_ , . _ . .. .. _ . . . . . _ • -•- .11 1 ;'Itr---UWp for Yount WTI° i e i h h m a er: : ;1: . .. . 1,•.,. . • . •z. ----- D. A 'rhe American Preskyteriatt imagining that '' st. . 11111 STIR AND DINNER _. , s enator Wil son ' s , !sp eec h . , !that Wise-who made the tour to lialeigh,incoming Administration responsible, if It THE REASPN AVOWED.-Tbere , I who called upon the grand urine and -gives confidence or patronage to our Rich- Get enotigh Sleep. is at the Nortf a ohms of gersons whit We have. often bead young Men re- .s i -1 . , - R mem. Home" is the title of one of the ol'Y 'Wont Cards- The (dreaded Wonder ot , the Age' BLACKWOOD'S IMAGAZINE ; - -. 1,, ------=-T---.IL-' - --!---------- best monthlies on our sadism list. It is a No Pay if Dr. Tobias' celebrated Venetian '' •',,.t0 . - , ..-k,„A.4,t1 • ,',., .i ; - I . i f :ellillPllN ., .:,., WV i . .• . 4 : q" 11:1111 M, e - • -i ' - t he ltih '.''. ' '' f Allesttffill% had ll4 o .1141, 11 184 ~ ~, „ courts to lowa Botts for defendinli tho moild Enlnirer and' PA:miners, your Charleston Mercuric, and Standards, your/ are bfintl::.and ,vrealc snough 't tip ` mark that fur or five hours' sleep Was all nrominent reason as ' o f re o t r ohf t e h mp e oe d tu, i pl ffi lite c l:r u ie l i t ar y mn -------- ; - '" ---------- ._ s _ - periodical admire y p , . ~ THE STIR .IND: BINNB . .VALUATIOX, ATM ~/011 bl ada tel . ! in its whole Liniment - does not cure Cholera, I;timentery, INSttitiliremasitilitt of t ett n A 14. 4•11 ° 'bed bY tge , - I 0 s pose o ,hy bll Cotrimitudoners of Adana' aty. stlnek•iftblbi . Union in- hie dominions-that boi, only ,- ' ' -GI 3813.01 ' : ' . ITV ' phsangee t'n _ _ - the emiemt, ffesidiption and ;redid of the Reel end Pomona! Propat'l gra el, nee ? d • Oder/ „., ' 0 . -14. :3_, 4 k - ef ' , , de these threats to reserve rho Union. Mw-Orienns Delta, and , your South that the recent rote of so many Sous - , , , made h'• they wantedrand all that the human humans tout t hr s o ll u i g y t c h o e n i g n: , r e e s l e : it P . . , e o wed. . p lhe h l a y lnt A j if going Without auf , -, in i:c a n : v use to be made of it, when it should have ' . , ' 4 i' c , i'l,4 , • J LA.W It-ENCE HIL'L, and Profeellotili tnade taxable b y Ibis *Grand Atlte.of Ainruntily of ;hut entenoolllll f '•1 s.r.,- \.- 4:- • ,- , • • . 'oth of Side pemocruia, or any Democratic) jour- ern ;min in the -It. H. House of Represen t fi e9 en t, d e r i ewvee liv i no • eiir :e aus „ u.,___ t Tahge,oBfwnhd: , az . i s , , . . sl, . . The Highinotul Enquirer of ihto 1)1 cult i n D y n p a t a i:r e e e d h u r a l R e 1 8 t h l ° , 0 1 w p i a r : o p: o s y s e e p o a: a t to :r i c e w r i o a c y:e u e n t i le: clean y a t r i l d Y n i;- . l': • tin - newel Zweilweemeaki to itibiserdeor •• ••• • r' kme•r 4 ' • A ' •'' Ito • • , •------ - - -••• 4a - • 1 , ::• , ' ,p . _ ~ - October , las', declared that' if ' Fromodt oa f in the Hotted States throateued i i• ) ' ...i• / toes agrna pr,..revirak o f 11? . e foreign t rio doubt, permanently injure their health lul-, "fliday Evening, lannary 2. Reviews, Moral Tales, And si 1 Tri oral ---atme c a " Chronic Reumatism, Swellinga, Old Sores, Cuts • • „ Fi x ..,; el. ty i4cr ; =te94 &I 5 6 --- !`ft .t •:.-I_,•,'''L,••• • •• ,- . ::;.., 36- were it would be the duty of the the dissolution of the Union in the event • Cold Feet, Moequito Bites, ' bisect: S gm, culated to attract attention andto instruct the Burns, Bruises end Pains or Weakness in the Flentlal Cost Reduced 50 to 75 per:ce,nt. - , .. . , ( we. ril l lei ~..,.. ~, i 1,4 , i.i r slave trade was !dictated tty a he t tfelt con. in this way. 1 Limbs, Back and Chest. xe noneue, TRY IT. ~- ,- . • CkFFILE an ( liambersburg streel , , g' • -9 . 24 Et ''''' i; • ifzil i tt .0 4 - 's ' _--_--)... • ..(\ ', .-' • , lid South To dissblie the Uuion and farm aof our success. We intmid here in our - ..,,,, •-....... .1 • - ...- , „ , , • : . , , , ft, de. Southern Confederacy • ; and wo were told, places to defend that Union which makes eve way aeoms to o ` . td invert too that it alffirds a nd o ortunit Cordiffii vicuna of the riCkedneas Ind timsnity 1 9 _ __ .. ... . . . , Fra PP ~ y g a i • ' ' Sabbath. . . , ' - '- - '. - Dr. T o bi as has warranted his Liniment for - SCOTT k ew Yorki continue to - N / C 0.,. , . one. door West of the Lutheran ' s ca to. re th fu e lly fa co m , i m il pil i e i ;B le lo - gra eln p b li ra les ei , n Essa g in yitBs,, m Cr u o mlN C T h o u o li t a lia °) clie, llg H hi ea ' Headache, dti g , ( The , B !, iiiBh Cl" _,_L rierl Y Reviews ' .- '• ' . 7 " : ---r-7-94. : ' 1 " . . ?,t.in„'F- • 81alw al 1 k. 0 :v4 ~ iski 1 . f order of nature. I f Mika will persist in noble thing. Let .Yount 1 ernon be the Wasr- l t ' hv* detnand for L , ,_ Presbyterian Churek-Serylees mornino • . of 1 years wi thout ever a mg a . s publish the following leading . British Chureh,nearly opposite G rammer's a tore, Boroughs awl •( , ,Li.. 13 Lil3 - ..:4' , , ;ga' ¢ t• 1,5,.. tv ; of g••• • ,a , , 0 in b o . further South, that if Fremont were elec. es one people, against the men of your par- of that traffic, and that it is, therefore, to be listens, Buffalo, N. Y. $1 50 per annum , the return of the money-all thitiVis asked is to . bat turnino night into day, ft is not to be won- e'en:m{4lunit; of America. Lot the ashes of • : ,' -' qua evening. , Rev. Mr Van Wiek. e B yo luD ung t . x i ll: D e A ry ms fa , p m u l b. y . m ou i gt to eilP h e a c v is e i vi lY cO l py th . periodicals, viz : • , ~, ' , where he may Ate found . yea and wiliing Tulmes# l 2 o . • '• ;'(',Fi 4,14 _„,...„, a , 1 , 4 .,...5,,......,,..„„„, 4 .... a .Rg. W' 4 ''‘' . 3 • P e r° it.tF 11 CIETITS NH. Jed i rent 1 ted it would be their duty to march to ty who have threatened to subvert and de- regarded as an indication of a healthy dered tit that few last out the allotted term Washington repose there forever, and when I , I Christ Church, (Lntheran.)-Services i pp ~ 1 to attend to any cede within the province • •'9 • esi •'9 ---;'- =LI x.. ,i e, -it; ii . =;*l4 ; L ., , = Wiishingtou and tilos possession of the etroy it. We intend to go a little further. public sentiment as well at the South ae of life. No matter what be a man's occu- any ma" -110111dions Servic.es 6On. hte . xt 'n or ten o kW for $lO with en extra Copy to t e z r it be ac w co u rd hou ing i b it a di ft e e ' r d o ir n e c e e tio us l. g N it o 07; un7 1,013 / ~ ... . THE LONDON QUA.RTERLY,cConservis - of the [Wald. Persons in want of full . E. f EL'i -4 s 1 V 014.4 6: it' 1721 .1 Or • • a is day vetting an 57 ability i,,,, .), . i i n 1 ~ - . , mr. • archives and Trellising of the United Your slave propagandist journals have de- . Oth 1 at the North. To such we commend pation-phrical or mental, or, like e - shall have been privileged to perform. • , a patriotic action, worthy • i of the honor lot his ', Rev. Prof. Jacob iiehreffur, evening, s\sozoit do not find it better than any thing you have , . .g, w E i ..E.s ~21.,E —c-,Voi 8 1 liessent. live 1 States," forgetting that the treasures of flounced the lode cadent laboring men of body, when his spirit is milli d home' • _ Ir) the • ' • •Sf. James' Church, (Lutheran.)- ihe morning and e,vening-mdfning Rev. Dr. ell 11 - f Last evening the Sabbath School con- ever tried before, get your money returned / ' sets ofteeth are Invited to call. , . ' rl ril . fPri ir, ~ t .t. ; .. , . efforts ; h Otte, I the Treasury were et IliNtAin, Now-York the North as "greasy mechanics, "'filthy this frank disclosure of the motives o u ~.• . i t h lo's, "mine, ' and living in idletim-the Creator be buried by order of C . . , . , r . 'ogress, , . rimming and evening, Rev. Mr. Hill. the getter.np of the club. SS-Thousands of certificates have been re- . • -,.. -,...5.,=...=.-„,.. D. A., BUEHLER, EDITOR. I and Philadelphia, to the of/cans's coun. opera t ives ves " osinalifisted fanners," "moon- Virginia elave•brooders. contained in a constitution cannot hist, depend upon it, ,by the side of the noblest ut men. Let. Methodist Episcopal Church.-Services mor- ceived speaking o its virtues. ow a aye 1 •„ , . 3. , .- ! fleeted with the Methodist Episcopal church, . . f . . N . ~.1 i t THE EDINBURG REVIEW - (Whig). 4 )- § RAFEIZENCES. Dr.C. .Irzaztreviv, Rev.C.P.Kasiorn,D D Gettysburg; i19330:4 5171? 52750; '36990610017g 2650 , 1170 11100 without a sufficiency of regular and refresh- 'it be henceforth the greatest homage dint ...,___)..._. .--• ,_:......, ____,..„,.._„,„.. „--- on the 19tt THE NORTH= BRITLSII REVIEW (Free "D. Hoaezil, • Prof.M.Jsceas, .. CuMberhittd• ' ? 232421' 165311. 90017; 66i5 fie& 74 /,'' •,,, ~ ',-. 4 , 1 'l , B '• iS min and eyening., - el•ito ' try"- the North. r ' struck theorists." We mean to hold you letter to the New Orleans Della from ai i 11. II I • i ervices mu- ercises consisting of speeches dialogues, sing- cotes from. unknown persons, or given by , . • - • - orate, finislit an of - sag sloe coon ...miter the great surgeon, r mil he paid to nny man in the Wt•stern , German Reformed Churc i.-S Church). '. ' • .. H.S. Heask • -," H. L .BAuennt , GermanY, , 126983 8340; 3TAIt7 060 .J. ' 4 2 4/ 275. •'. ' g 4 6 0 is the practice to fill the papers with cortifi. • nee never used the medicine-now 14.wi1l be recollected ' "LET Tith:3l IIt.EER." responsible, if you bestoiv your et:Cicalae. • correspondent in Richmond : ,'' • ' ' - .• t 'II nnie )1 e o Ile 1•' died suddenly of spa,smodie affection o the : ; 1i r - 7 ,, leas m i ten , al ifount , fling and evening. he exercises. seemed to be much those who h gave an interesting public exhibition, the ex. ing, die. T 4. • • " D. GlLexitT, '. H.R./RI/et 888888 (WA, ‘ ';'prilicipteA he is and patronage. upon journals that maintain Dr. Tobias . o ffe rs ) rs to ay 1000 dollars to any ' ;711081 102561052 n 18.10 19.8' , 280' ~ . WO , . i 4 0 , 675 , 1 (Trion. The details of this scheme can b 'THE WESTMINSTER REVIEW (Liberal) Rev. RiJneesoir. • I "M A. Bray za. Hentingioni i ' 12010! 18425/ 4477', 1153'di , , ~..1. t 400 Ily argued in the r • The licy of reviving the slave tmde is heart, a diseiuto greatly encouraged by want i .. o , , Unifil *herein oisiguishei angth that •olie principle of slavery is in itself P ° , .. , , ~., , , t. ren illy carried out. Lot the whole place, as : 1 unpopular here, not more because of tau eon- of sleep. in a just puutisneu volume u . Catholic Chureh.-Services. ono who will prove that he ever published a false certificate during the time he has had D . . 5. ''' = July , i,' 1848 , . : '. ' •Latititore. , • LACKWOOD'S EDINBURG MAGAZINE' - , , . ~, ~311$ , k i3i 1 ..1)0 si in° Hamiltenbant , 1.288272 , 15439; 61.58, k .5151 , , , , , „ volt wit pub right and lees no; depend.on difference oi l - 1 r l • . • ti 0 ee ing.which it would be likely to produce medical man, there is ono great lesson that Y a Washington owned it, be purchtuied by Con Associate RefbrniedChurch.-No Services. • • The Prayer-Meeting of the Presbyterian, We understand that a cotnpany of tie- , . , his medicine before the public. , . . Itt`Vtilinett Ilia eoruplezion." , , . . grems. Lot it be la'd 'N ' it 1 Lau - ' ,1 out as a ntio a . = German Reformed, and the two Lutheran . enjoyed by alerge and attentive audience. (Tory).. 'W hi . .11 -,, M-ait),L EI,I, A N', '' Liberty, ; ( y(04571' 99161 211.15; 0(5; , , ' taol flee . I spinet the South among the leading Europe- hCall on the Agent and get a pamphlet eon , . i : . hard , tudents and liters men may learn , rel Hiller Grteri 'do ' is ry 1 w d. Let no undietinguish- _ . „ 'churches, These P I enoilicals ab y repre ' the three sent' .11On '' ' ' 175509 , 9344' 26. , ,') 1 I- • 1 ; .., , 177 iillls ifiLe J,O `OA* , %, , we , trot , . . cootie! an nations the of the ruin which it tad in- the Eagle Hotel, in this place, ( Shively e ) and fain genuine certificates. i Attorney at Law, . Ham t-.- • ' t j • - • ' 100 '. „ • ggw - 375 ri inillfitV hat o • voice to the interests of this Slate and North .. .. . and 'that, is, that Hunter PrObablykilled lod dust repeal' there. By' tho law, letit, be a 1 i Methodist. Thursday evening. ' is held every Wednesday evening;; great political ,stiles of Great Britain-Whig, ~. Metistleii :1 1 " . 