M. Noite but competeat,laeith.
are neud epigy,
Vin. H. WRIGHT, Sec'y.
Auf. 20-3;
t . t ±"tv,v,..04y .r t... 0. 1 10 !
r•-v,
IrtwL
rrtHE undersigned, •residinkiin HuThl
tington township. Adam.' County.
Pa., offers at Private Sale that portion of
his farm cut Of the:Pine 'Grove • Road.
containing THlll,77:.lloR.4'§'at first-rate
land, on which are erected a lar' and
Commodi-ous '
BRICK DWELIAC HOUSE' '
Hough -cast tenant house, 'also a
weather-boarded House, gank earn and
fliaeklimith Shop, and" all the improve
medal necessary to , make home comfOrta-',
ble. Them tie firist-Mie Sprinkel Witter
near the doei..uneurpesied fn 'the Vciehiy.
There is on the promisee a Fiih,Pond
soar oung and thilVitig
0112cittrarb :
of choice: Fruit. If the purcha
ser should wish it, ten acres of
Woodland will he sold in connection with i
the above desirable PropertY.
Persons wishing to View the' properly,
will be shown it by the undersigned.
SAMUEL SHELLY
Aug. 20.--tf.
ERIN G.
. T HE subscriber. hating 'Welt' '
co
menced the Butchering 13usimess, in
the Borough of Gettysburg, rehiectfully
informs his friends that he is at all', times
ready to supply them with fresh meri t of i
the usual varieties, such as BEEF, VEAL, '
MUTTON, LAMB, &c. His slaughter
house is upon the corner of Waiiiington
and Railroad streete. Thankftil forAlte
liberal encouragement • hitherto received,
he respectfully solicits a continuance oldie
public patronage.
tZr - Perirons having live stock to . die.
pose of will please call upon' the nailer
signed, who will pay the highest rnatket
price for the same.
ROBERT HAMERSIX.
Aug. 13, 1852--► f.
DAILY LINE.
FARR RELDUCED!
lIE aubscribera announce to the.trar.
elling public i b nt they are now run
'ningnl)A.ll,Y hiNE OF
between GettysburgGettyeburg and Chembersburg,
leaving Gettysburg at 7 o'clock, A. M.,
and returning by 7 o'clock, P. M., 01 same
day. Fare each way $1.50.
Stage Office in Gettysburg, at the "Ea
gle Hotel." •
OMR, TATE & CO.
Judy 30, 1852-3 n).
TO 3,47 OLIZZTTP.
I N consequence of ill health, I have pin
eed my business and papers in the
lino& of W. H. STEVENSON, Esq., whom
I recommend to the confidence of the pub-
W. H. STEVENSON,
ATIF@RMiglr otr 61x-lu.
OFFICE. with A. R. STEVENSON, Esq
nt the North West corner of the Cen
tre Square, Gettysburg, Pa.
LEATHER.
Fritz, Williams & Emulry.
Store No. 29. N. 3rd street, Philadelphia
Mofmcceti M ANUFACTCRERP.
CURItIERS, AND IMPORTERS
Cornmiseic,n and General
LEATHER BUSINESS,'
I)I7,IIOLESALLE dr.11.107,41,33k.
IG"Mantifactory 15 Margaretla street'
Philadelphia.
July 9. 1852-Iy.
L, Ader
t or A NTIIO
- the Er.
been tiled in
s of Adaom
ted Tuesday
next. at tile
t of Gettys
anon of said
Contrary be
WEBSTER & YINGLING,
(Successors to AL Z.llldekr,)'
IV ENDA/Man MOTEL
AND
1 1 21 01,236111 0
Corner of Main 81, Court Streets,
VITESTBESISSTIOL.
May 21-If. • •
N. Protley
I
ETTERS of Administration on the
1.41 estate of Davro KING, lam of 9pr
minty tp., deceased. having been granted
to the subscriber, residing- in hinuntjoy
fp.. notice is hereby given to all who are
indebted to said estate, Co.meke payment
without delay, and to those having claiint
to present them properly authenticated for
settlement.
