The Franklin repository. (Chambersburg, Pa.) 1863-1931, December 02, 1863, Image 3

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    praile : of'olricers below the rank of General and
there were 1,834 killed, 13.700 wounded,
043 'missing. 03 the Confederate 'aide
there Wire killed' on ..the .field_ or mortally
wounded General s Armi.tead,'Barksd:tle;Dar
tiett,- Fender, Pettigrew and Semodes, and
"iintlnded lleth, Rood. Johnson, Kemper, Kim.
`all and Trimble, Of officers•below the rank of
and men; There were taken prisoners,-
e - elitrAng the wounded, 13,621. an amotint is
:trttained officially iof "the wounde4 in 'it con
djtion,to be removed, - of the Killed and niissing,
enemy lias made no retlirn. They are esti
:mike& from the be+4 date, which the nature of
gibe ease admits at 23,000 General itteade al
so captured.three cannons and forty-one stan-
dertls •
I mast leave to others, who eau do it from
pursonei obsereatitm, to deserihe the mournful ,
sepiietecle presented be these hilt-Bides. and
items - st the close of the tetritile . conflict. It '
wtilea saying of te,e Duke of Wellington, that
next:to a defeat, the saddest thing is a victory
,The-horrors of the Mittlefie d, after the contest '
i o'er--the sights and sounds of woe-=ter Fite
: - )hti - sw a' pail over the seene, which no _Words
Waal
,eilstinately depict to those who have not
witnessed it ; on which no one who has witnese
-ad it.. and ivbe has a heart in hie boeorn, can year
to dwell. One drop of balm
,aloite, one drop of
heavenly life-giving balm—mingles in Chia bit
,ter Op - of misery. s Seemly has the cannon'
• ceased to roar, when the brethren and sisters
: Christian benevolence, ministers of compas
sloe, angels of- pity, hasten to the ft. Id end the
.heSsiital, to moisten the parehed tongue, to
bind the ghastly - wolitlk to soothe the psrting
-Agonies alike of f. lend and foe andan catch the
irhiepsrell messages of love from dying lips.
miniature beck to my dem wife,
but do nit.-take it from my hoeom lilt I ion,
4;itter„" rdy sister aet to grieve' for:
'tae; I ant willing to die fur my county.", *•oh,
v es t my mother were beret" When, since
Aaron etoiid between the living' and the 'clead.
was„ there ever- a ministry like this ? It has
beat said that it ie a characteristic of Ameri
,
limas to treat wonien with a deference not paid
to them in any other country. I will not un
'eft:snake to say whether this is.eo,,but I:will say
- that since th•s terrih'e war has teen waged, the
Whnseti of the loyal States, if never before, have
evrtitied thee selves to our highest aAmirritine
••
find gratitude, alike those who at home, often
with - fingers unused to' toil, often bowed
_ 1 - ber eel h their own domestic caves, have p i&fer- •
need en amount of daily tenor not less than hers
' _Wife ,works for her daily bread, and thoSeWho,
l in the hospital and the tent of ths Sanitery Corn;
mission, have rendered services which millions
timid net buy. Happily the labor and tie 'serf'
lice ere their own reward. Thousands of mat
rens•and thoueande of maidens have experion
eed a delight in these homely toils and serVicee,_
eetoPered withywhicb the pleasures of the ball
'room and the opera house are tame and unsatiss
(eatery. This on earth is reward enough. but
rieber is in store for them. Yes, brothers,
siste r s of char icy, while you hied op the, wonuds
ilsthe'poor sufferers—the Immblest, perliape,
that: have shed' their blood fur the country—for
_
„ get not who it is that will hereafter say toy u,
• s-lea;rnuch as ye have done it unto one of the I
et, of these my brethren, ~e e leave dont: it unto
'
. And now,friends. fellow-citieene,O we stand
'emsongethese honored graves, ,The momentous
. .tete.ation presents whidh of the trio - pars
to the war is responsitee for all this:stiffer.