194 - 15-18670 2068'3, Oftls - 1. Z - i •• - - . 1 tive, enterprising gentlemen have purchased iND PROSEOOTIN'a 'ATTORNEY • ban '' '' .' 's _ S 67; '21941', 37588 2710 . 504 --: I ,s - . • - ;...0 , 04111048i , - -, 150 k , 0 .7 • • il' himself by taking too little sleep. • "Four ; Carolina where large props are skein& /rem a privilege conferred by act of Congiess alone. 1 , v for and ,Ra• mid i -hid polities forms only • Venetian Liniment have stated it is injurious 1 . • OFFICE en the South side 'of' the Pebli? Franklin ' ? 213113 W 1896 i” 42518, 241$ 860. Y. , 4.1120 • 1115 Jiaffilrhy Me trade in skive property. It, i s j a th is re . hours' , rest at night, and ono after dinner, , • , The Germans have erected a building which .4' ~,'‘ i they call the National Valhalla - 1 ' groat min. The idea tea nolA t e o e b n e e n . " l r t ne i d' s I i ' ' WOOD WANTED. to take it internal! D T o bias h token the r. As Or aim of one-feature of their characte g , Y• r• ° a e° e the most profound writers On Science, Litera lianrtizeinildg trilliaekbinugudeinegte:snidveBupimpipyrionvge:ounvtsen,leen; As persons envious of the largo sale of the , . .. iik , , , ' - ikr - 100 &puny, titT , doors West of tlivi '',..,entlnel ' Conniver' s roar' sir erect that most profit accrues from rho inati • cannot be deemed su ffi cient to recruit the I soma tution in these two States, Virginia in panic , exhausted powers orbody and mind.' - , , , y the effigies of their de art d h was, ' Suited to the genius of our nation, if once the ' ; I'l p o °roes mid ; ~ dtsend tee representing the stock-holders, invite pro- 1, Samuel'. Tobias, of the city of New York, ture, MoralitY, and Religion, they .stand, as °fl i mat ' ' • , . Tyrone, _., 1286621. 91,6700216 '3830' 's, ~. .' •,, 1 .,, AiXOI3 ii ' ' 'tertle are in want of WOOD, and hope '' "It - htit those of our patrons who intend o us i they ever have stood, wirivalled in • , the Vorld, March 28; 1856. • ' , M o untiny; •. . 149692: 11781:3 12405 4025 ' i„, ~ 0 k',,, ...4 . 1 A ~..,•., ular ; for hero our climate an soil is not a- Certainly not ; and the conseryildiee being duly sworn, do depose that I compound a ' intitiO 336871 tar) •leh.`-= = ,- • % '''''', il V q ir that Hunter died early. If men will ineist 1 penple should seize upon it.' Our readers will 1. i - . Wood on account of subscription, will do so at Pmatill from builders until the 19th inst cos desirable in a first-class hotel. A commit. , following orrii : • • • Niteletpleelentt ' ( 2475% . , i - t ' , VID. A .•11•11 EHD B R v Heading, i• . ' ? 1899511 16338: 5138 i ii 0105; ,_•• • .. i, ... ~. .ii ~,,,. ....- dapted to,the production of those staples.- of letters, being considered indieputisible to the 7 . 3 . ) A. - 'l''' t 1 • 1N cotton, rice, sugar, etc.-which render slave once. . 0114.. The School Directors. for the Borough dients of which it is compounded aro per perfe ct - . • , Liniment called Venetian, and that the inpre• ncholar and the professiotial man, wht e le h ' SI h "' Deat h " ' b thexc l amationof Lo ' '‘ on e eating cep, er tw i n sister,, remern or e rd Nelson, be- • I labor most remunerative. Our profit arises ." s• _ .s. ly harmless to take internally, oven in double intelligent render of ever! class they furoWl a Attorney' nttLow . „ Berwick tesPo ' S lonn l ai! ' 49113 141120 i •6026. $„ , , ;•.,040{ 200 from the raising and sale of negroes. With will avenge the insult. fore the battle of Trafalgar-"An Earldom, . i having deter Mined to 'drect a large building for , , . .. . more correct and satisfactory record of the W Freedniii,' , 79253 4663, 1 - =. o 2381 or Westinineter Abbey." Of all the spots in LOOK " 0 trT. tne-quantity named in the directions, accom- 11.1., pmniptly s attend to Collections . an . -, ~ ) 2,0 11 1 •26 , •• • you it arises from their labor. In this state of • ------ ---------- the accomodation of all the Schools, offer for t l'te f th e d throe current t =tire o e ay, Omut the all other business entrusted to his care. panying each bottle. -, 1 Confidence in Others. London, perhaps no ono attracts so ninny vim- world, than eau be possibly obtained from any g,,,y• 20.37 4 0' 8716' 61972 4601 ' 1502 things it is not to be wondered that Virginia „ n ;,, „ , t... d,eet.d, in , d •• • sale the School Houses belong to the board. New York, January 9th, 1856. Office br_the,DiatuutuLatijoiutior .the Store, b i lk " s - ' ' ' ' - ' '• l d ' .Beteriik hem' 4 : .V . r7' . l lee , 8156! :310 .' ~ ..., ~ . .. . . toy 380 hors as that venerable pile. The associations 11 other source. should be opposed to this policy, while no doubt ant; t r eg u ittinrl n i and ill deeetrieg, W ..,,,,,,,__.,....-- --- Sworn this day before me, which surround the mighty dead, !meek to i " ''' -r '' - " ' ' ' ' ' .f., : e, .-.4 . , ~.;-,•,. ,; 'it ..t * 5., ''''..r....:....:....‘0 ..--...................................- ,a,,,,za,..0..,a. -4.::::....=i5t-... ,. ..-...-. it would result beneficially to the more South- , Than doubt ono boort, that, If twllarod, SerThe dwelling and Barn of Mr. VAI,Rx- FERNANDO WOOD, Mayor. Earl y Comex.. Ge t t ys bur g, Pa., Feb. 1, 1850 • ern S tates." no blototd ono'. Ilib with trus bellowing.' every man who has a heart or mind. But . tc - - TINS Myles, near Round Dill, in this county, Price 25 and 50 cents ;sold by the Druggist The receipt of ADVANCE SHEETS from vtrTc ' ' C Ai' ', 1 1•Oill ;. , '" 290202:3'256119 770910;172024 Iwo iii 6 204 taw 400, 4080i' 7990 . ~ , ~. , A' r : , P. it. ' de / 1 1.4reAr T /010 1 / 1 4ti 16931 1 30503 '0745, ' ' • i. , ',,!:. _.,.; , • 1833 : .egit -' __ ... et tee Un-when the visitor has passed through every ;' .sr will mho soon appointments, there is THE OCEAN TELEGRAPH part of the noble fane, and gazed toxin every . „ J, were, on the 24th ult., entirely consumed by . United States. •DA V I D WII. I. H., , , te,il-‘,.,%;r:,.!. ; :,..':4--„,,-; , ; .,,,:i. ,:, ~.,... ~ . , bY:0110E NIVT3,;,. ' ' these Reprints, immmuch WI they can now be 1..3 , ~ A .:•, 6- V, ,' • ...;`'V ',., •":-`• • ~..-",,-,:. • , _ _...,..gee week nten, Ino doubt. He siint'."sinho " sr._ .. - ___ monument, ho has found no Washington.- '', 4 fire. The fire originated from a stove•pipe.- and Patent Medicine Dealers throughout the 'the British Publishers gives additional value td Al torney pt Nom / . .‘",, , .1 ..!-,,-;'„,-, • ..., ~ r., , -i.: ..,. , .:4. HENRY A,- P .KINO. µUII on that transparency were the • words . No nation has ever had such dust in its keep- - 0 I ' Loss estimated from $2,000 to $3,000. No T AS itiked Mr. 'ATI:EVB6%''s (lice No4' . '''; ;,`:-.!:'"--''':'''''''''''• ''=, ''-- ...^, -'' ''; -.,' V „i. T.. ' VOSt10•111P1I 4 1 R. meat, in pint bottles, at 50 cents, warranted soou as the original editions. • ' 1-1 ~,., ' ', ~ 'Ts ~,," r V '' 'pi:4 lA. ...i a . ~,A, ",..1 . Conatirsfonenr, ..,..n.cu tot.us, • I "IlleeclindKaa.... ti I. . . - ing. Let Mount Vernon then be btmght. and , i 8e1...A150 for sale, Dr. Tobias' Horse Lini- placed in the hands of subseribens about as I West Unlit r of, Ceotre Square. yr,' . vvittirttn qiielYs.- - . i wane the pteihnit Constitution shell h a let t h e eulogy of the greatetit man )hut our '.l insurance. superior to any other. TERMS. (Regular Price's.) I REFERENCE.-Rop. Thatideui Stove* gi" =-?:- , , o:9i 1,84 ,•• •,-;171, ; ,41- '-i t i ::,'..;.t 11 .1 .....?..If r.t '3 '. -II .. . • • .- soil is capable of producing be, He sleeps by ' : 4 , , Dr. Tobias' Office; 5G Courtland street, N. . , t Missouri which Court I ~,,, int........ 1 1 , Egii.,' Lancaster. - ' . ,`",,.. ''''t;)• k .,„"' . ~ *-- -- -41. „,,..... ~,turt., 0 - . . Me side of Washington. ! 1 York. I, - -- --- - ------ ,;) 1164..A150, by A. D. BUEHLER, Gettysburg ' ' '• ' 0, ' ',CI: I .OIY ' c; « -- 1:I; *." . • NAC,; 1., 1 •,. 1 - , • 1 746 - '-' '' ' • • re ng at B D W.A HD B.',flit gill, E Ili.) '.i . .,,.. -., • '-. , "..:•-• , ....• :. - ' ' -,.- ,', and H. S. Miller, East Berlin. s . . - wor teat -,:-., ILLUSTR ATED • i • ' ti• -. ~,„„- -"- • , _ .... Sept. 19, 1856.-m ',..., f % . ' ".t'. . - ... .' 4'''' EDITION, s•allat It mill be recollected that a case W:IR recently argued in the Supremo Court of . ""i!iiill i nitca wherein a negro man, Dred "tifidtr,Valined - hie freedom; bemuse he bad' 141411.0 Y his toaster 1884 to RNA.' and in 1838 to Fort Suet:l o, 4 4iiniglythiciirss the ".ifi•ssottri Territory - , raisrHiket 36? 30'. "Ilia wife,.Was also* shit. taken in 1895 to Fort Snelling,*herel 4 ` liikf inertia. Their 'eliildren were burn, * gississippi river,,north of 307 3c4 land .at, ,Jeifersou Barraeks. if the pa , 1. erititsweri entitled to their freedom at the " 11 "iirth'ortheir childreni , the, latter are also • • tw!r 'foe Suit was first brought in the Circuit to u .4-tart cif St., Isouia, where judgment wan ; .i , illrendered for the-piaintilf,,folloWing all the 1 7' lweeketienti on the. subject and recognizing tfeil • establialied principles' applicable t o An appeal wet taken to the ,improme deurt :of 'Mimi - intl. which Court ‘.' ft , 1411852 reversed the decision of the Circuit , '•"R'Codft: • This reversal was done by a nut. • p `'.• • fill ye the Curt only, who gave their for overniling the precedents' which htd.accurred in that. State, and Territory. . 0 ' ' , Wind. these reasons in - recent letter ; ; • 0 4 ` -4 `llritn - Iliintgoincry Blair, .Esq., to the Notice the rea.sona ~ ,,i „ ,;',4lacause the times now are"not as they were when thO former decision, on this mil). I ,,,joet,wem made. Since then not only individ-' yea ,aals, but Swot, have been possessed with a 4, l. tr a 'il li f o o l i t r i s s pl a ri o t . 4r t el i a n tio t tLto o u l re ttr u e i r t y o ; whose mss " 1 . :_,, ( .4are 9 s whom inevitable consequ P elled Milk, be I "" the'orerthrow and destruction of our govern -I...iiente Under such eircumstpnces it does not . t .bebobve I the State of *moan to show the least r. l ,r,mptintenittico to any measure which might count...mance this spirit." ' This,is an admission that the law is in iron•vifaver - of the negro claimants for freedom. J,"''",intl't haste the decision upon, a supposed :`" l ,iiik/iirtl nerd/Slip Upon such pretexts .„, sire inen's rigrita Strickendown lit tbdSoutb 7 ;ern States. ,Suchissoutbern justice', when ': , l: l 4ln,contact with Southern,in wrests. It is which thus corrupts ,the southern . ii 4,141? ioc. - 11Ailberit"'Lliienfneos eentAOputhern.liistinionists; ,"-ilitrif6)vrA'retV Tenintm - emit SLA,',6 "*. , "".6 he 1511! I k ~ ,• eeamesa hae existed in scene parte orPrince " 41(1.1. touching an amebae , . ti4d liable( the alum' during• the wee. The Ilarlboro' Advocate; ler) ,`I. ;,. ;•• 4Si 1 1 1111 1 „: , • ; , i. lattro slaves, the propertyot Ilenry Danger ,' b ituld, Esq, were arrested and committed toptil t,t• last,, stud on &many five others z 'wote also ,:cernasitted. Tkose first arrested 432 4 ,13 1,4,1 tci lave" given r,oilMt information, or ix, have:triad° Semediselosms eenteerning an Vitisbireetien; on , witielt pnblie appehension litAttre,to' be based. • In coasequeace l of these circumstances, public meetings of the citizens of this,distrittt were held on Saturday and Mon. 11(.1,1 4 for, the organization of patrtils, and for taking ether steps in tho, premises. • The Berrytwille ( 1 12:) Gazette of Thurs. (Iffy fisitr the - following : "I• • Suit befoee going to prem, three slaves, ;roe, Urn andllineelat, the property of Mrs.' Geo. L Kerfnot, near hlillwbod, and a free negroe, named Alfred Thompson, have been lodged " Our .141 ter 'attelopted, insurrection. t ti learn:that these negroes expressed themselves beforotbe Justieo , who cointnitt6l them as ra. plot of insurrection to commence ear countv,and also' at llarperts Ferry, two from tho' finst day of November Mistier, thht they bad heard white :nleti and negroes talking ifFremorit was else ted they would. he free; and as, they knew he ivrts not; they, warp prepared to fight for and. I 'lhrestiene4 tho lives of two of our must worthy they, citizens as thefirsi te inte.tided to take. , , . ,BEI.YI ICINVIASM.