JOSEPH - FINK, Adm'r.
July 30,1852-60.
LETTCRS Testamentary on the es.
41 - 0 Irate Of DAIIIIIILSIINDAV, latent Mount.
pleasant township, Adams county,
deceased, bden granted to - tbe
subscriber, who resides in the same intim:
ship, notice' is hereby given to all whir
aro indebted to said estate, to make pay.
ment without delay 4 and to those having
claims to present the same properly authen
ticated, to the subscriber, fur settlement.
NANCY SU N 11A Y, "Executrix.
August 13, 1852.-0 e
rJACOB MA-
Kum( and
the Court of
ty, the Court
$1 et day of
house in the
hearing and
unleu cause
N, Proth•y.
at
LETTERS of 4tllministration, on the Mr
tate of ABRAHAM PICKING late Of East
Berlin, Adams county, deceased, having
been granted to the oubseriber, residing
in Baltimore:lll4l 4 notice is bellbt given
to all who ati iitibied.to - sateestattr,l4
make payment without , delay. to
those heritigelaime to present'them pva
paxly.ituthenticiateil for settfemeni.
&MG. N. PICKING, Adaer..
Aug 74 qq": 5 F-41*-,1&. :110 4,
, 4902E:stonE
Glisorens t Handkerchiefs,
JUL 'Dolan .' E dgings and Laces. Sold.
netts. Book end Irish Lin;
one Block Silk Liso.and•Pririgei &de, &te e
to behodiss great *sties," at 0
• • •.01 , ' • • SCHICK'S
GeNtLRNSeN~x ar.
del •—r,
LOTH 8, Ciiihneirea:Cateitnns, Ken
-7'l luelLYJaanii, VESTINGB of allk lode,
Suspenders. Ha nd k e rehiefa. CRIV ATH.
Stockings. may be found, goof:
and cheap, at
A. R. STEVENSON
ivo on
NOTION.
ITOTIOZ,
' ~~%~it~1►~
• ...11 10t,i ';
veuraurfOFMARYIAND.
•
onit' AL rotttYvirwr ANNUAL SES.
don will begin on THURSDAY , October
14 . : 1864, arid end on tbe; lot of MirCh, 1463.
1 - Principles and Practice of Surgery and Clinical
Esyseity. ,NATHAN R. SMITH, W. ii).
„Phinniatry and Pharisee, WJLI,IAM E. A.
AMIN, ' M. D.
Principles and Practice of Medicine and Clint.
'cat Idedklne, SAMUEL ettkw, M. ft.
.:.AM Y and Physiology : , JOSEPH ROSY.
'5q14. 41, 144, THCHARD.H. THOMAS, M. D
sttplili t iv Sica* TberaPotica • fk. , Pathology,
W. MILtENBERGEH, hi D.
~ „
PrOctici "AhVom.Y..I!ERWICK H. SMITH,
lit' 1): • '• -' • ' ”'' '
Nee of the Aril Pewee, $9O; Demonstrator's
Fee. $10; Melleiditibo. $5 ; Otechasion, $ 2O .
IlFerzparporeaol•fi/lieical Instruction the
,Fatieky ...itaver Mesa at, their commend the
iii3altsmare lefmatary, n iein the same street
Avithithst,Ueiestraity, and ia• its immediate
neighbovhood, remaining * hundred 'aus}
eighty, beds.• below/ins td • the University,
and managed and ettentiedentitely by the
This ~l hietitution is
the reeerdiee and,,treatment of the/florists
of disease shish furnish the Most' useful
and pecifitable anhjelne foe clinisill'obser 7
vation. An, additiotaix tabs,' Made 'tiering
thetresent cue tner;ishich .niailfrielly
increase its scrommodstidne• mid ideite.