:Ing e -4er this dreadful ancriffse of life—the
' tewfut and constitutional Government of the
United States, or the ambitious men who have
.•
re belted against I say rebellel" against
although Earl Ruesell. the Bruises Secretary
of State for Foreign Affairs, in his recent tem
perate and Zwacilietory speech in eSmtland,
seems to intimate that no prejudice ought to
attach to that word, inasmuch as our English
''fttr
l erliers rebelled against Charles ,- and
ret It, Atittour Amerieun fathers rebelled
against George al. These certainly ate vene
*bite...precedents., but they prove only that it
- is jadt and proper to rebel against oppreeeive
• 'o..terninente. They do not prove th. t it was
,j,usttand. proper fur the sou of James II to re
het against George 1., or his grandsqn, Cherleis
'Edward to rebel against George Il ; nor. as
reeme to me, ought these dyenstiostruggles„
quarrels, he
ate, AntericartliniOn. corny
hese preceensoo
' prove`ehat it was just end -proper for the
Selisappeinted great men" of the ea-Wm-grew
hag Mates tp rebel against "fin reisseheneff
tient Government of which history gives us an
account," as the Vice President ut the Cooled
erecy; it November. 1860 charged thetn -with
doing.. They do not create a preinimptioa
Iteeu favor of the disloyal sh4veholdera of thh
igtkith who, living under 'a Goverdinent ' of
Which Jefferson Davis, in the teesion of 1860-,
q said, that it trim "the beet . Ge'vernment ever
laietituted by man, unexceptionably adminie
•
; fere4 and under which-the people have been I
- peospetoue beyond comparison with any - otter
people'whbse esreer has, been recorded in his
te:ey," rehelled against it, because their aspir
s lrfe Qiaiticisnr, himself among the rest, 'were
0
in danger of toeing their monopolynt its offf-,
ees. What would have been thoughteby
k art* posterity of the American rebellion ,
again 4 George 111 , if the colonists bad zit 'all
timers been mere than equally represented in
l'actitiment, and James Otis, anti Patrialt
ry,seied Washington and Franklin. and thee
AltubSes, and Hancock, and • JdTerson, and
ti.e' r of their stamp, had
,for two generations.
._ -enjoyed the coufidence Of the sovereign 'end ad-:
:nentetered,elae government of the Empire!-'.-
Whit would have been thotight of the rebellion
e . against Charles if Cromwell, and the men •
i ;welds School, bad been the responsible addle
ere , of that Prince from his accession to the
Osage, and then, -on account of a -* partial
e/lah.ge in tins ministry, brought his bead to
the block, rind involved the country in a deeo•
eating way? What would have been thought
„ „et', the Whigs of 1688, if they had themselves
• etempOsed the Cabinet of James IL, and been
the advisors of the measures and the , 'promo
'
tern or the policy, which drove him lotte exile?
Pi:whirrs of 1640, and the Virt.igs of 1681, ,
• rebelled against arbitrary pewee in „order' , to
e iettefstishoonstitutienal liberty If they had,
e siisen egaioet_Charles tied James,- been use these
1-e Monarchs favored equal !Vito, - end in order i
t e lletai,e/ree. ",for the first time in the 'hitter,' of
A ttle,Woild" - "t9 establish an oligarchy' founded
on ktie doter 'scoot) of 'slavery;" - they: would
'elettlY hare furnished-a precedent forsthe' rah- •
-: de oVthe Scotti e but their -cause would,- - not
Initial:teen sustained by the eloifitenee. of =Pylei
oria g i ncterra. nor sealed withthe .blood of
:• , eflaerpton or Russell. '- "
: I call the war which the Confederates. are
rsiiietti g , zrgal on the Union .a. "Rthelliori;" bb-"
°"" it is one, s and in grave -matters His ;beat .
10 call - things by their-right names. The Coh
..stol4loFltof the United:States puts etrebellioti7,
a n per'tvith "Invaiion.' e r— The Consti;tati9n
•• "40 WY - , :not - only of Englend, bet of MititY cite ,
' Sited country, regard theta : in the same light ;
etrlrither they ,regard theyibel in_ arms, as
. far
4 -- -- , T.raeethsti the alien, enemy. .To levy ,tvar
awaiast •tbe United States: M e ttle constitutional
eiethaitiOn of-treason, and thet:*--crime is, , -, by
-011 0.olvilised Government, regarded-- as the
ebightist which eitlien - or subject can oomnsit4--
.: 1 4 4 .3tontent with the sanction of human ins - ,
c ; Alf all the crimes against the law of : the
Up:l . h Is - singled' out for the denunciations: of
s•zoll4 1 011 The Litanieri of every church, in
0 11 ° 10 bdoln. as for AS 1 am aware, from. rim
e , Metropolitan Cathedrals of Europe etethelnein
blest Missionary Chapel in the Islam%pi the
ilk conalsr with the Church •of England in
imploring the sclvereign of the Univeri3e. by
the most awful adjurations which thelleart of
Mon can conceive or his Jenne ,utter, do de
liver us from "sedition, privy conspiracy, and
rebellion." And reason good ; for while a re
bellion against tyranny—a rebellion designed.