—The standing rem. anittesivf the Senate hava been appoint- Not a simile SenatOr representing sentiment of the North on the greptqpestion of the dny has Peen op. .on one , importoni, committee.-- The party which carried all New England. New Yeti. Ohio, lowa, Wisconson. awl Michigan, which nearly divided Pennsyl- Indiana . and has nn • ,sepresentstive on the chief committees— .- ) not " one.'" This pert) is represented by Seine of the ablest, most experienced and most intelligent members of 'the Senate, Lt coniftitutes the powerful minority in the leflelative branch of the Government. A I lenge heretofore that minority ham been ne 7 . . ,gigged . *dace ; on the committees carves-. :Ponding in some degree with its strength end•itaportance. Now, for the first time Ow history of the Government, the' ~notlity..,has been entirely ignored. And the , party the; does , th is, that gives all the ,A;tarnitteis to the Senators pledged to the itieficitutt intensaw of the-South, charges the neglected party with sedionalism •Piovident, Journal. : 1031,n RON•• FRAZ BP he Lancaster (Pa) •Hsrald IS'S a report reached that oi- It „ - Tustrdiy ; evening that this well lin kao I lawyet and pctlittOan was dead. It Wiliimaiemimbeied that he was lately seat to Ahe insane asylum at Harrisburg._ z ik• (linnet thus writes to the Chair man Mille England Agricultural Society : *..Gaittlentstt, please put ins down on cattle for a bull.' ,LitraitaTity Elaavaa.--Mr.. , M. IV hit itikattlia-tata of Augusta county, Va., by his tratament., liberated all his Aster end provided tor their transpoita. ,timi_to tacit's or one of the free States at thtt 4z r iato hii• eatate.'- To each of than t i e jot ; the stun of $100; and to lifirted 4 aihe' had - *erred 'him beyond the age of tlB you*, Salklur the exceva of time. • F.o,ioFoco RiNnini o ili l tii to . e'Snalokid out. • ; dtrOur raiders have noticed that there had bion an 'animated &bate iu the Sen. atd, upon tho'Slaviry Questiou,' as , discuss ed in the P14.4414314'11 blesiago. — readers can scarcely deny that in this de. bate, the Republican Senators have defen ded themselves end their canoe with great ability. Mr. Wade, Mr. Hall and Mr. It'essendon utadu very vigorous and effective efforts ; and Mr. Wilson of 31assachuscto, on the 10th ultimo. tielic.red n most elab orate, finished null powerful elucidation of the - principles of the . party of which ho is ,satlititingnished .1 champion. The length of. the speech will prevent its, general pub. lieetion but..we n ettractr, *froth , ,r • ' Willett the 'Cher:tater of :the whole may b'e to Ferrell . t', Qu the 4th ot Noveniher la3l more than . .1,300,060 itiet,turelligont,,p iiriotic. hitt- orty.loviug, abitliug .citizens 'if ` England:, the great ~Central ,State;' rind al th e North .West, holding with Repub. Roan fathers tlett . all r men are:Cleated equal and; have an inufionnblo to liberty ; that the,Constitution of the UtiituB 3W[0.4. .was ordained, and establitilyd io secure that inalienable right evory where, ntoler'its ex clurivo atithurity.; denying ."ilic authority of ,Congrassi of a 'l l erritorial ,Logishiture, of, auuittdivi.lattl., or ,atip.rhititio, .of gt %It, legal existeneq, to Shivery in any Territory. of, the. United Status, , While. the pretiont. Constittition shall be inaintainter - 77 .prottettuoed thraugli the bah, la, box that .?the . Con stitution,,,confors ,up .on Congress sovoreign power over..the Ter. ritnries of Hicalietted ;States, and that in the exercise of : this, power l it, is: both the right and, the duty of pongresS taprohibit, in the Territories those twin rcliert of bar bstistu Polygamy end .§laveri.7 ing.with Prookliu that "Slavery iv an dehasinnent ; of !unpin nature"— Viith'Adninv,that f!consentin4 to. Slavery is a sacriligmus .breaeli. of, trust"—with Jefferson, that "ono hour of American Slavdry iv fraught with more ,misery than "ages of that which wu rose in rebellion to oppotio"—witli Madisoti, that "Slavery is, a dreadful, ealamuy,"t that "imbecility is over attendaut upon.* country filled with 61aVee'Vrith .Mottree,ll . llo. "Slavery has preyed.upon tbo, vitals of the community itt all- thu.Stotes.- Where it 1118 existed"— with Moiesquieu, thai even the v ry earth, which Meows ,with profusion tinder the. cultivating, hand of the, free-hora laborer,' shrinksinto barreences front the contatni eating sweat of.a ,slave,"they pronoun ced their- purpose - tab° to save K.oeuis, , now in torli„ tiod'all , the Territories dile iteriblie,,forthe,free laboring men. of .the North sod the Souk their children and their eltildren's 'chili:reit. forever. • Accepting the 'Declaration' of 'wiener), , donee thud. the Constitution of the United States..asc their political...eh trts,--avowing Con skit utinp s , he ..re}113,171C . 0 - inini — aqiTt - A - d, Rights , fittiteti--:`,procittiodeg.'every where,thtur purpose, not o e war upon I the. pout not, to interferit• With the legal and constitutional rights' of 'the people of any of the Statcs- 7 they gave :their votes. with the profeendet conviction that they wore diseharging the' ditheS. sanctioned . by humanity, patriotism and religion.„Teeth With its high hopes and aspinttion4--inau,- hood, in the. vigor . and maturity of, its pnwere , -age.,With its rich and, rine experi., ences, inspired with , the tipirit of Vt.:fling ton, :when.he announced to Robert 31orris. that his suffrage should tilt be wanting” to i effect,'"the bf,,plaverY" in his I native Virginia,.'.in the onli preger and eircetual-tnnde in which it. could ho secant.. ' lint is, h,}7 legisintive aiithority" l —sevcred•thet ties which ',had bound them , I • -• . • - • • to other erganiaationS,,afid united to pro- Slaveryhibit ,outside the Siva States, where it fptit z i under the exclissiyoauthor ity of (I , :utgresti.„'l'his 'is . , the ,Offence of these ono million three, hundred . thousan..l, sens,.of the friie',North neon wham the utikel.neled holm' ds.of slave propitgan distshaveheen, unleashed. • ' TTI& SLAVERY' AGITATION.. , 'undert D Sit, Si:eater/1 who have ken to sustain, or rather to npologia° for this traorilinary,eourre of the PreSideut, have' geode:lined ,the diaMnisiou of the Slaieiy', questien during the .paht few yenta: . I commend tii Senators sitlot,eoicsitre the pi,tn. ple for :hese dismission the worth, ;iftlitinei 31adison, that" "Everything which tends to increase, danger, involve national' ni pense or safety, becomes' Of concern to °V' 'ery part of the Union and hi a proper sub joot for tlaroonsaleration of those eharge.i 'with! the general • administration, of. the Oprerninent,'. l . Surely Senators ounisot be surprised at, the iliqiussion of cjuestimis vast these' whisk' grow out of the Shivery 14 neatly four milliotis of wen in! Atnerica. American Slavery,, our connec tions with it, and our relations > to it, and .the obligations these connections und re lations impose upon un as men, as citizens of the States and the United States, Make up the overshadowing' issuesof the ago iii which wo live.. Philanthropists who hive sounded the depthrand shlutls of .huntanV oy'; scholars .who have laid under onntribu• Hon tbe doinain of tuatter.and of mind.: of philosophic inquiry and histarical research ; statesmen, who ire impreming. their geni us upon the institutions of their country 'anti their age- all: are now illustrating, by their genius, laming , and eloquence; rho; vast and entnplicatell itsuee invoked in' the great. problews we,• of this age, in Ameriea) are working out. The traneetident teag. nitude of the iuterests involved in, the ex. istence and expansion -41'6e arum of hu man bondage is Atuorioa is arresting the attention of the• people andAtirring-the country faits prefoundeist depths. I TIIP} SEAL orsorkoritirrs. Tine charge of is oton made age net the RepUblican party by the President comes with 'an 'ill 4race from the ehief 'of a party whiCh has to its ranks every politt• cal disuciOniett of the United States. The Senator from Georgia' (Mr. TOombs) not !now bere t declared : "If Fremont were elected, the Union would be dissolved, and 41ight to be." The Senator from Louis , hunt (Mr. Slidell,) thu organizer of Mr. Buchauan'ti Wing of the Deintieratic party, and ita auknowledged leader during - the canvass, adowed the same 'sentiment's Gov. Wise, whose indecent assaults-upon FreMont and.his mother 'shocked the feelings of every gtntletnan in America, threatened to dissolve the Union. HO was ready to organize the militia of Virginia, to place them upon a War foo:ieg and they were rea,dy, he said, to "heir- their bright way " through all opposing legions. We , re Inv told by :the Richmond Enquirer Sir, the Senator from Texas spoke sneer ingly•of "bleeding Kansas. " Throughout the canvass,eur efforts in , favor of making Kansas,a, Free State and prettating the le gal rights, of the peoplewore sneered at as "shrieks for •freedona',',and. 'Pr "bimdi n g Icausas kromouther that on the °Amn ia; when the,news came to New York that :Pennsylvania ,was cartiell,, in Gumbo., the -Empire Club, came out with cannot), ban %tiers and tntosparoncief. Tim Vivo POlll tA. w hero the waves of Abolition fanaticism have never reached—ibe inhabitants of that lecality; like the people of Lower Ell gypt of the'WeSr, ;stood fifty to one by the Daniociacy 7 the we' Points and the Sixth Ward hero net ; and' liftoff a transparency borne'through the streets of the great coin nuncio! capital of the Western world, was the picture) of three . scourged black men, and On that transparency were the words "Illeedingicansan." I thought then that it 'was a degradation which ' had reach 'ed the profoundest 'depths' oft,utniliation ; but even , that degiudatien has been sur passed hero in' the National capital. In that procession which passed along these avenues but a few evenings before we came here---a procession formed Ai:tiler the the immediate eyes of the chiefs of the ex ecur!ive departments of the Government, and filled with their retainers led by Gov ernment otfielids—was borne upon a tran spareiloy the wordg, "Sumner and Kansas —lot` them'bleed I" THE OLD.LANDUARRA The Senator from South Carolina told us some days ago. that in the Itevillution, when the Governinent • was first !ranted, they wore all patriots—they did not quer. rut over these ftectipnall questions. The Senator hum Texas, I think, htil - tho same language, that, we of this degenerate age. were raising these sectional questions.— . I would ask these Senators who forced these issues upon us F In 1774, when the oldGungress met and framed the arti cles of Association, the &mood article was a, prultibiiieti of the slave. trade which hail beep forced upon the Colonies by the pol icy of the ,Ilritish.Guyerument.„" That pro. hibition of the slave trade tvas sustatued by the North and by the • Sopth ; even, South Carolina endorsed it. In 1787, when your (lonsttutiuri was framed we of the North were not responsible fur the ex• istoneu of a slay° anywhere tinder the Nar. 