ages. It• is open , te all Metrieralatee of
the illuhooLtlaroughtltut the,lYstrPeilititouC'
Anatomical Materisf-hrtsbundKno , sod
cheap., Expenaesof , livingt. , ilisltlesbre,
so,low sein.any , Atlentiocityt ..) . 1 :
E.: At AfsfYli, M. ik rasp
, Baltir f rre, •, „. ;,,
BOUNTY LOOK:
gits(iN§l entitled,to. eriesky
Lands under t h e nets of Con- i
grew; of the Unite 4 States can
' hive their claims ProniPily end
efriciently attended to by applies.
t ion gither personally, or by. loner'
to the subscriber, a this office in Onnyablitip
Claimants whose applieatioss have been
suspended on account of tieficieney is
proof max find. it to their ad v antage, ct call.
'N:3 6 l`lle . fee charged is ',14 tin each case.
payable upon the ! .tlelivery of the, warrant.
The subscriber will alio attend to claim.
for Pensions for Revolutionary or other
services and the loeation of lands. ;. The
sale: and porehose of. Land - kWitimitst
tended to. and the.,highest.eash price paid
for the same. R. O. jiIeCREARY I
May Attorney at law. ,
D. Nile4.llti AU Gr
lITTORN.AV AT LAPP:
drbFFIOE •in • the South-west cannot of
'the public square. one door %cost of
George Arnold's Store. and, formerly 9e4
cupied as a Law Office by John At'Cua
aughy, Esq.. decoaied,
.dot Inrraey sill Solicitor. (or
lati.nts and PErtstuns
Can furnish very' flesh-able fecilitie>w to
applicants end entirely relieve - ibeitt him
the necessity of a journey in Wit'shington.
i tt opp. hlpC. is prepared' to attend to
the prosecution of
Ciaims for Bounty. Land
to Soldiers of the War of /812 and others
—the aolectiou of choice lands and •loca
ting their Warrants—Troauring Adepts
and selling Soldiera! lands to the bested.
v in him ticrsouall sc.xisLbe
letter. • r
•
Glettysherg, Nov. 1.181111....tf
GETTYSRVIIG
FEMALE SEMINARY:
TRE next term of title Institntien frill
commence on tho 6th of &pleinbti
next. The Trustees hate riuceeetled 'in
securing the services of a verY competent
Teacher, Mier DABLINO, of Whole
fluence on the moral pritielplee and 'Oer
sonal mann'ers;as well as intellectual
movement other ponds. they feel author
ized, after the experience of a session, to
"Peak in'the highest term.: All the t-Ver.
'nue branchea:tatight;in the lliet femele
Seminaries in the lend, are embraced in
the course of studies, incltiding•in mid him
to all tlie lower branches, History, Astron
oroY4 FhYli ol oo w
0 Bol! RciAwiug , t'RiPg ,
inK 111 us ic,' La tin and rench..
Terms $lO per, senior! of fire months.
Frank and Latitils t eeing, !quoit? 1140
Per i'eattion., ,
By ortlM• ufil;t 3 1 1 910 ,
' 'S. t. 1,414 Veltgtt. . I rea s t.
It., (1: Weltrati,
N. B. .Ar.rangementa hnvit ,lbeen made
for the aotutmotodatiun, of a Saw boardiee
from ihn nountry. in; a very retired, ooh=' l
venlegt end trust-worthy fituily., • , I"
,GoltYPlill, July 41,64-111.- , •
INS YftEll 7 olllliiiiK
evidano Vo:to, NOW Ate
•a6ritrice" Campy ' locate!! at (.44
tysburg, Is now in successful operation. and
fur lownese of rates. economical nitto l le , '
men t of its affairs, and safety in Inaltraticrip
Challenges competition with •any other
similar company. AU its operationleve
conductettondor the personal attpersi ion
of &tanagers selected by the Stookboklhrs. ,
The Bookopf the Company are at all time.
open to the inspection of those insuring in'
it. As no travellinj agenttreee entploYetli
peritons detirint to insurer can Make ap r
plicetion to either or the' &tanagers, front
whom all requisite infortnation tan' le
licrThe -Mennen, are Mi
ller, • W.. H. Beevenenn; o.lwope,
A. Buehler, Geti.veburgi'Wno, Wil
son, •Menallerr Robsti . Cueq
berland I Jacob King; Stlisbari Atillitiw
Ileintzeltuert,Frankfial,-A. Ateginlyo k
Wamilion6b * J.- L. Noeli OmJbirtl `J:
Museelman, jr, Likerii) 11. A. Picking, ,
,Rending j Jaccilyerigot, Latiinort.