after prostrating arbitrary power, to estiablish
free governascur onjhe basis of justice and
truth, is an enterprise on which good then'end
angels may Jonk with complacency—ad unpro
voked rebellion of ambitious men agitinst a
beneficent G 'vertu:Mut, f* the purpose—the
avowed purpose—of establishing, *ending
and perpetuating any form of injustice and
,wrung, is an imitation on earth 'of that first
fool revolt of "the Infernal Serpent,' which
emptied Heaven of one tbird.part of its sons
Lord Pomo, "in the true marshaling of the
Sovereign degreesof-honor," assigns the first
place-to "the Corufitores Impetforum, !founder*
of States and Commonwealths," and t rtruly -to
build up from the discordant elements of - our
i tours; the paseions, the interest, land, the
opinions of the i div ideal matt ;• thel rive ries
of family, clan, and'tribe ; ittfluenc4 of cli
mate ; the accid. nts of 'peace and whr accu
mulated fur ages—to buildup from these of
tentimes wetting elements, a well cdmpacted,
prosperous, and .powerfal State, if its were to
be accomplished by one effort, of in tine gener
ation, would require a more than mc+tal skill -
To contribute.in somenolable degree to tIN,
the greate-t work of man, by wise and patriot
ic counsel in peace, and loyal
,heroisth in war,
is as high ay human merit can well rise, and far
more than to hay of those whom Bacon as
signs this highest, place .of honor4Roictulus,
• Cyrus, Cmsax, Ottoman ' Ismael—it VS due to
our Washington as the founder of the Ameti
can Union But if- to - achiever or _help to'
achieve this greateet work - of man's W.adorn and
virtue:, gives title to a place amonglthe whiff
beneftleturs, rightful' heirs of the benedictions ,
of mankind, by equal reason' ehal- I the hold'
bad men, who seek to undo the Debts work,
Etierthes haperiorum destroyers of States, who
fur base and selfish ends rebel against bent-S
-cent guverantents, Beek to-overturS wise con
stitutions, lay 'powerful RepublicanUnious at
the toot oh foreign thrones, bring oti - Civil ...end
foreign wardinarehy at home,Motation abroad,
desolation, rain---by equal reason, i say, yes,
-Ji thousand fold etroneers shall they
_inherit
the exact atious of the ages. • i '
Bat to hide the deformity of thedkime under
the'cloak of thatsophietry - which imakes the
worse appear the better Teuton; we are told by
the leaders of the rebellion; that in -our com
plex system of Govjoinent, the seplarate States
are "Sovereign," acid that the ceritral power
is only an "agency" established by these Sov
ereigns te_manage certain affairs, 'vthich• they
could not so couveuieutly' admin i ster them
selves. It happens unfortunatelyor this the
orythat the Federal Constitution ( which has
been adopted by the people of eve State of
the Union, as much as their min tate Consti-
Usti, as have been adopted, and isliieclared to
be paramount. to them,) no -r iwherti,-riscurizes
the States as "Sovereigns," in ' faht,; - that by
their name-, it does not recognise Ithem at all ,
while the authority established by that instru- ,
mem is Ts cognized,in ini text,net is tin "agar-
oy," but as "the Governmentof !the United
States." By that Canstitution....merenver,
which purperts in its preamble r m_be ordained
and established by "the Peopip•Of the . Ut.ited
States," it is expressly- provi.4l "that the
members of the State Logislatnre, , and all the
executive o ffi cers shall be bound In oath or af
firmation to support the Constitution." Now, 1
it is a common tang,. tiriasi!ait'sfit vernments,
for.an agent to be,bound by oathi i to be faith
ful to hie sovereign, but I Diver eat d before
of sovereigns being hound by (hail to be faith
ful to their agency.
,
'Certainly 1,04,m deny th at the se parate'
States are clothed- with sovereign powers for
the administration of Iscalstfairts It is one
of the most beautiful features of our mixed
system of government, but it is - , equally true,
that, in' adopting the Federal Constitutien, the
States abdicated by eipress !enunciation, all
the must important functions of !National Sov
ereignty, and by one comptehetive selfdeny- •
ing clause, gave op all tight to ontraveuelhe
Constitation 'of the IluiiedtStatetk Specifical
ly. and by enumeration, 034 ilencionctd all
the.must important prerogatives ] of Ind pen.
dent. States, tor peace and for'etar, the right
to keep troops or ships of war i 4 time of peace
or to engage-in war unless.- actually invaded ;
to enter into•cempiict with too her . State or
,
foreign potter; to Jay soy dot or tonnage,
'or any i mpost on exports or imports without
the conceal Of Cti,ngress; 'to: ens into a treaty
alliance or confederation ; to grsitt letters of
marque and reprisal, and to ems bills of 'credit;
while all these powers and mey others are•
T i t
expressly vested in the Genera ,. Government
_Co ascribe so,poitical communities; thus,. Jim
irod'in : their Juritidletiowho 'marmot' even
establish a post-office on their own sail—the
character of independent soserAguly, and to
reduce a national- org Inisatiott, clothed -with
all the transcendent powers of Government to
the name and condition of an "'gency", of the
State,' prove - S nothing' but 'that the logic of se
cession is on a par with its loya ! lty and patriot-
Oh. but "toe reserved right!!" And what of
the reserved rights T The te l killi amendment
of the Col:l3titMlol3 supposed eo provide foi"re
served rights" is . constantly !misquoted. By
la c
-the eamendment ;, -"the pp,toeri not delegated
to the Belle:id Settkes-rihr • peek hited by. is •to
the people of the States are ler ved to the
States respectively,or Co the -.people.".-- .The
"powers" reserved' mast of CoUrse belarch = as
could have been'hot-were not delegated . to the
,;aces—could Ih ,ve been but were not probib'-
ited to the States—bat to speak of the riyht
of an individual Sytte to secede, as a power that
could have been though it was not delegated
to the United ! States is simplel nonsense.