'Haan Stattislittil taken ,ninasitresih favor -br teediew to emanCipetion iu their States: When the CuMititutioil . wos from• eel there was not,4 man . in Americo who believed that the'idetiof property in man, , to OM 'herds Of 3.1 r: cm• bodied io thitiGitistifution. When iogton a ttered, upon lila duties as PiCsitlent, there was no action td 'the Nttidnat Gov. eminent which 1111111'.10 . thit peg ple',if Mos4a• ehtsatts, or any . other Shoe responsible fur, Slavery onywherd'OCtiiile of their jurisdic tion. Wore melt' proscribed . than who 1111 the vii. vs tba . t we on 'this side the Ghomber now, hold? No, Sir ; the , men tvhopietpulgltteil the Dticlitroiidn of little• pendetoiC who 'carried us throng!' the Revoluti'm Wlid fronted 'the Constitution. of the United Staten, and 'who •Bald the fro uffiees; were all men opposed to 81a. very „ WHO AR tFANATICS ? Cast. your' eye.' over thu North ; take New England, with bur one hundred and fifty thousand popular majority• against your candidata; take the gre.tt , State of Now Ydrk ;duke the Whole line of Nor thern Stites ; and' when you look at teem, reinamber that wo have u large plurality iu all of thorn, except iu a antall. portion iii olwled within about forty thousand square miles of terribiry, and that ,we Intend to burn over in the next four yours, I allude •atel Central Pennsylvania, Southern Indiana, Southern .and 2 email' portion.of New Jersey. • There we lawn to diaeuns the question, and have it clearly defined and understood. , rest of the North is ours. If you,believe that the. people are . fatuities, or that -their leaders deceive them, remember one thing, that iu .1850 . there were iu, the United States nearly eight. hundred theusaud free persons above, twenty : years of, age: who, could not reud.or . Only rninety-four thousand out of this eight hundred, thobs anti happen to Hattie the States which gm mont has carried. . Remember ,ituother thing, that.theb tate of Mussauhneeus which I you consider so .ultra—L4upeoplu,so.eusily deludetl--priuta, within a 'few thousand and circulates more newspapers within ;this State: than all the fifteen Southern States of the Union. Ileartinber they bore - more eulogies public lihr i arics than all the Slave States.;' Ittrineinhor they, give n way more money to the Bible and Mission. ary,and other Benevolent Societies every year, than , tho entire illaiehtiding States ; and they. hop done so during the hist quer ter of a century., • , WIIAT TUE REPOBLIOAN SENATORS WlLt:tlo. . TIM Senator fr o m Texas ,cOmmentis our devotion to the Union.. We have ever supported the Union. and I tell you,. Sir. what, we intend - to do in regard to its sup. port. The .Senatorfrom Pennsylvania the other day, nenouticed the Barnwell Rhen school of politicians. I suppose he thought. it safe to attack that little squad of fanatics. as Ali, them. in South Car olina ; but,'sir. we. ,thee Republibans, do not confine our denunciations to that little. friction. • We acidotic() ydur 'Governor Wino'!-all your chosen leaders who have threatened to destroy the Union, if the.for. tunes of the election went against themr— dm men who have . your corifidence—the men'who got° Wheatland,sud have the ear of your incoming• Executive. Is give you notice to4lity, gent/emery what we in. tend to do. If the incoming Administra tion sends—intothis body .the nomination of a single mac who over• threatened the dissolution of 'the Union, we intoud to camp on thim floor, and to resist the (mare =Bon telthe hitter end.,. I give you no. tire now that we shall resist the coming into power ef all. that class of • men ea ene mies of the Constitution and the, union. We go further. We mean to hold the What Senator Wilson says is true. — There is not a politleal•Disunionist in the , land who is not in, connexion „with the Locofoco party. ,• These few Abolitionists who are Disunionisti do not'vote, and have, therefore no political power. Disunion ists of whatever• grade, should be carefully ex• eluded from office; and we are glad to see that the Republican, Senators, like true Patriots, intend' milting the confirmation i of all such appointments. -, That Buchanan with all his professions of lave of the Un ion, will make saoh aPpointments, there is no doubt. Fla scinti,' 'aeon' after the aloe lion, for (7nv.• Whte, and offered him any office within his gift. Yet Wise openly declared for dissolution, in ease the cleat ion went against his party I 'lnto the hands of the friends of snob scoundrels has the government of the country boon placed.— Map Heaven save the Nation from the evil these wicked men threaten to briug upon it I NEW CITIES, IN :KANSAA.--The Hoc. ton hreih'shos'and leather trade has sub- I seribedl626,ooo to estahl:sh two towns in Kansas durimethe - ensuing spring. They are to be celled Batchelor and Claflio Batchelor is the largest maimfseturer of shoes in the. United States. (31sflin is in honor of Unrace B. it Allen Claflin, I New York, slid 'dime & Wiliinm Chil i tlin, Massaclinaette; • Preparations are in progress for—founding another town still by prominent members of the Rev, Mr. I Hale's congregation. Tux WEDbINO PRESENT I The Nett/ 'York Poet has some rellec !lions on flits' sill je : et whieli were Fug ! gested hy-:an tot:Went which .4.ame under I the observAtiqn4ita fatly friend of the ed. [nor's acindintance,. While milking some plirchnses in one ''nf the magnificent jew. elry est ablisiiiiitnini - of that city, A day or ! two since'. . She incidentally mentioned th At she wantetlthe article she was look. ing al.lnr ,wisd,ling.. presents. "Do you wish to 'hire4r., boy them?" was the inno cent intiotry ;fir the Aihopkrepiir. GI the ettitrse of alitile ruttier ettoversiviott the lady aecerisittfd. - to her surprise, that it is guile common oractivit now in dist city to hire wedding presents of great value to be exibited to the public at the eeremout and then returned. Who is to he impoinirninni7by . these exhibitioLe il. - ;pendr 'upon cireilinstances. Some times Inith'bride and groom are parties to tile (rand ; 'sometimes only lute ; some-• times the parents' of one of the parties, snineihmes rifling:. The public are al ways, of &Mule; to he the victims, En 1 . 7 A 134 it EP:I: EilligrATtOx.--At the late eleetitia, the'DiStriet in lowa represented in Congress li r ifle Iron.. James l'horington, east nearlY 55; 000 antes. The Ist District of Small Caroliriairenresented by the Hoe. John McQueen { polled - :in all, about 7,540 rotes. Mr.. Thoringten'a -District polled more rotes than there nrm le, the whole State of Small Car olina. South Carolina has six Reprsentativs iti Cougreis. mueder h i Prl~on, • Ilostottr Dec: Teeny, the IVarde" murdered Charlestown' prison, was mrderetl this af. ternoOn•• by, a prisoner named Decntor. It is 'but a few weeks niece the deceased ,Wits called home from,o.ntetlding Cootie consequence of it murder of ticleptity,srartlen. t nllNtiud Colllmlon. Barataterte;Dee. 26.—Two trains entne in to collision yesteittlity, op' the Virginia Central Railroad, near Gardonevillre. The 'trains were both much"' ammihed,-und four or five persons instantly killed... Untirorailty Buirnt--Insurrectlon !tumors. • LoutsYtt.t ! x,. KY., Dec. Medical Department of :itie UriirerSity situated here, incuding the librari.liitioratory, and museum Was totally buri&thiii 'morning. • ' The loss is about sloo,ooo,'itnd`the insurance $50,000. Dispatches , received .here from reliable par ties in the south west report that there are ma ny statements afloat in , regard to negro insur rection, but for,the moat part they are tho merest hundiugs, the of magi excited• • ql!?Vidne Atiralru-A Family Pols. ' ; oned.-Six Dead. LisviLi"LYDee3l.—News of a ter ribleaffnir,nvnlr:ngthei probable death ofa who 7 fami i hcfehvdthilcityfmmHai„ den county, fu this, State. It appears, that a family named Stitte, residing there, having, horn some trifling cause, excited the malice of their negro Cook, were'all mysteriously poison ed by the wretehiL few days ago.- Six are al ready dead, and.two others are supposed to be dying. • The affair has., created great excite- Loconicellye Explosion. Pa.; Iree:110.--4on Saturday last a locomotive attached to strain of cars on the New York and Erie , Sailroadi exploded, nt Addisen,instantly killing the fireman and de• molishing 't he engine. Negro Excitement at Nashville. Lontsvtue, KY., Dec. :10. 7 --.4. great excite ment e.xiata at Nashville, 'repo., ,in reference to rumored rising among,negio slaves. The , coryoratiou met and passed an'ordinance qutring' tbe military to.hold- thetnselves in 'readiness for any emergency, and appointing &large number of additional watchmen. NATURALIZATIV ,NSTATIBp.cp.--Thio Baltimore Bun .of,..Mondey last:(good an• Allority Tor ; thejlemocrets) .sa3a that Twentritoo - Hundred,and Thirty ; five (for eigners were, nature that, city du ring the year 1856, and that Fifteen Hun. dred and ..Thirikone declared their inten tion-of becoming citizenly during - the same period.., The same pap& also,,saye, that The whole dumber of .pareons naturalized :in•tiewcity ,during the( past three yews, ,wae.. Four 7750 wand, Nine Hundred and Itlindy.nine. and the whole number who de clared their intention of becoming citizens during thesamo period was Sfx Thousancl Two Hundred wid eleven. In view of the Ocean telegraph line be ing a fixed fact in the future, the Herald indulges in some interesting speculation as to the astounding revolution it will effect in the newspaper world. Thus, when the British Parliament is in session, wo shall be able to print the next day as much of the proceedings of the British Senators us may be interesting to the A merino public. Parliament usually gets up at two o'clock in the Morning, but as the difference in time is about five hours iu our favor, we shall reedy') the doings of the sages of Westrniiiiitei at about tee or eleven o'clock in the evening, New York time—that being several hours before ad journment, and quite as early as we gen erally receive the proceedings of Congress. The transactions in stocks, the closing price in consols, the state of the cotton market . , will be sent from Lemke and Liv erpool every day at three to'uleek-in_the af tempo'', and will be received here before noon, forming the basis of operations for that day—in other words,, the doings of the London Exchange will,be known here before our Change hours, uod will be pub lishediu the papers of the same evening before they are laid before the British pub- 1 lie. Transactions on the Paris Bourse will be sent in the same manner. The advantages of this to our mercantile coin. 'nullity can hardly ho overrated, while the reading public will be kept informed on all European affairs. As to the cost of de spatches, the. British government, guaran teeing the company patronage to the ,a mount of seventy thousand dollars per an num, has fixed the maximum rate at four shillings sterling per word, or one dollar of federal money. This will be divided be tween the stations as follows :--From Lembo) to Cork, sixpence sterling; across the ocean, two shilling and sixpence; from Newfoundland to New York, ono shilling. ONE . THOUSAND PERSONA KILLED BY A STROKE Of LIGHTNING.— Atlculthla Iroll3 Rhoden states that the lightning thruck the immense store of gunpowder which was placet: in the vaults belonging to the Ancient Knights, destroying the whole Turkish quarters so completely that only three children were saved. One thousand persons are said to have perished. JUsTICR PROPERLY DINYENSKIL-4 Lour don magistrate laielya fined a respectable W 17111.111 18/1 NllllllB. and in default of pay- MUM. SPni her to jail for ihree . mottihs. be cause she gave a good cliracter to a die . - IF honest (fantastic, and a bled the latter to rob anew employe . little of that kind of justice would b very useful op this side of the Wbter, imd tend to inalte our domestics more useful as "helps" and honorable is a class, Da. lavisiusToN, the celebrated African traveller, alter an absence 01 seventeen years trout Ergland, recently arrived at Marseilles on his return by way of the Red Sea. He had been sn long unaccus tonteitio the use of his native tongue,'.that on getting on board en English ship he found it difficult. to speak a sentence in English. He was en his way to London, where he was' expeeted'en the 12th. COL. BENTON NOT Ti) BE RETURNED. TO THE, U. S. SiNA.TE.=—The Missouri Re publican copies the shitement going the rounds of the papers, to the ; effect that a coalition would take place that would place .Col.. Pen ton in the U.S.. Satiate again, and says :4' , .. , "To all which we say—bosh I. it -is neiilie 'probable nor possible that i buten can be returned to the Senate of - Uni= ted States by -the legislature ui - port;, and the very fact that the Black' lepubli. can and Abolitionpapere of the rth de r sire it-ill this case—wili,kill .810110 dead. - ' / , As to the_ point made, that Mr. Buchan an's influence is used in Missouri tolieve Benton returned to ihe"Seitute,lit is . petit fiction. Mr.