:1: '1 -
Ore•ii.Lawrence
foritE iii'damiliershnig 'street. op
_ll,/ Selidiliti Wheelie Church. 2 doers
hes44l,l4iddlemt4ii's store Where he may
a
Ossondleadrand willing •to attend to
any olive ;within the province of the Den
tist. Persons in want of full sets of teeth
ire respiesfullY invited to call
REFERENCES'.
Sr, . N.Baaaucar, I Rpv.C,P.Kikarri, DJ)
"D. illossza, , Prof. ]aeons,
" H. 8,11 U•4 4 . Save's',
" D picaylr . " H.A. Moinjuisvaa
Rev.ROll.T. 40IANSOS, I ), 14, 1,. Sratirf a.
1,3848.
VOUNTERPA Nlslti—whiul twilled—
'kJ for sale very low at KURTZ'S.
Ft ANS—a large assortment just rsceiv-
Ftl at Nurt:es cheap corner,
CMLIENGE ?
ThOlehest gt, Best Assort)Re' " nt ;
OF BFKING & StlintgOOk.
For Gentlemen's Wear,
EVER OPENED IN GETTYBDII/10 tr.
803 ELEV HOLILIE'SANIM
MAKE pleasure in calhni the fit(emiont 4
oftheir friends and the publie to Alteir.
extensive stock of Fashionable Gootle',fok
,gentlereen's wear, pun received freqt;he
'lit'''. which, fug "inelY 9fAtf . le, beauty of
finish. and superior quality,, challenges
comparison with any other stock in the
place. Our assortment of'
I Cloths, plain ankl fancy Tweedn.
awl Cassimeres, Vesting",
Satinets, Summer Coatings, &e.,
CAN'T Bg BEATI! Give ne a call, indk
examine' for• yoerselves. We have *-
chased our stock carefully. awl with a de
sVe to
. pleaee the lattice of all, from,the
wet pro/U.:II to the most fatithcies,
ICePAILORING. in all, its ktrapch:est.
ittentkeil to as heretofore. with aid, assist.
ii4ee of ittiOcl workmen.
utottse FASHIONS fei Scituug And
Rummer have beou received.
"Gettysgorg, April 30, 184
The Richest and wait
assortment of t"
FAN C Y
RVER . , brought to,this place, bas
received' by SCllicg, and is
now opening at his Store in South I...initi
ators stmt. , Tito public is invited to iall
and examine goods end prices, both o 1
Miligh Cannot but please, no feels /s
-aunas Amu( hid stock will be fouWtl
LADIESI FANCY CRESS GOODS )
aircicaa Silks. Satins. l'opleina, "Fiimbes
aciages, Ilerage de I,aines,
paca*, Orriobaainca.Ginghanm„Sviins, i.e.
nnet and Cambric Alas Hue, and Calico,;
Ut g( 0 . 1 variety,
fr,aros. twssit.w.encs,
BeOvals, Tweeds, Co'ensiles, Nankeen *
Linett• Cheek, Vestiugs of all Soto:, &e.
16'116i:oat Its slink is very large, an 4,
braees all In his line,
ficr•uall and, judge for yourfielifeis
lkenhle,o eho v goods.
April°,lBo . 4. • „
,
1 1 111HWIREST011t.