But waving, this obvious lbsurdity, can it
need a serious argument to prove that there
can be no State right k to ente ( l into Ft new con
federation reserved under a onstitation,which
expretisty prohibits a State "to enter into any
treaty, affiance or coufediration." or any
"agreement or compact with, another State or
a foreign power ?" To any ,at the State. may,
•ey enacting the preliminary arce of secession,
acquire the right to do the ,prohibited things
o say for itistance i; that though the States,
in Mining, the Cointittition. delegated to the
United Stales apd.probibilect to themselves the
power of declaring war, thexi i e we' by %pea_
fl t.op reserved to each State e right Of seeed
log and then 4eolariog war; that though they
.expressly rohibited to the States, and delega
ted to the' United States thel entire treaty-ma,
king power, they.reserved by implication,, for
an eitiress reservation is not pretended, to the
'indivitlnalStatee; to Floridelf or instance, the
right to secede' and, then to make a treaty a ith
Spain, retro ceding that Spiinish colony, and
thug surrendering to a fereign,poler the key
to the Gulf of Mexico—to Maintain.
,proposi-:
done like these, with whatever affected seri
otisuess it is done,appears tome egregious tri
fling.
Pardon me, my friends, tor dwelling on these
wretched sophistries. But; it is the se • w hi e li
conducted the armed busts lot rebellion to - your'
doors on the terrible and glorious dupe of July
and whioh,bave brought upon the 'whole land
the econrge Of an aggreeive and wicked war
-1 a war which can ham !y:q other '`termination
oolupatiple trial ,t hp peiplaaene safety and w el,
-fare of the country, ,but the Complete destrne
Ihei:Stanklin; itterfoit.;
Lion of the military-power' of the enemy: - I
hate on otherloccasions, attempted tri show
that to yield to his demrnds and ncknowledliC
his independence, thus resolv ing the Union at
once into two hostile governmeats,iwith'a ner
tainty'of further disintegration,. would amain!.
late the strength and the influence of the, cotin4
try, at a member of the family of nations, of
furl to foreigti Powers the opportunitYand the
temptatien fly disastrous and humiliating -in
terferenee in our affairs ; - wrest from the Mid
dle-and Western States some:of tbeir greatrint
oral toilets to the sea, and of their , most , im
portant links of - internal coMmunication; de
price the commerce and navigation of the coun
try of two-thirds of one seacoast and of the
fortresses which protect. it; not only so. Out
would enable each individut.l State, some of
them with white population 'equal 0." h go6B
Northern county, or rather the dom nant party
in each State,to cede its territory, its hartiOrs,
its fortresses. the, ouths of its rivers , to . arty
foreign power. It cahoot be that the peOple
of the loyal States—that twenty:two Million's
of grave prosperous freemed,will. for --the.
temptation of a brief truce in an :eternal bor.-,
der war, consent to . this hideoUs national . sui
cide.
Do nerlhink tbnt I exaggetatelbe Consequen
ces of yielding to- the demands of the leaders
of- the rebellion • underetate- them. They
reqtrire of-us not only all the sacrifices I hare
mime 1 , not only to cede' to - them-La- "foreign.
and hostile power—all this territory of ' the
trite(' States • t present occupied ,by the rebel
fo es, but the abandonment to. them of the
vokit regitiiis we have rescued from theirgieep,
of Nlorytrind, of a pelt of Eastern Virginia and
the wholeof Western ,Virginia, the iseacoast of.
Nerth and South ,Carr Una, gentucky, Tenses'--•
see and Missouri, Arkansas:am - I the largerpor.
ittriiit' Mississippi and Lottisetint, nioit'"6l:
wit oh, with the exception of lawle'ss
-foere is not a rebel in arms; in' • all of whiph
the great majority.of-the,peopla.are loyal to
the Union. r We must give back, too, the 4elp-
Inss color' d pnpulatiou, thousands of whom. are
periling their lives in the.ranks of bur armies,
lo a bondage rendered tenfold more bitter by
the momentary enjoyment cf freedom. Final
ly, we most surrender every man in - the South
eru country, white or- black, who bas 'moved a
finger or spoken a word for the- restoration bf
the Colon,: to a reign of oerror as • rernorse'ess
as that of Rut espierre, which has been the
chief insttrument by velvet' •the rebellion hes
Men organized and sustained; arid has already
filled the prisons or the 3..utb with noble Men,
whose only mime is thatthey are not traitors
The South is full of such men Ido not 'be
iieve there has beeu a day since the election of
President, Lincoln, when - , if an ordinage of se . -
ession could have been kait ly submitted to the
'mass of the people, in any single Souther'._
State, a mojarity of ballots would hale beer,
given io its favor. No, not in South Carolina
It is not possible that the majority of the peo
ple even of that State, it permittel , without
tear or,favor. to give is ballot - on the question,
would have uhatoloned a leader like Petkro,
and all tite memories • of the IGadedetis;- the
Itutledges and the CotesvirorthlPickneys of the
revolutionary and censtitational,age, to follow
the agitators of the, present dray.