- Buchanan canubt want. him there—his friends, do not :went c hlin there ---he :would blow, the Administration-sky bigh..,B,lte. were, there. _There is not n real Democrat in Misseuri , who - does want him there.,"„ The , hrippiestlieriod of a man's when he ilee-a pretty little wife hall 'dor, en beautiful children, more ready cash than h ,Itnnwe - whit to :do with, a good can.. science and is not even'' in debt for his newsriaper. . . A. barber,desired a groggery customer or Jae. one, StintlaY morning, who entailed strong of Ricfihol, to,keep his mouth shill, or his. establishment woUld'get indicted . .• jar keeping a rion•hola openon Sooting. , .I,atand," said s, Western stump orator, ..on the broad platformof the,principles of 'OB, and palsied tie Mine ' arm if I .desert .um."''.You stand on nothing . oh the kind." interrupted a little shoemaker in the crowd; "you stand in my both, that you floret, paid me for, and I want the money." • • ANOTHRII Sz.%v aICITEIENT,—There was great excitement at Jettison. Miss. on the 21st inst. in consequence of a con, trmplated rising of the slaves, 27 ot whom, hod been arrested. The Mayor had called upon the citizens to organize to protect themselves. There was also a similar excitement at Canton. 111 iii. This little gem I found the other day hid away in an old almanao. I thought it re ally beautiful, wondered how it ever oome there, in such an odd, out.btthe-way place; and then, after various spCculations, I tried to picture to myself what a world this might be, what a world it would be, if every one's life wore indeed "blessed with true believ ing." thotight of Eirth"'s sorrowing ones, of their hopes withered and dead, of their spi rits fella, worn and weary ; life en arid waste, and darkness And night around them. And what wonder, I thought, that so many ' do falter by the way; with Distrust coiling at, coldly around their hearts, corroding its very fibres until they are worn asunder. a Why is it 0, why is it that we have so little faith in our fellows, members As we all are of ono great family, with • the same hopes, the same fears, the same final destiny before us ? Distrust is a lesson learned too soon—the teachings of the chill world•spirit, whispering to us only its own dark thoughts, uusunued by aught of good. If we could but retain the simple hearted trust of, our early peers, how well it would be I It would bring . a blessing. now, as then,would be a well spring of joy, in whose crystal depths were mirrored the sunniest thoughts, very life-pioturee of 1 gladness. It may indeed be a wicked world, .yet is there in it more of good than we sometimes think. We build up great, high walls a round our hearts, shut out the quivering sunlight from them, and call it—night.- 0! were it not better that all these barriers of seltisolation were broken down, so soul. less and frigid are they? What a flood of 'light and beauty would then break in upon !us. Sympathies, iced with the cold breath of distrust, would melt away. heart-gree tings and heart-weleomings there - would be where now reigns a voiceless silence. A generous fail It in others is indeed a bles sed thing, and there is in it a power to overcome ill, that will rarely fail of reach ing even the most hardened heart. Let us see to it that uur's is that faith, our's that genial, kindly confidence, blessing and ever blessed. ` What did the pock Bay? The clock upon the tower of a neigboring church tolled forth elowty and aoletuuly the knell oF the departed hour. As the last sound died away, Willie, who was sitting on the carpet at hia mother's feet, lifted his head, and looking earnestly in her face, asked : 'Mother, what dill the olook say 'To me,' said his mother sadly, 'it seem-• to say, gone—gone !' 'What mother ! what has gone ?' 'Another bout, my son.', 'Whet is an hour, mother cr 'A white winged messenger from, our Father in heaven, sent by him to,inquire of j you—of me, what we aro doing ? what we are saying ? what we are feeling and think ing ?' , • • 'Where has it gone, mother ?' - 'Back 'to . Him who sent it, bearing on its wings, that were so pure and white when it came, a record of all thoughts, words and deeds, while it was with us! Were they all such as our Father could receive with n smile of approbation ? Reader, what record aro tho hours, as they cradle and go, bearing .upon higli for you.? , 0/0 - Childhood is liko a mirror, catching add reflecting images all around it. Re member, that an impious or profane thonght uttered by a parent!s lir, may operate on tha'yoting heart' like ti airoless spray of water throwo upon polished stool, staining with ruit, which uo after soeuring eau OW-Any than who can bound,ont of bed as soon as he wakes of a mid-winter's morn ing is worth something.; no fear of his not making his way through the world credita bly, because he has the elements of a promptitude, decision and energy, which guarantee success. S , oung ,lady who alloWs herself to do the tint.thouglitless . act, lone all that heavenly happiness which love only give to her life. :She falls down from the 'en , joynient of innocent gladness and happiness into jealousy, envy, gloominess and Ullll t 4. islied desires into a miserable and deprave , bin state. - When from weaknieis of the eyes, or untt- PWII intensity of the light, it is found Dens sari to moderato the quantity auiitted „to the,eyes, by tho use of colored alio' sae,: they shOuld never be blue, which are more eels. olljoioits than ,useful.., Green glees ie bet ter; but the best of all is a colored glass of imperfect transparency, known: by the name of "Neutral tint glass, ' by which the inten sity of the transmitted light can •be dimin ished•io any' desired degree. ' le" Our hearte are like instruments of music well toned Y ' they make'no melo dy in ,tho oar Of tlod, jthlese, they, be gently touched by ,tha*,,igetrof the Spirit. iffirAmong tho proininant benevolent cihjeota of the day, wu peruoive the call . for the formation of a atmiety for the atieliora, lion of the oenditiort of women with snoring husband/. • • Why is a vain Inung lady, liko a con• firmed drunkard? Because neithor of them is satisilod with a moderato use °title glass. /erg you wish to know what are the "amend dowos of bfo," get ,drunk some day when the sidewalks are covered with ice. The States. Virginia first settled by the Enelimb. New York first settled by the Ito teh. Massachusetts settled by the Puri- New flampshise settled by the Par- New Jersey settled by the hutch. Delftware settled by Swedes mi.!. 1611 Fins. 1635 1615 igttryland settled by Lord lialtinutre. t.lonnectiott settled ly the Puritans. Rhode Island settled by lb ger Wit- North Carolina settled' by the Eng South Carolina settled by the Ilti- Pennsylvania settled by William Georgia settled by General Ogle- Vermont admitted into the Uniuti. Kentucky admitted into the Eldon. 'Tennessee titintittal into the I Mum' Ohio admitted into the Union. Louisiana admitted into the Uni .... . Indiana admitted into the Union. 3lississippi admitted into the Union. Illinois admitted into the Union. lei 36. linens. 4150. lisle. 1(170. guenot% Alaiininstmlinitted iutn the aclimitted into-the 1'16.,7.. Itlissourt admitted into the Union. itlichigan admitted into the ['Moo. ~Irkitimas admitted into the. Union 'Texas admitted into the Union. Florida admitted into the Union. lowa admitted into the Union. Wisetiniditailmitmil into the I California Audited into till! 1711iun 1541 184 i. Look Up Here is a good moral under the guise of a • • "A ywing man mire picked up a sovereign lying in the mid. Ever afterwards, Its walked along, he kept his eyes fixed steadily upon the ground, iu Impes to Mid :mother. And in the course (Wit long life its pieked up, at different. times, It goodly number of coins, gold awl silver. But all these years, while he was looking for them, lit saw not that th e heavens were bright above him, and smote beautiful around.—lle never once allowed his eyes to look up • front the atoll null filth in whielt sought the treasure and when he died a rich old man, he only knew this fair earth of gin rs as n dirty roil in which to pick up money aw you walk along!" • romstillt mull Lonia Y‘Tolfop.-31. in one of him intampeeekes, rompores him lot With thnt of the ninn he loot just before nlli•rt ail to CO0011111: "I will never venttfre to contrast my own Tumble lot with the brilliant one of that po tentate. I eat with my children the hit!cr bread of homelessness: 1 am staggning i..y le,u; towards; an (ihgenre grave. For inheri tance my children may get n lecney of sorrow, vet of devotion to their country's cause. Soch Is my lot,: hut, whatever may he my faults, my errors, or even my sins, never hovel bro. ken- oaths, never have 4 deceived notions, never trilled with the duties of All honest pit triot. Bonaparte, on the contrary, sits high in power, dazzling. the eves of ahnri-sightol men with the, lustre of his . propitions star.— Still I do not nt nll helie're in the stability of mu&essfuL crime." Liqui:Oing Othrtz is stated that Benjamin Ilardinge; , inventor of artitieinf stone. has :Met:ceded in-redacing quartz rock to it liquid, limpid, end clear as', pure spring water, by means of hurinid beet and some sim ple solvents, and other ehmeleaf agents, at very small 'expo... Tho editor of,the Iffie Amerietm says he has, seen the liquid stone reduced in a few minutes, by Mr. }lard inge,to a plastic state, capable of being mould (nd into any, form . . Faraday, and •Marshall 'Hall, of ' Lorktin, stitted;''have endorsed the usefulness of the discovery. Supported by such authority, it really appears to be ono' of the grandest discoveries of the present age. Curiong fficini 'announce ment of the Preahlential rote in to:Maim:a de velops nomo curious reatilte,whiCk the Picay-' uno refers to: • "Every candidate en the-successful ticket,' received the sane number 6f votes, viz : 26,- 169, and every candidate on the defeated tick et also the same nunnlarr v vis : 20,731.. If this 'bo indeed correct,lbere Was not a man scratch ed or altered .in .a single parish in the State, Remedy for Corns. There is in tbe,Nevi'England Foil:nor of thin 9th of Fehi'unry lest nn. aticie'on 'corns, which . lippears to have been an 'extraiit taken from Dr nlFa JoUrnal of Health, in which he says among.,Other "things that • 4 norns like consurnp.-• tion; are never cured." NOW; eir,l make no• tiretentioris to seience, i Will stnte some facts relative to my experience with corns. Many years ago, in hay time, I was atilictetwith. a• pricking on the boll of the first joint of - my little' toe, which I' supposed proceeded from a peg in my' boot —Den% busy,' I endured it. untib'en,kno leisure time, when I examined my bdot; and-not finding sufficient reason fur com plaint. culled iv boy to ernmino . the 'foot, (not being' nhlo to do so myself.)'' Ha represented, a hard, horny snbstnuce penetrating the flesk.„ wkiioll he . pnred slightly, and applied.ft'drep or two of wormwood oil, In.the eourso of iv few weeks, the corn was wholly dissolved andi crumbled oat like surf or dead Inetter,.and in. that. place has never troubled me since., t have boon Oftlicted on other parts of my feet -tilesTwhich-T-tilive'tricil ti iißo manner With like effect; except that Imo& a greater number of applications of thiroitiii some. in stances' I Now,' if you think• thin of sufficient imptirtance give it to the world; after fixing it 'in terimi that finny ho uniierstowl..ta it may be ~ the metals ihf relieving, sonic , of those who are, afflicted with those troublesome' things.. if hare full faith in its etficticy, hark% prescrib ed it to others with like results., o:!r:Witb the now year,it is our inten tion to commence making out Bills of all unsettled accounts for Subscription and Jobbing, which we shall send out at soon as possible. We hope those who motive them will Bnd it convenient to meet thet promptly and without further notice. The coming January Court will enable many to send of bring in Money ; while those 'living at a distance can remit by mail at •oar risk. WEMEMBER THE Pooll.