TUre-SUbiCribarc would respectfully
iSt$OlOllSllO their friends and the
publle; Chht they have opened a NEW
HAROWARE STORE in Baltimereari„
adjoining the residence of DAVID ZIEo CEx ~
Gettysburg, in which they are opening a
lerge,eud general assortmeut of •
11AUDWAStE, IIRQN, STEEL,'
, GROCERIES)
. CUTLERY, COACIi TRIMMINGS,
Springs, Axles • Saddiety
Cedar Ware Shoe Findings,
P:lly lc. ALTirmetnfra
n genital, tocuutog every descriPliert„Ot
articles in the above line of businesteso9
which theY Invite the atten lieu of Unit*
inaket t s,Bleckemjilis,Varpeutere l Cibinet.
mokura; Sfibemakera, Saddler., and Ato
public 'genera*.
Our stock having been se.lemed with Celt
earo' and' ,
pereliashed for Cash, w 0 gear;
atisee,(for the Ready Money,) to dietitele
Or 'alai , part of it on as reaseeehle termite
they eau be purchased any, where. „,
We partictiferly reneest a call front owe
friends, and earnestly solicit a abara4
publie favor, is We are determined 4, ea,.
tbluh it, character for Goads.
low irliei.ao49iiig W 0 .' 0 ° 619 4 fair. Price
Glees,
• DA U. •PANStII,,„
VID ZIEGLBIL,
ootyanuVlanii le. '
.
NEW .AR i,savL Or
Argun: GIN -
4 the Parings' Cheap Corue s r.
„,,Lt;
R.KuuTz We just returned from .
zmii Baltimore and Philadelphia with a
large and desirable lot of Sprieg and sum.
pier Goods. .NVelrould mike, die" strap
don: quo, Lathes to our rnmplete also&
meet Of , Threas Silks. Berage de Leinesv
very rich styles, Salk.Pripleine, Plain remit
Figured Meuse. New Style Moss de'
Lainea,. Lawns, Silk Tisane, Bastes plebe.
and figured. Also Gingham*, • Mustinew.
Calicoes. ' Cheek!. Tialtings,dte: . , t ;
014NTIGE3IEN'S
PlothsiGassimer t ni,
VnatiSe. ia great variety. Also l Li
and Colton 'Pant an stu ff , at all' iirlees. "'
bander:9mi eesortment of G gilds ,
wear
etilatPlßUlllaßaSio
A very large but of Carpet varying in
prices from 124 to $l,OO per vsrd. Call
and look at done e if you want to buy or
not no trouble to show our goods,
Q,UI 4- 11ENSWARE.„:7
Our' Ou assortment of Clueens ware its admit.
tedto be the cheapest in the country';' we'
l ent receiving a large addition to our form.
*tir meek; ' Glassware'of every description,
direct from the manufacturers.
Gi'oceries ! Groceries!
Avery full assortment of Groceries—.
the' bast lip 'tiger and levy coffee in tort s •
Isle° molasses, teas, pepper, starch, twig*
&c., ell very,ehesp. Wanted in exchange
for goods Butter, Lard, Ra g s. E g gs . llae
Sides, Shoulders, Soap, &c., for whisk
the highest price will be given. lirrlt
you want to save money, JCVATZ'S.
Cheap Corner is the place in do it, !
°''Getrysbitrg, April 10, 1804—tf ' '
LOOK- OUT I PAY UP.
TSubscriber hereby giiis
JP- that be has placed his notes, 'book.
accounts &e., for debts conAracte.dprior
Jaritm rtils!, 1849, in the bands of Mei;
antler g. Stetenson. k:sq., in Gnuxilburffs
41 whose office all pecanos indebte an
requested to call mid mike PAY O , IS ",i•
large amount ounotantliog lurbius-11 t
indiAgeoce, ; ?'l'
ALL claims MUST BR CROBBIRq !• 1 !!!
SAMUEL FAIINLOTQCI4 ,
Dec. 12.1851;--41
faCY 'l 7 11 18. Snithe end Rub
Krb new lot, just , reeel*ed end rot
the 12E1) FRO
EDE'Blanks of all ii k 1
air at thio otAce,