Nor must we be deterred ft-owl - he vigorous
prosecution of the war, by the suggeetioni,von
tinually thrown out by the rebels hod thi,
who eympai hire with them, that, however i
might nave been at an earlier iste.gethere has
been. engendered by the operations of the wet
a stet e'of exasperation and bitterness
_which
iodepsiolent of all reference t-3 the original na
ture of,matters in controversy, will. -forever
prevent the restoration of, the Union, and thr
return of harmony between the two great 'sec
tions of the country. This opinion:l take
_ti
be entirety without foundation '
No man can deplore more
,than I do the
miseries of every• kind, unavoidably incident
to war. Who could stand on this spot en
call to , mind the iceues of the first. and third co
July with any other feeling? A sad fore
tioding of what would ensue; if war shoal , '
break out between North and South, ha
haueted me through life, and led me perhaps
too long to tread io the path. if hopeless- coat
promise, in the fend eteleavdr to conciliar
those Ole were pre-determined not to be con
ciliated. But it is not true, as is pretended b 3
the rebels and their sympathizers, that the win '
has been carried on by the United Mates i th
ou t entire reg:nrd to those temperaments whieb_
are enjoined by the low of nations, by our mod-'
ern civilization, anfby - the spirit of ,Chtistinni
ty. It would be quite easy to point out, in the
recent military - history of the leading European'
r,ower,-,, nets of violence and etnelty,ll in the,
prosecution of their wars, to which no parallef ;
can be found among us. ha fact when we non=
eider the peculiar bitterness with which civil'
wars are almost invariably w -ged, we o rnay _
justly boast of - the manner in which the United •
States have carried on the contest. It is, of
course. impossible to prevent the lawless ac's
of strugglers and deserters, theec'c neional
naval Bumble proceedings of subordinates on
distant' stations ; but I do not believe there
in, in' ali•history, the record of a civil war of
soon gigantic dtmennioue, where so little hits
been done in the spirit of vindictiveness, as
in this war, by the Government and command
ers' of the United State- ; and , •
this notwith- -
standing the provocation given by the Rebel
Government by assuming the reeponsibiliij
of wretches like Quantrell, refusing quarters
to colored troops, and scourging and Csllinf
into slavery free colored men from the North
-who fall' into their hoards, covering the sea
with' pirates,nnd starving prisoners of war to
death.
In the next place. if there. are any present
wholielieve that, in addition to the., effect of
the military operations of the war, the contis
eit.tion acts and the emancipation - proclamation*
have embittered the rebels beyond the possi=
bility of reconciliation,. I would request them
to reflect. that the tone' of the rebel leaders and
rebel press was , just tti bitter in the 'first
months of the war, nay before a g"n was fired,
as it is now. There were speeches made in
Congress in the very lust session before the
rebellion, so ferocious, as to show that their
authors were under the influence of a real fren
zy. At the present day, If there Is any die
criminatirm made by the Confederate press in
tbe,affected scorn, hatred and contumely with
which every shade of opinion and sentiment in,"'
the loyal States is treated, the bitterest con ,
tempt is bestowed upon those -at the North
who still speak the language of comprothise t
and tab condemn these measures of the Ad-t
ministration which are alleged'to have render-t
ed thb return of peace hopeless.
No, my friends,- that grecions - Providence
vrlitch overrules'all things for best, from te.ein
tng evil still educing good, has so canstituted i
Our natures, -that the violent excitement of the;
priithiefls'in one direction, is g , nerally followed
by a reaction in an opposite. direction, and the
sooner for the violence, If it view - not so, if
linger produced abiding anger, if hatred caused
undying 'hatred, if injorlea inflicted and retali
ated, if necessity led to new retaliations, - with;,
forever accumulating compound interest of re
venge; then the world thousands of years ago,
would hitve turned into an earthly bell, and- 1
the nations of . the - earth would have been re
solved into 'clans of Judea and demons; eto},
forever- warring with his neighbor. , But it'
not so; all history teaches a different lesson.-
The wars of the roses in England lasted an et .
,tire generation,, from the battle of lit "Atha!
in 1455. to , that of Somata) Field in 1485,-
Speaking of the fonner Hiune says: "This WI ;
the first blood spilt' in:that fatal quarrel, whir „
was,not 0144. in 'less than a course of flirt
~ ` 1314, ctilbAT .2„ -186a4
years; which WO egiudizeil by twelve - pitched
battiest which opened a sceue - of eitntordirtai*
fierceness and cruelty;
,is computed to havA
cast the liveS of eighty prince: of the
and :almeit - entirely annihilated' the ancient
.Englund. —The strong attscliments
Wbich.at that,titne men of the same kindred
bole to each other, and the *vindictive spirit
which was tensidered a pointpoiritof honoi, tender
ed the gteat - families' implacable in their re•
sentments and. widened every moment the
breach 'between the parties." Such was the
state of things in England; under-Which an'en
tire generation grew up; but when Henry VII
in whom the titles of the two houses were uni
led; went' up'to London' after t 6 battle of
Bosworth -Field to. mount the - throne, he was
everywhere received with joyous acclamations,
;•as one ordained and Sent.frOin Heaven tcipot
an end todis'sen Huns". which had 60 long
afflicted the country.