—Winter, cold and dreary winter, is upon ue i and many there ore, nu doubt, awing ns who are not pre. pared for it, and‘re enduring privations, which can and ought to ho relieved. Those who are lilrssed with nu abundance of the goods things of life, should sue to it that there is no suffer. ing among the poor around them. It is base ingratitude to be unmindful of the sufferings of the unfortunate poor ; and to refuse to relieve them when it is in our power to do so, is s grie vous An. 01), remember the poor. Wait not until necessity shall drive them to your doors, but seek them out, nd give them of your abon• Aimee, and thus r‘alizu how true it is that Charity like Mercy, 4 .1 a tw'ee b'esid ; lthlusses him that gives and him that takes." There are many ways in which relic% can be afforded. 1.41 only the heart be right, and tt thousand channels will be opened up through which to roach and make glad the hearts of the destitute : * * "Evers- drawer Should be unlocked to:clay. 'hom do you keep that clothing for ? • Why nut awnv ? Come, pull it out—at eloalcn vest— Whatever you can give, 'Wenpped snugly around the orphun'm brennt, \V il m nke tfie ilying live. -ri m „l o s e r FUftreli-11 pair of shoes Half worn—and lien.) a cap, Which you, perhaps, tuarrorver use— A hat with scarce a thtp— A pair of 11:1111A—a rusty coat— WI I give them In the poor ; What is toot worth to you a groat, Will wealth and warmth secure. IVhot is in pm. gnrret 7 Men the moths For Innittlis heen Imsy therr4 Ace, they have quite ,led myna the clothes • You saved with so smell Care. Coins, poll them out; perhaps we may, Find monething hint will make .A poor man rich, if given to.day, And bless the hearts that ache. 'Winter is upon us ; give, oh, give Whatever yon can spore ; A mite will mnke the wretched live, And smooth the brow of care. When plenty smiles nround your door, And comfort dwells within, If eon forget the worthy poor, .ZTwill be a grievous sin." .Sheriff TwinAs advertises n Sheriff's Silo tit the Conrt•housc, on Friday the IGth of ,Tnntiavy next, of the following properties, to -wit .7. A tract Orland in Huntington township, con taining 12 fires, property of John Stahl. A. tract ) landon Butter township. contain ing 55 acres, prcperty of James D. Taylor. A lot of ground in Arendtsville, containing 11 nerey, with, improvements; also a trvt of land in Mcnallen township, containing 15 Acres rope rt of John Wert. A lot dground in Gettysburg, on West High Street, containing one acre, property of Ilugh Denwiddic. A holf lot of ground in Gettyahorg, on Choin• beroburg /Meet, with improvements—proper -44 of Ba,muel Little. ler The stockholders in the Gettysburg Railroad Coppany will elect a President and 'tlyelte Direftors, at the Court-house, in Gettys burg, on Monday the 126 of Jaunty next. The steckholderiin the LittlditcavnTiailroad ' , Company ii.lll hold Their (first) election, for a President and • like number of Directors, at 'Barker's, in bithestown, on the same day, (the 12th.) 117 Rea. Mr. VAN WYKE will preach nt the tetra Marsh Creek Church, on Sunday the llth inst.. at 2 o'clock in the afternoon. ' FIRE t—Yesterday afternoon, about 2 'o'- 'clock, a messenger from the Poor-Houso was despatched to town with intelligence that the .Innilaing was on fire. The alarm immediately apread, and in a short time a number of our citizens wore seen hurrying towardaille Poor . .11Ouse but the rum had been, subdued by prr • • • ounkconnected with the buildings beiore spy assistance was' had from town. The fire ong ;inland in the new. Hospital, from a defect in one oftbe,fluefi connecting with the air cham - lber of the furnace, intended to introduce cold •utir into the chamber. This flee.. being con . :itructed wood, and the ralveby some acident jiccomingtilesed,.thuxforcing the hot air frorn . ". •, she furnaeo into. it, took fire and communica --:' n,ed , to ' the floor immediately above. There • •Vitikof'Ccierse a gobs 'deaf of alarm 'among the ' . - dniziatee of thebuildiagi lliet the firo was prompt • •• Iy extinguished, doing no material ilamage.4-- It wrialmfbably fortunate that the fire occurred 'fnder the circumstances. 'The defect in the .;flue Mtn readily he ramolied by substituting a nmetalia one for that new in use.. Otherwise fire' from the satireause might haws emir- Jiereaftjc;a4andangered life and pro , •rat ‘.! IPert3N, We ederStana that the Stewaxi, Maj. Scow, wain:town at the time of tbo fire, and did not hear of it until at ras over. • IllerThimsilty next, the Sib instant,ivill be the•OniversaTe of thtf attleW New Orleans. The , Inilepenifent Alga will piii.7.le .on . the ' ataraili of that day. e resolution has passed the Legislature of lowa asking Congress to en• large The territory of the Stale by exten ding the northern boundary parallel from the Big Sioux directly across to the Alia. solid river. The corner which would thus be annexed is arpresent part of Min. nesots, hut is a ivilderness not included in any land district, and designed to be the nucleus of the new territory of Dalt. kotali after the admission of Minnesota as a State. A ell Rll'Thl#S GIFT.— Hon. David Pinellas, of Utica, N. Y., now nearly' 70 years of age, was the tutor of Ex-Onv ',noir Seymour, lino. Ward Rem, and others who have reached high public hon ors. His old pupils have not forgotten him. They make up nn annual holiday gift for his benefit of $5OO each. Five of these gentlemen made up in this way a purse of $2,500 for the old gentleman's Christmas. • Truly there is no ientiment, however exalted, which does not have its counter• L its, and usage. however sacred, which has not its hypocritical observers. DA LLEY'S MAGICAL PAIN EXTRAC• TOR.— Th ere never has been n discovery 'natio in Materia Medica, whereby pain can he so quickly allayed, and where parts in a high. .state of inflamat ion can he so rapidly re. I lite ed ft, their natural state, nor where wounds and sores can be so thoroughly and rapidly healed, and decayed parts restored without ei ther scar nr defect, thnn with DALLEY'S MAGICAL PAIN EXTRACTOR. In Cuts, un ls, Sprains and Bruises— casualities to which children ore constantly subject—the action (tithe genuine BALLET'S PAIN EXTRACTOR, is ever the same ! How much fain and Suffering may not thus lie presented ! Morniter, Life itself is often dependent upon having at hand the Genuine DA 1,1. EY EXTRACTOR, and for particulars of which I respectfully refer to my printed pamphlets for the truth of which I hold myself responsible. No (11010 Of Burns and Scalds, no matter how severe, has ever yet, in any one instance. resisted the all-powerful, pain-subduing and healing qualities of the BALLET'S PAIN EXTRACTOR. No Pnin Extractor is genuine unless the hox has upon it rt Stzel Plate Engraved Label with the signatures of C V. CLICKNER k. CO., proprietors, and HENRY DA LLEY, manufacturer. Price 25 cents per her. M-All orders should be addressed to C.V. Clickener & Co., 81 Barclay street, Nthv York. Nov2B,lot TO RENDER A MEDICINE PER FECTLY palatable is certainly a great ad vance towards the eradication of disease ; be cause there can he uo doubt: that, one great cause of protracted illness is the natural re- hictance we have to swallow medicine con formably to the directions of the Physician.— Various experiments are therefore resorted to I by the medical Practitioner in order to dis guise the taste of his prescription. Recourse is generally had, in such cases, to those artic les of food which. the patient is most fond of, and which are commonly at hand. The con sequence is, ho loathes the sight of them ever afterwards. Now, CLICKENER'S SUGAR COATED VEGETABLE PILLS, remedies this objection entirely. The medicine is so , completely enshrouded by the, coating of sup ar, that the Pill may be suffered to remain in, the mouth a considerable length of time with• out inducing any "symptom of nausea or dis gust. Their curative properties are chiefly confined to complaints which originate in fm. purities of the blood. Hence they strike at the root of disease, and the relief they afford cannot be otherwise than permanent and effec tual. They place nature in the very position she occupied at our birth. They demise the bowels, purify the blood, promote insensi ble perapirat k ion, and restore a. healthy action to the heart;thesliver and the lungs. Their virtues are so positive and certain in restoring health, that the proprietor hinds himself to re turn the money paid for them in all mob where they do not give general satisfaction. These Pills may be had of Storekeepers in every city, town and village in the United States. . det.l2,2t 'To' Builders. pROPOSALS will bo reeeived until Mon day the 19th inet.,.for . the erection of an additional story on front and back building of the EAGLE HOTEL, nevi occupied by Peter Shively, and for many Other imprivernents.-- Plans and specifications can be seer. by calling on either of the undersigned. '; • • 'A. COBEAN, H. Di MERRY,' GEORGE THRONE. . , Jan, 2, 1857.—td. • PUBLIC SALE. rpHE following School Houses and;Lots will 1. , be eiiposed to Public Sale, on Wednesday the 21st inst., nt the Court House, in the Bor ough of Gettysburg, 'to wit NO.I.—A ,ONE-STORY I3RICIC 13BIL DING, with a basement, and half lot of ground, situate on High street, and adjoining proper ties of T. F. Frazier, and Samuel Folk I No. 2.-4. ONE-STORY BRICK 'BUIL. DING and lot of ground, situate on East Mid. ,dle street, adjoining property of E. TTanneway. No. 3.—A ONE.STORY BRICK BUILD. ING and lot ofground, situate on the South West:corner otWashington and High erect— Sale to commence at one o'clock, ,P. M., when conditions will be made known. Persons wishing' to view the propertrarlil please call on the President or either of the Board of School Directors. B order orthe Board. W. L. CAMPBELL, Preil. Attest—S. Anownation s Clerk. ' .Jan. ;1857. • • itM.The New York Ledger, threat fami ly weekly paper, for which the most popular writers in the country contribute, has now at tained the extraordinary circulation of One Hundred and Ninety 1 housand copies, and subscriptions are continually pouring in. Sep the Ledger's advertisement in another column'. — A DYE FOE, THE HAlR.—Perfection is not attained by indolence and case; there is no ncross•lot road to universal favor. The world will not be blown like chaff into a chan nel indicated by imitators. Witi.ess the fast anchored fame of BATCHELOR'S HAIR DYE, won by watching when others slept, sus tained by its intrinsic worth and truthfullness to nature. frarritnied not to disappoint the hopes of those who use it. Made and sold, or applied, at the Wig Factory 233 Broadway, New York. See that each box has Wm. A. BATCHELOR on. no others are genuine. IfIALIIRIORE 111 ARKEI Cure fully corrected to Thursday, Jan. 1, 1856. Flour, 'toward Street. $5.37 (4 000 Rye Flour 512 (al 5.25 Corn Meal 3.00 ( I n 3.25 Wheat white 1.50 (in 1.60 Corn, white ......... Corn, yellow Rye, Pennsylvania. Oats, Pennsylvania clover Seed Timothy Seed Ha Timothy. Hops - Pantries. Bacon, Shoulders..., . -. 1.i lql 7 i Bacon, Sides 9 1 (q 9 i Bacon, Hauls 91 (til • 101 Pork, Moss. 19.51 01,19.75 Pork Prime 19.00 (a.,00-00 - _ - . Beef, Mess 15.00 n 10.00 I.nr(l. in harrels.....o. 121- a 12i Lnrd, in ken's 1)1 a 131 . . _ Wool, Unwashed... Wool, Wai , Wool, Pulled Wool, Fleece, common 35 a 30 Wool, Meech, fine . 50 a 56 Wool, Choke 11erino 50 a 52 Butter, Western, in kegs 14 a 16 Butter, Roll - • 20 a 24; Cheese. 10 a 1/ • Coffee, Rio • . 9/, a. 101 Coffee, Jove • 14/a 15 lEtarria. On the 24th ult., by the Rey. Beale M Schmucker, the Rev. BENJAMIN C. SUES. SEROTT, of White Marsh, Pa., (line of the Seminary,) and Miss MARIA JOSEPHINE, daughter of the Rev. Di. Schtundker, of tliis place. On the 18th of November, by the Rev. R. Hill, Mr. ABRAHAM L. GUSS,.of Juniata county, Pa., and Miss SUSAN Al., daughter of Mr. Christian Rindlaub, of Stmban.townsltip, this county. On the f Bth ult., by iho Rey. ' Creigh, D. D., of Mereersburg, the Rev. FRANCIS NETSCHER, of Butler township, Adams co., and Miss CATHARINE ELIZABETH, daughter of Mr. Jacob M'Cuneopt the former place. On tho 23d ult., by the Tth. P. Schemer, Mr. THADDEUS HANAWAY of this plate°, and Miss ELIZABETH BECKER, of Hano ver. In ,Philadelphia on the 25th ult., by Hey. J: Wheaton Smith, Mr. JAS. A. 0. YEATS, of Franklin township, Mattis county, awl Miss DINAH E. PHILIPS, of that city. 103... The above announcement was accom panied by a token of regard for the "printer," in the shape of some excellent cake. The par ties have out-acknowledgments, with best wish. ea fur their future prosperity and happiness. Ofell. On the 24th ult. Mr. JACOB MACKLEY, of Mountjoytownslip, aged 80 years 5 months and 10 days. In Ma.son.cernity, Illinois, on the 21st of November, of Typhoid fevet, SOPHIA, and on the sth ult., MM. CATHARINE ARENDT, wife and eldest 4aughter of Daniel Arendt, formerly of this vicinity. - On the 22d ult., Mr. MICHAEL HANES, 'of Reading town'p, in the 80th year of his age: On the 18th ult., in Cumberland townehip, ITiss MARY C..MILLER, aged 30 years and 6 months. MI6 FOR R) NTlupin two story. brick Houst, with lot and stable, on Rail Road atreet, between Carlisle and Washington streets. Inquire at dila office. Jan. 3, 1857. ATTENTION I ......