•
The great rebellion in England, of the seven
teenth century, after iong and angry premcird
tionS, may he said to have - begun with - the
calling of the long pull:meta in 1640; and ;U
have ended. with the return of Charles 11 in
I66o—"twenty years oe disCind, - contliet, - and
civil war; of confiscation, -plunder, havec;
Proud hereditary Peerage,tratupted in the duet;
a national- ,church,
,overturned, its clergy beg
'gared, inost eminent prelate put to death; a
mtlititry;deSpotista etutddisheif on the; of
Ninonareby try bleb, had unt , sisted beven bithdred
years,, and the legitimate soverei g n brought to
the block; 'the &teat families. which adhered to,
the :king proseribed impoverished. ruined;
prisoners of.,War'solii to slavery.in the". Weit
Indies; io-a word.verything,,that can embitter
and madden coritauling fationS. ; Such was
the state'of thinks for twenty year, rind yet •
by no gentle transitionc , Wit stbldenly arid
"when The restoration of iiff l tirs appeared nu,st
hopeless," the Son of the behemied'soyereikn,
was•hrought bliek. in 'hisq . athWs blood stained
I throne, with-such -"nnexpressihle and ertiveL.-
s,tl as led the merry monarch to exclaim
t, "he doubted it had been his own fault he had
heen ' absent so long, lot he•aa* nobody :who
Et did nut ptote.st he had even wished for his re
turn." "in this wondetful: Inaanei;': says
1 'Clarehden,"and expedition.
t did "God put an end to a tebelliohy that. bad
I raged near twenty-years, and had been carried
on with all the horrid circumstance-sof murder,
&vastatiort. and parricide, that tir6 and g) f void,
i•w the hands of the most ovickeAmen ih the
world (it is apyalist that, is speaking) could
be in.trumenta of, almost 0 the desolatitia
Of two kitigdqms. and . the e.ictledfug defacing
", and defOrming of the tnitd. By these rematk
; aisle steps...did the merciful hand of god,in this
short space of time; not only bind up and heal
all those wounds. but oven toads theizeiti as
ondiscernable - as; in respect of the deepnebi,
iVds possible,. u Welt was a glorious addition to
de;il....trance."-;
In Gerumn i y, the wars of.' the Reformation
and of Charles V. in the sixteenth century. the
thirty years' war in the stfcenteeuth century,
the seven years war in the eighte,eti6 century,
Jot to speak of other leas cetebrated coniebts,
-ntaileti upon that country all th' miseries of
Intestine strife thr more thattithree centuries
At the close of the last named war, •'an ofll%
cer," says Archenboli i "rode through seven
villages inlßesse, and found in theta 'but one
u'utpa.: being," More than three hundred
coniptehendea in the taapire,
fermented with'tbe fierce pissions of proud arid
etty States; At the commencement Of this
,yeriod, the , castles of robber Counts frowned
spun every 'hill top; a dreadful secret tribunal
.roze the hearts of men with terror throughout
the land., religious hatred
,mingled its bitter
roison in the - seething cauldron of political
.nirno.-ity; but,/ an these deacily,
.entreffies be
ween the_,States of 'Germany, scarcely the
nemurt remains. There is no country In,the
.verld in which the' I sentiment of national
brritherh&id is stronger.
In Italy,. on the breaking up of the RoMan
Empire, society might be said to be resolved
ntafts- originaleleinepts, into ohor,tile atoms,
chose only movement iiiimtht of mutual re--
?nlsion. anthie.Ns barb 'liana had di:strbyed
he old organixations and coverect the land
.vith a mereiles, fetidaiirn. As the new civili-
;.ation grew up, under the wing of the
;he noble families and the wailed towns fell
in:o conflict with each other: the sacu
ar tid of Pope and Emperor scourged the
and; province against province; city against
.ity; street against street waged remorseless
war ngpinst each other noixi father, to• son, till
Dante was ali!e to till his imaginary-,hell with
:be real demons of Italian history. Snferovious
had the factions become, that t he,g - r'ear poet
tilde himself, the glury of his native, city and
of his native language, was by a decree^oi the
municipality ordered to be burned alive, if
tunnd in; the city of Florence,. But thase dead ly
feud, and hatred yielded to polittcal iniluencea.
as the hostile cities were grouped intu.Statas
under stable Gbvernments; thii fingering tradi
tions of the ancient animosities gradually died
away, and now Tuscan and 'LoinhArd,Sardinian
and Neapolitan as if to shame the dS;zenerate
sons of America, are joining in one cry fur an
united Italy.
Tai France.not to go back to the civil wars of
the leagiie in the sixteenth centdry'arid of the
Fionde iu the seventeenth; nut toepoitit of the
dreadful scensir — th-t onghnnt the kingdom,
which followed the • revocation-of -the edict of
Nantes: we have, in the greatrevolution which
commenced at •:- ( the Close of the last century.
seen the .filood hounds of civil strife let louse
as rarely before-iu the history of the world.—
The reign of terror established in Paris, stretch
ed its 'bloody Briarean arms tri every city Mid
- village in the land, and if the most deadly
_ feuds which ever divided a people 'had the
power to cause permanent alienation and ha... •
tred, this surely was the 'occasion. Rut- far,
otherwise the-fact: lit seven years from the
fall of Robespierre,the strong r arm of the
youthful couquerer biought order nut of the
chaos. of crime and woe:-.laenbilis whfise hands
were scarcely cleansed from the best blOod of
, France met the returning emigrants, whose
estates they had confiscated and whose kindred
they had dragged' to the guillotlhe in the Im
pet ial teehanitiers;- , and when,' after another
turn of the wheel of fortune, Louiri-X.VILI was
restored to his,throtie, 'he took the regicide,
Fo':che, who had. votedlor his brother's death,
to his.Pabinet and confidente. , -f
. The people of loyal America will never take,
ta their cvnfide.car-adtait,-again lb a share
,in their Governthent the hard -hearted men.
whose cruel lust of 'poser lias'brOughl this
,desolating War upon the.land, but there is no
personal bitterness felt eVen.against theta
They
. may live; if they can bear to live-after
wantonly causing the deatW of se; manythtius
and fellow men; they may live in eat
ty beneath _the shelter of the Government they
haire sought to oVerihroW; or' they may fff'to
the protection of the Governments of.Europe—*
some of them are already there, seeking,-hap.
pily in vain, to obtain the aid of foreign petyl
errs in furthe!ratitte of their own treason; There.
let -thetia stay. The humblest dead . soldier,
that, lies cold nnti,stifl in, his grale lefore. us,
itt ; an object
- of envy beneath the clods that
cover him. in comparlsonWith i the litilng• Man
Who is willing to grovel at'thelocit:of aforeign
throne for: assistande in compassing, tho ruin of .
,his country. . . - .
But the hotti is coining, tild•tiati 'is;" when
the power uf the leaders of therrebelllon to de,
bade and and inflame must cease, :There is no
bitterness on the part of tip - masses. The,peo
ple of the • 'South are not '•goinetti'iliigd an"
eternal wriGfortheivretehettpretexts by which.
this rebellion is. sought to • be ) The
bonds that nniio, us as otinpoople,a giibsfantiaj
'cOmmiinity'otorigltt, languilge;•belief arid law, -
(the four greai ties that holdtthe fee/Alois of
men together,) common; national and political
interests;
,a common history; a common ;pride
in a glorio4,4neeitry: rtConimen . ancestry; a
common - bite - rest in this , gritat heritage of tires
sings: the very geoFraphie,al jfe4tires., o o - tir
country; the mighty rivers that CrosAtte lincs
of 'olmate: anitthus farilthite the; interchange
igi , natural atui industrial products; white the
wonder-world arm of the engineer has,levei
montitaln walls which separate the: East .
and West,_ eon:Melling your own Alleghenies.,
my Maryland and Pennsylvania friend's, to
open wide their , ever lasting - doors to the chariot,
wheels of-. tra* - aro, travel; these bonds of
Union are Of nerenidal force arid energy; while
the causes of alienistiim are imaginary, faceti
ons. and transient. The heart of tiro;people
NOrth and South is fiat 0 - MlYr - don. Indications
too-plain to 'be mistaken, anneamee - ilie fact,
both in the gist' anththe'. West of the States in
rebellion. ; In • 35orth Carolina. mid Arkansas
the-fatal charm is broken. and
Little flock' the UPS of ',tiiest litid brave Men
are unsealed.and' the huhmendent.pressis tmlim
haring its arylirry. The. weary. masses of the
people. are' yearnlug - to see .the dear old flag
floating 'again upon'ttie capitols. arid' they sigh
for the return:of .peate,,prtmperity, and liappi
nei-Ovhich they enjoyed under a.Gnvernment
whose power was felt only in it blesSings.