_ 1)1 INDEPENDENT BLUES .I friVOU will meet for parade, hi full ' 'A. dress at the Armory, on Thum: day Bt/t 'of. January, at 10 o'clock ) I , A. M., antliarincand accoutrinUtt4 , in complete, order. , s:, By 'order of the Captain. CHAS. X. MARTIN, O. ..c..:,' NOTICE• ETTERS Testamentary ou the estate cl? ,10101d/tELLAANES, late of Reading township; Adams county, deceased, having beett granted to the subscriber, residing in . Hampton, Reading township, notice is hereb y . given to those indebted to said estate to make payment, And to those having claims to pre tent the same properly authenticated to the ,subscriber for settlement. • • • JOAN BRCIUGEI, £I, Jan.?, 4856. - - Per and. For any one of the four Reviews , $3, 00. For any two of the four Reviews 5 ,OP For any titre; of the four Reviews 7, 00 For all font of the Reviews..:„: • B 00 For Blackwood's Magazine • ' 3 00 For Blackwood and three 8eriew5.,,,;.,..9' For Blackwood and the four ItevieWs;..lo; 00 Payments to be made in all cases in adVanee. Money current in the State where *l4, will be received at par. . POSTAOK. The Postage to any part of the United Slates will ho but Twenty-four Cents a'j•eat: for "Blackwood," and but Fourteen cents fiir each of the Reviews. Al Ike above prwes the Periodicals , 'will be furnished for 1F157. SPLENDID OFFERS FOR Mg AND 18:4 TOGETHER. Unlike the more ephemeral'MagOinca bf the day, these Periodicals lose littlp hy age.— Hence a full year of the Nos. (with no omis-, Fiona) for 1856, may lie regarded nearly, as valuable as for 1857. We proptate to furnish' the two years at . the following extranielY rates, viz. For 'Backwoods Magazine, s4' For any one Review ' 4. 00 For any two' Reviews- • - t 110 For Blackwood and one.litview • 7 00, For Blackwood and two Reviews 9'oo For three Reviews 8 00 For Blackwood and three Reviews 12 00 For the rani' IterieWS. . . . .. T 1 00, For Blackwood and the four Reviews... 14 00' *To avoid fractions, (15 !nayreniitted for IllackwoOd, tbr which we will tor Ward „that work fir both rears, po.t/ paid. N. 13.—The price in Great Britain (lithe five Periodicals above named ia about f,O per, annual. 59 (( 64 60 (a) 64 7P 64 00 45 (5 48 7.50 (ro 000 3.25 (a. 3 50 15.00 (0120.00 7 @ 14 7U (ti) 75 AS we shall never ristain be likely to offer such inducements ns those here iiresente4 Now is the time to. SicbSeribe! . Ve!ltonittatices mult, in all cased, 111 inade dire'/ 1,, the Publisher*, for lit themit priced 110 conitnimsion can be allowed to Agentd; Address, • , • . LEONARD SCOTT.ItCO., No. 54 Gold novel New YorY. I)ec. 26, 1856. - a 24; . 33 a at; 28 a 32 REGISTER'S NOTICE: V" On Cli is hereby given to DB - Legatees and .1.1 other persons coneerned,linit tbo Admin. istratioit Amounts. •herci eater tnentioned,will be presented at the Orphans' Court:44l,l:llns county, for confirmation and alfoivauco„ ; on Monday, the 191 h day of January nriti viz: • 207. Thu first accotin of Josiah , Cook; via:,.. !of the estate Of Jesse Cook, de ceased. 20d. The first accottat of. Margaret Grain , , rota, ExeCutrix of the lust will and testauient of Maintain Orem mer e eceased.. 209. Thu second and final 'acceurittif lla•id E. Iloll.tiger, 0111 t of the AdministratOis of :the estate of Tempest Wiltton, decease& 210. The final account of Samuel Durho raw, Executor of did last will and testament of Joseph Miller, deceased. . 211. Thu sceoud account .of John •11.',31' Pherson;nethig Executor of the lout will and testament ofJoltu Duncan, Acceased. 212. The. first and final account of Levi Pitzet, Administrator of the estate of John 13. Pitzer, deceasdd, 213. The first apd final accouisiiOf Michael Overbaugh, Guardian of Aluria; Cath arine and Pius Shenfelter. ~ 214. The first and final account of John. Boyer, Administrator of the CAttlie or Sarah Hooter, deceased. 215. The first and final account of 'John Boyer, Administrator with the will annexed of Magdalena Hoover, deceased.' ' WM. F. WALTER, 'Register, per DAimi.PLANKI:Deray. Register's Office, Gettysburg, Dcc. 26, 1856—td 7 - Flour : for: Sale. , F you want a good barrel of Flour; call at I HOKE'S STORE; as he has !mule arrange,' manta to have always the beat, which he will sell at 25 cents' advance. May 2, 1856 TT ETTERS Testamentery' , , on' -the Estate 11 of GEORGE , GULDEN, late , or.,Stte ban township, • Adams county, P,ennis., de. ceased, having , beau gtanted to the subseri her, residing' in Meuntpjeasant townsbili, he 'hereby gives notice to persons indebted to said. Estate, to call' and settle the .8 ame g and, those heving . claims are requested to' present the Sairie,' .. proPerly. , fitethentienteiVfor settle ment. Dec. TjANIEL-GULDEN; peculor. c 26 ) ,1856.--6t, . , • . ' Collectors; 'Take 'Notice ! 111 HE Collectors of• Taxes in • the different A- townships of Adams ,county are .11deby notified that they will ,be required to settle up their duplicates on or , before gouda!, the 191 h fiay of January n&i, on which darthit -Com mission&sivill meet at their 'office to give the necessary,exonenttions, &c. if the Duplicates are not settled up in full by the above dale, .the Colleeuwa,Will be dealt -with according to Isi►' e witboutiegarif to Teiiona. - ; • IL.A. meeting of the Commissioners will take'. plait) at 'their 'offiey•ilt Gettysburg, on on Monday. time' sth of January, at 'which time e.xonenaions will be grantell to such of the Collectors as m'ay,prefek.attending and mak; Ing settlement on that day. • • - • - GEORGE.t4i: ER -• HENRY A. PICK L ING, • JOSIAH. BENNER, ' Attest— Commissioners. J. Di. WALTIR, Clerk Jan. 1, 1867.,—td A large stocker Boots and Shoes, selling at SS. assail profits at ' COBBAN PAXTON'S. JOHN HOBE NOTICE. Aittorney;.ftt. Law, WILL faithfully. and promptly'attend to Y all basittens entrunced fit hinr,.../fe speaki, the German language. 011ice;at ilto nameplace, in South Ilallinutieistreeotear Foiney'n . Drug Store, and nearly apposite Dninter , & Ziegler'a Store: N. P B Attorney 'sit Law, ArIitITICB on Chittnhershtirg. 'street; Gettys ll berg. two doors from Geo. Arnold's store: will attend to filing'elaime,for: nowirr LAND. under the late Acts of Congress, Tensions, Se, All business :entrusted to his hands will re. ceive protnpt attention. n. rti i; o (jDt'At..'‘G'it Y , Attorney nt Limy • (Office re.noiretl to one door West or flueliler'e Diug & Inok-Store;Chettibeimbu'igetreei.) Attorney and Sultillor for -Patent, and lb& mow!, • bounty Land Warratort, Back-ray sus. pended i ins, 'att'd all miter claim. against the Govertioneni at Waslitivon; . l). Mao Artferie.an Enklaitd. Land Warranty located en 4 sold, or bought, and hikheet.'-prierty given.' - ; • , • • Lan&to for fide k..,10vra.: Illinois, .tind other Western States ; and Agents, engaged leentititr Warranty drek • - ekir Apply to. hiiti or by- Jotter., , • . • • AYER'S A . ;Are coring 00 . 84 !o, 041'0d:064i: before kuoirosol,agy Illediclne• INYALIDB, READIND JUNE FOR YOURSELVIIB JULES HAVEL, Eve, tie' well 'krintvh iirlbtuer, ,oub.rtuut Bow, Philadelphia, wince choice petcluctie Are found et &moil gritty toilet, says: "I NM lia p py to aa v of your tATItiIITIC reLL'lnit have beind• them • benrer, family medicine, for common me, shim any within mv knincledge. , Many of my, friend: have realized marked benefit% fmat Mein, and co. lurid. with me in Relieving !h thOY POW.. extrmiiditio4 virtue, for driving out di., , ., , and ruling 04, •kk... They, are' not only effectual. but Aare and pleaaant to be oaken : nuglitiew which nowt make them valued by the public, When they Sri known." The venitahle' Chasm*llor WARMAN? writes frpm Bel timer., 151 h April, 1854 ' .• " De. J. C. Aran —Pie: I hare taken your Pills with great benefit, FIN the lietlewnear, languor, hem of appetite, and headache, whicbhaadJale.peare overtake* rIlt• . the A feW doemi Of POI/Till. and me. I have used pair many Peeloral many yeses In my femur for roughs, and maid, with unfailing pumas*, .X O l IMO 3 medicines W bleb aunt and 11 . Mei It a ninepins to COMM* YOU Mr the good you have done and am doing." Q lIN F. BEATTY, E.ite., Sec. of the Penn. itaiboad 1.11,,N I • Pa. R. R. 0/Ike, Peitederphie, 1853. Ilr: I take promore in adding my tonhoony to the iffleary of your medicines, having derived Toy miliariai benefit horn the ties of both your Pectoral and Cathartic Pine. lam never without thorn In toy fially:rim chair I 'ever consent to be while my means o 111 procure them." • The w idely re n owned /. 8. BTEVEIII3, IL, of Wont. wprth u having used yOULCVINARTIII PILIA le iht'practlao, 1 molly from experience ilmt they an as Invalltilible purga tive. In cams of disordered (onetime of the, llVer, mooing headache, Indigestion, costiveness; and the ghiat variety of. disease■ that follow, tit/Tare a rurer,gemiedy than any other. In all woe where a primitive rethedy,le rooked, I rosildently. rsenntmend them Ville. to iblt Puirlie, al superior to airy other I hive aVnr (nun& nil are seri In their , operetion, - end 'notedly 'safe —qualifies which make them an Invaluable polite forpublic not. I have Art twiny yearn blown - 'your Cl4rry•Perrerel as the bet Cough medicine In t h e erorld ; and Ow.* ellta are in no 'trim Ihßeor rn that admirable preparation for the nod meat of dhomes.” _ • ."Alipm, Ms., Nee. In, HMI. "Da. J. C. Atli.... War flir it have been anhcsed fresh my kink with mauls he Da worst' fectw,And now; after haty.yeate triel,hild an untold of amount of aufferilli. ve boos completely cored Ina 6'w weeks by ytuir Pitts. With what feellnp of rejoicing I write can only bb Imagined when you realize what f have authonsd, and MM. "Nom until now halo t been Ms from this loatimene disease in some sham At time. It attatked my eyra.aad made me almost blind; beef/lee tile unendurable pain; at 'othereli settled In the *taloa my head, and destroyed my' lair, and hen kept me partly bald all my days; sometimes It came out in . my face, end kipt It do menthe a raw e0(10 • "About nine weeks see 1 tonmlikited taking yottr thank NHL and , now am entirely - free hum the complaint My eyes are well, my skin is fair, and ply hair has oem. minted a' healthy growth; all Whin& makes me (eel already 'Mum person. " Hoping thin statement May Iselb•Means of stonveying information that shall do soon to others, ' I em, with every motiment of gratitude, You're, . • MARIA 1 11 CHER.". "I have , kn o wno the' abOVe named Marfa4 Icier lkien Inn childhood; end her etelvment in awl Ort.. ANDBSWiJ• Civereenrof the Ponensouth klanufacatiog Co." perr.:3olEL PRATT, of the ship . Harlon, 'hdit Boston, 96th April, 1854: • "Your Pills hesitated me (Mm a billow/ tittle= wee H derangement (toot dengement of the Liver which. hati vary 'lnhale: I had failed oT any relief by my Physician, and from every remedy I could try; bat a (*vendee of your Pills have completely restored 'me to health. , I have given them to my children for Nona., with this hut et. recta. They , ware promptly cured. I recoinmended than to '_Mend for toothsome, which bid troubled hint R 4 months ;y be told me in a hrov.deys they bed cured him. 'You Maki the beet thedielhe In the world; 'and I era free to say so." teed this from the dletlngthstodfiedieftoir of the boors* Corot, Whose brilliant abilhies herb made bin, well known, not only la this but the neighboring Mites. • "Milo Thq taut. Sill Apiih 1e&. • I hart great eatlefectlon In 'muting you thin Myself and family hair. been troy much benefited ley ymer medicines. My wife war arid. two yean race, of • tio. tare and dangerous cough, br 'your CHINS? recroasti tad sines then has 'enjoyed perfect health. My eltildren hare Pererld times been cored (tam attacks of the Tulle ransa and Croup by ft. It is an invertmlihe remedy for these complaints. Your CAMAILTIC l'issa have entirely 'soled me from a dyepepida and coatirenem , which bas grown upon me for polite yeere,— Indeed, care Is mush more important, fmth the ritct thin I had foiled to get relief limn the beet Phyetclans oanch this section of the country affbrds, and roma any of the no menno. reme dies I had takeh. "You seem to us, Doctor, like a providential Mewing to our family, and you may well suppose we are not an. Mindful of it Tunis respectfully, LEA T HA XTEIL." . 4 Scruffs Ctiesber, Ohio, Anil SA, I. "Da..l. C. Aral— Honored Sat I have model.. thor ough nial of the CITHAIRTIC Pius, len ma by your. *gest, and have been cured by them of the dreadful Rheumathou under which he found me suffering. The fink Aloft 1•• Hewed me, and a few mobsequent doses hare entirety *moved the dikes. ' T feel in hotter health no* the. b* ..cone years before, which I attrtivits entirely to The effecht of your , C to Pius Wont with great tem pre", • • . LUCltni 11. hi ETCALY." The above are all nom person■ who are pabalely homey where they reside, and who would not make Owe stank Weals Without a thorough conviction filet they were Irks; Prepared by DR. J. C. AYES it CO ., Traelical and Azalytical Chemists, Lowell, Nisei ur For Sale by A. D. BUEHLER, • • -Druggists generally. August 2 4 •1856.--11 • • , l, 1 '' ,'N 1 ').--, 1: ,, t.,, , tf i . it- 0. p,roull.r.Air* CO will "Comniande ~. , 4 ! ... ! .! , , , tt,, te , 6 'fti' it fen dip*, s new 'edition -of Alit ! ' • - ' 2 ,, ,f , ).-.. great , ikitilr e iriSeint4mitlily Parts: Price, 21 '... " .. 'Cents each. . , , ; • •,......:,,, ~ ~;..., , ...,:,.1, 2 3 B itch ' Viilant?, WI 'Consist ofilbsis 'parte, 4,' 5 6 ..7 . • 8 • 0 1 0 lisitsonitily priritca in imperial !octavo. The •• •• -n12'13 ' 14 15 :16 17 Wliote • b'a'rk will bit Al ustnsted Ity'about fifty I• - ' t!•!! 1 t:' • , 18'• 141 .- : '2O 921; =fel 23 ' 24, Stilierldt Engrbvings 'on - Steel inbisding• Pot , , ,•. •• , , ~ L 5 26 • . 27 !,.28 26 3 0: 34, 1 1 raits alit] trigiiiial Pictorial Design', by *nil- F51)1ttr5aY,... , ...1 ~.. 2._....3_. AI.- ...5. ~t, . 7 nelc•iiil 77 t 7 A . O, 10, I t 4 2 13 14 , With nunthettut Wood Cuts ant' Mraiii.-1 • ••, . : .15 16 11. 4.8 $lO2O 21 tithliltatt *ill "Contain at 33 forges and - .22 03, Y 24 05 20 . 27 28 one Enginviug on steel i every other par . t, will 115actt;'........1 .2 i 8 . ... f ,:5 f 6 : ,•7 • Ittlyetly° 11*° ._,,._ 1 r ititeg. ' ‘__' . - _.,.,_. 1 . ' ,• $ t Iklt k 1.2 .I'3 ,14. • .. T.FILIN OF PUBlttleaystill4 • t • A k 8 t • • • 15 .ii• I . ' ~19, 20 . 21 .•1 Bail) nerni•monthly plat eoutaiiiiiiii 'es 11 . •• ..,22 . . ; p , ; -24 •t'6 "27: 28..iiiitht alibi:Med, 35 cents, lalyable on.deltwery.. . ' . • 21) • 1 30 •31=,.. . • • ..• • "0., All subselibers must engage lib take tlit At'ltl l / 1 •.‘ , ..%.....,.%)),...,..... .1, , . '.6.. :* 4, *m e t work. ' .. . • ~ • . 5 , . 0 -7., 8 ...I0 1.0 .if - If. re il'heitebtia and subsequent volutoeswil t. 6 . 2 - 7fi •14 15. 15 117 18 he istrididoin dyable liartsh-and thlt.irliele will 9 120 01 ;V- ltl 04 fte, ipubliiliOd 'at restilar • ititerii4X.of,7=wo a. , • . , '26' 2.7 ::28 .29. .30 , ... *midi. • . - ,A1Ax,...........,)).......:.6,.......,_..,•.!,-.:•).; .) 4' Q . Among ,Ilte illustrations already ',.eripsieil i,3 .. 4 . -5 . • 60•., '7 8 0. tie nearly. Completed, are the following • r 0 /IL 12 'id 'll4 15 Pi . PORTRAITS ON fatal:. s ... -1,- if, ?,/il (t 4U 1.2 ' 2l ':',,, A 32 . 2 ••,, n 8 Ven__,..Sch,nyler,' Geti. Chas. Lee, Vim. Pi* i ll ~ 7.'" 27 l 8 1 ,, ot,' nattl7tloll."AiMold.,•ll4l)..7.lreetti, Gen.. lltTirti e : T . .‘. i • - ",. I . - ''% , ,ii, e t .:' , /. .. ''! lien. Knox!, Gen :Sinclair, 'lleir.'lrSiktrk" oloorA GCrt Ltird, - Gen Steil' G ' •&iiii i 8"Ii . ' .a r . tow, eti. o "lip sa e • S. 11. ' .l lc = . 9 k ,• k,„ 2 .11 ; Gen. La Fayette, Count Pitinskil,i4leirilm, no lk i 'l° g 6oil: Mercer, deli. Heury•Ltio,'Cid. c ilOuttrlk • =• •.1 '. • •,• A t t . 20 , 30; ., ;•=, , ~ , 7'. Gen. Wayne, Gen. 'Clinton, Hobert llornk 'July' '. •'''.. ' .• •.. • ' l ' w - '. 1 ,, e "` . 9.ol7;ttark,Gen.' Hamilton. Gen. patna,..o 4 l D , , • . ''''•''" '"=`;••••` •,='• •"'"' l - ' -••• • ° • x.1.4•10,ver; • Cion. Sir William How., Gig. Sig •7 tll •4 1 70 ' 1 7 lleu'rj• Clinton' Washington from the O r ctura • , „ : ~.. 1, 0 2 : .. 0 1 3',- , „ I li , . :2 ,., 14 . ., 2 14 3 .. 1 , 7 4 2 7 g b e y" Peale, Wm' hington "Washing ton tire"pie,l47• l . by a ruttaiiin, • 'Washington from the , pi,eturit, by '24' - 2'7 '2B go, :30 ai ~ ~....,...,.. , ..: ~.. .., . .. . . 1 lyettmiliter, wh.hingt.(it Irvin Ihi ()tett:toffy I L I MUOT ' • "` , .:7 i • ;!••• =,,,, • • '•• •=,:t'•,•„'' • •'...,•• • • Stuart., Washington froth TheilCl7Bl,!Cor,,illu t ,• .• . ; 4.. 4 -- .. .. ,• ... min's Stntue, Wasliingloti trout iltd.tte l oo ) tat :i t IT . t i, , 1 1 , 1 !, 1 , 2 ..20 13 It , 2 1. 2 5• u rt)w4 l,, statnl, ‘vtilltl i ,ligton ~r i m ,y ? 414 •,. ' • '.. . 3 ..,4 23 26 . ~,, ~. !pro fi le,. frii.iYashington.'(earli ppi,rt,),,11 ) ( , (16 . .. • •-•0 ;;=7 , a' Wtifibitigton from Sturtit Miss' 1 1 b1.1414 Ida a Servsniiiti,...... ! I v • ' ... 'l'; '''li 'll -'5 11411 ' 1/I " ctur° ' :, ii i ~' V i„ , Tv,. , i,. ) . 6 , 11 4 2 11.1.trirrakiten t . .l*liTiteb. v, .13 14 . 15.'10 IT 18 -19 ' Historical Scones, (Chiefly from ortginal,da. 20 21 .21 113 24 -25 :20 signe))• Sight of iVarifiitigton's Birth Plat* .1. 1 7. 28". 29 30,' • Mount Vernon, (3 views.) Washington as a ft ... •. ~ „., , ~....,....,.... .1 ' .•tA ' Surveyor. .Washington tit. Pork ;Nicsuity. : - 4 ' 5, 6 7 .8 9' . 10" Washington surveying ilia Disniat Swampy= ' 11 10 - .13 ' 14 - 15 'is 'l7 Washington at Winchesiir.. Washiniton'a ~. ~ iS 19 '2o'', 214 . ••4 '23 . .24 Field Spurts. Fortifying Hunker Hill. Fort ' .• •-- = '2.1, 20 21 , gtt V) 80 3l Ticorideroga...q.ake George,. Fortificatfon at Noyin ai!, ... ; .61, , 2.3 ,1.:1 I'4 6' , I Went l'lint, in 1780. Washington quelling a 8' ~ O • . 1.0 .. :1. 1 12. 13 14 riot, (from 'scouimporary drkwing.l 'View of 45 10, 17 - : 1 , 10 20 21 New York, 177 f. Boston - from Dorchester . ~22 .23 024 2ii :" 26 27 28 "Heights in 1776. • -tattouticernsnisif Indepon , . 23. , 30 ' .. , .. •• ' '' -' ~. 'ilence.lhittle of'frenton: • Battre cif German , ' .6)... ... : 61 '.2 , '' 3 4 5 town. Pattie of Dhonittoiliths •lirseduck'll hit. 6'',:' 7 ' 8' '0 10 - 11 ' '12 . lb/ Field. IVitsliint•tonguing'to Congress, ate: 13 0 '1) 45 . Ili 17., 18 10' • " N.'17:•' , .t.1%, is intattbeiltlint tlio illustrations ..,' . 1 1421 . 4` , P4= .03 24 25 . 1 20 iitliis atkilitton slittil he worthy of the subject 147. 2829 ' 30' .31 " 'and' Of ttte•Anthor; theliest'artistifii've been •• - •••• , -, • - . engaged to :Ova° citipittni ,Iltrticiirt.'end the .. • ~,, ...: • C ,_ ' . • "'Moak enitnent etiginvers are secured. 110' . = • ili O r 1 E. . .. . 'Pxpeiise will lie ipared to make 'Vie engiar - ,----• ' " - 4, , _s , logs ceeMtablo to Atriericnn art, and fully sat. Tir'ttittersigneA,"neftoill'eed . 7 4(0 7 0t•1e t ll 7- . 'isfitctorito'notateurii of fitstitlioirs taste. ~ ~ , , . . of . E autivelne assets in the intuits Angu s ' '' Anstcra and C/IN't Assenn Ail/inert bn liberal Lercritc;•Coltiniittee•of Tease to Ernie 'hitt' . ' "Nit•his, .' i l'his tifitlotn in published exclusively wifb, among. the eredithis ,end p a rties, entitll=tl for subscri b ers. thereto, will alietid at his otliec fii Gettysburg ) lice. 26, 1856.4-=',l7 •. , , Oil / Tuesday Mr I3M sta../ of arinurir,y itrxi, ni. ---- . ' --1' 16 O'clock, Alf, to discharge said •Autv, of . LADIES ) DRESS FURS. - which all/M1.06s 11/ interest urn hireby ifeitilibilt. ,---. .D. MCCONALGII'7 „ A hot Astefttrticut of new aid elegant 4. 1, a 0 r• ilk. FANCY FORS, "consisting, rin part, of Ono Frettch Sage, tr mire Silver and Rcick . --- ,,_,6 .• ," ------ !Martin, Geitett, and Trent h ('n ••; all new _ ..Itakti, liffiltite ' tandlahlfionnbir vottde into Ugteiille ti. Cults, 111,LACK. Silk and Slottelt.littltritAie late*. liictorines, Wrstkts, Mult,, , itoi4gaineetired 77/. style and at reditord itti‘iw• for stele at ttaid for sale 'at tlte Hat:and k .1. more e . C0.13+:.7.N 4 kAIXTON'S. • = K. S. M'Cut Air!. • - • .- , :" , Bige- l itiih? a !to tritrcka.s&kluskmt, Mink ' •'' • •:, • kfttet,•and Vnx Skins. , S. 11. WC. ' ' .= 42e0. , 196= 11i55.-3t.. : • ' •• : ' :Tastritgri !. .. OvioinFl!,•'• Drezuntr, . ~,. D ee. 9 6, 11356.---ta, II tLir 4 T 1 E 1 otliwing -In tletti l JI- Books mid Atemotts, hateire4them to the hand's of WA. o.llleCtal.anlv; qq fi* .t ,, ra:Als Testamentary on the Rohd e of . eollettion. Alt Vetnent nf"anyint 4.4.isktec ,tp• de t .e tk a e k um, . t 'costa, ate . Morintioy township, Adam, vottaty, return., an'ealt#######, 4 " WiSliell e- 13N ffi e "'" 4lavingt,ec granted tolls° anbeenbeirs, 'they - - 41e..reby give 'notice tonll Veneta indebted to • I ' , said Littrite to . rallana nettle Are lima; and 4 -4 , - 4 - • • ilitlseVaving'clailfiti are to tO, MINA °ln • them , i npedy autheittkat kir nettipineat. TAVERN . 1i1C1 4 10171.' • tIENRY :BENNOt ): • ' • &ea. , UCNILY Cleat ir . f4owitg Ariail#ololl#o keep Pub behe trot Parsed XlecutOr it lit )310htertthetaellt in t h e Coutti V '' lttoont)Oy township-411e -nauted of Adonis bgen t tiloli• 14 office 'with imtiona township . he ittiiiilatt outfitter tif , signitni,luld will lie' N0v.14. 11156.-64 presented itt tke ot georter Sessions, on r - rrhmliCr YO 'it ' OYSTERS, TRIPEIFIifi. 111:131S, 'JACOB Oxfordllorott g b. W Attgl . J. J. BALD IN, Clerk (11 Quarter SeS3lOllB, - Doe. 19, 1856.-3 t • • No.. 28, 18.56.—.4 3 r 3. 1 ' ; •, . ~ . _.- 3---r-t-13 • .. rraq usilors'igwed Iro teireti the teals re. - ' X iently ricinpiesl lorkir k Vrenige , Pry is • Cliumtiersbttg street and will istwayo it oft . DikYS I . FOR VRil NOW , TR pr, , r 4 Intl n ic , l• l •6" xs of ll* beat. 0 Y 8 T F RS, FUT, end Otlfer rettstadrr . *anti -; `AI •' •' . . ...tone 'up in le belt syle aid to palliate at .4.1"714148 " g" I" 11°°Kfil • 01 • t ragtia• Ileum. ' Call ra rod us e most tou • us,,, aroysyrra , o; be supplied' e Oilailiell MITE undersigned hos just received front in su c - h ~,,a utides a they v ,,, , , t c l ex t re . .1 tbo Cities a largo assortment of :GIFT- , • •• • ' ••• : )1 1 114TATIL BOOKS, suitable for presents, to which hts Gett e b e e Th rtide.a, 18,56 7 4 f • invites otteution—inoluding the .clto?oettonv .—;-,..-------- • ~ • 7----------• 'lola, Panto, nod Miscellaneous Hooka, got up . • . .iil IL CTllo X s, • in rich fancy binding and best letter press... „ k w.... . VOTIOE is bereby given to Oletitle-.."haA. Fancy Lielatiosiery. ~ . ...A. l era or thOFITYWRO: II 4 I bROAIM Gold Pena, Gold Pencils, Iloroiganidet, COMPANY, that an l' aerial, win be 11 04 Card cases, Pen-Kivas, &c. i t , ~....,„ .. tOr v. Accident and Twelve Plepcitsis for ia A, 1). BuEiitliS4 - v•.. - I , 4j u ot iub' o f i r r, ,p, at the Couvatousa'its ill iff i t Gwi.yaburg, Doe. 21 , . 1856.—tf ' ll'u !TBbuntA i re „ 4 „ weeli , ' /hi '121, 1 , low , a _....._.,......_. , ‘:- c. , ......• • • iiiiiii4 .rsa,, t ilk•. lyzavingta t . -:' and-4 O'clock, P. There will be e weattor tithe nekb4o4l, ( Ale_`Te lot of Trunks and Cupet Baill 4i on the game day. osid at the sate " awe, at 11. ‘ 411114 whieil will beaold lop t iota Toom ~,..1 . 1.4at ‘L ' • " a t • ' - ' • ,441,130N 1 8.. ' - 7 " : 7,- , hAvip witAA. seer. N. 73.-=•Ne" weetigelder is - eisiidok . tan .. ,‘ r .r• V TO V ISTat ' > 'to • voiallOibe . afore e/ertittef *on to Iwo „. it N •nnosuguty largo. -assortment, of lively sears an otty of Ike fruataknoola .” of Banati , dtapriptictitiant leceittett as . trittehitave hob attliad ti loy tinooPoitosif. - -•"444113014116 , ' , One.% 106,.-4s; ,• -. : 4 . • ' 0 .1 : .. - NOTICE.