•
' And nob, friends, fellow 'citizens of Gettys
burg and:Pennsylvania,' and , yotiifrontarernoter
-States..let-Me,agaiu invoke your benediction,
as_we part, on these honored 4r6.veB. You feel.;
though' the oeoislimlS'motirilfitl;that it is good
to be here. .‘Yoli,feel,that it 11 , 4. greatly. : ,sat
spicions for the cause of-the country thr4 „the'
men of the East and the men of ; the: . West, the
inert` 'of niiieteghTaiSter States, stood side by side
on the, perilous, ridges. ,of „ the battle.--,
You now feel,,- it 'A mew bond ,of union
that they shall ' lie side by side'
till' a clitridonr louder than'that which "marshal
ed them to the combat shall aWitlietheitc;blurs-,
,bers. God bless the Union, ; it, ii dearer- to_ us
'for theblOod tliose; bra`v . e Men titied' in' its
defence. The spots oh which they stood And
fell ; these pleasaptlieights ;:tbe-tertile - plain,
'streets
theth ; the thriving village," : whose,
streets so lately rang - With the strange': din o(
war; the fields .Wyond the: ridge; where': the,
noble Reynolds hekl the advancing foe,at bay:,
ond , whiie he gave up his own life, assured by'
his forethought arid self sacrifice. the tricirriph
of the two succeeding days ; the lietle__•streams
„which wind through thetills: on whose banks:
in after times, thgwondeiing ploughman', -
thin Up; 'with the rude. Weapons of savage Wa'r
fare, the fearful‘mibbiles'ot modern artillery,
the Seminary Ridge, t he,peach.orchard, came ,
tery,,Ciilp. and Wolf Dills, Round Tqp,,
tie Round 'rop,'hinnbl4 - hatnet. henCefotWord
dear and famous': ;: no lapse of time.uo distance
of spece,,shalkearasei you • to, be forgotten. °7 —
"The whole earth,": said Pericles, as he stood
over th — e'Jernains . ' of 'his :fellow-citigens who
had fallen:ln the first ye:arqethe,Peloponession
War, ••the whole earth is the .sepulchre of. il•
Instrious men " time, he might haye add
ed: is the milleiduin of their' glorY: 'Surely/1
would -d o no, injustice.to the other noble achlei
anents of the war t which. have retitgited/sueli
horwr on both 'alms of the service, an have
entitled the 4irnlies and- navy United
States,: their officers arid men, to the .Wartneet
_thanks mud. the richestrewards which a grate'
-_thanks
people - can pay. ttit thef,J ardsnre; will
join us iifsaying. us Weibitl lareyrell to tlre Ansi, '
of these Martyr ~ :herOes„ that wheresoever'
throughout ,World the accounts
of this great warfare Eve read,and down to the
last period of recorded tirtie, .in the 'glorihus
annals of cloy cornmeal country, there will be
no brighter page than that whioh,,relates Tuts_
BATILNI OF gETTVSBMIG. ;
Eng anb ,fancg Zonbs.
aIi,BAA.RG-li,INS' , • ,-,•
1,-)I FROM ;YEW YORX A UCT-1021 7 41 l•
. - ,_
, . „ :1
- . AT WA LLAtE r "B,._
oogNute Or MAIN AND QUEEN STIVEICTII:
Now style MosamSignes, -
. Diana chehmFlaid, '
Twilled Mosambiquee for trarelliag dressee, ,
Superior Muilin Detainee in colors, - -
,
- Colored Lawns aid Crape de parry,' _
Black Silk,superiar quality. -
Superior oyons'llaitzemer Silke.jsublhaettualittst '
• A large lot Of Linen Cambric Ilmlkerchiefe„
A letige lot of Iheli Litien,
jaconet to/hue, now.M.lle, •
500 Dozens :adios. Misses and Hon's Cotton . nee ,-
White Li nen and Cotton Puck, . . -. :
Superior French Doeskin. , .
Superior Solid color .Yointille Fig Silks,- : ,
Sulteriorlire4 Leonora% •
- SUperio Grey Piipliis. •
Bit gustily ll rep Leonora*,, t . -
Silk Si eck . Ties and Collars
Wiwi and Misses' Fillet Mitts; ' .
'
Marseilles Vesttngs, .
, . . . .
Super Ladies and \f ens' Kid Gloves,
Ilandeome Now style Prints and Oinghatos: I
\ -,. , C Nit P,E T 5 .
Brumelg:Velret:Ttiteelplifsop . eijot . tinsjand ootnroor
Carpet,
Four-four ft ve-four Cecoa and Canton 1114114,',
4-15-4 5-4 S-410-4 Floor Oil Cloths,
Sriperfo* Rultifig Cloths,
Bonnet Ribbons,
' lialniortil iltirts.
B Krirr SKIRTS!!!!
soNts ,
OBLERRATUD-" NE PLUS ULTRA" SKIRT, .
SOLD, ONLY AT
No. 17 NORTH Bth St.; PHILADELPHIA.
Skirts of all lengths; am any :die weist inaTti to Oran;
and satisfuotio it guarranteed. ,
Ladies, 'Mises and Children's Skirts orivOrY site and
shapn,constantly on hand. t • „ -
Beery SkiiK warraatf.cifor Six Months.
READ HOW WE DO BUSINESS:
We do cud mane tiny theap rk-itts Inthe con:Mama ntoep
tation of the terra, bnkwQ m mike -
PIE CHEAPEST SKIRTS 'ItADE,
because we make .
THE BEST AND DEFY communoy
We warrant every skirt wo sell to bo (meetly as rep
resented. We make all we sot!, Anil knowing how thei:
are mute we guarantee them .with full confidence. if
we ani a ball skirt ice toil/ exeltairgi it for a ratio onr , aitit
if Oicy get oat of orcier.ol• break toithilt
,!nolttis,i toe
will repair them ,free bf Charge.
-IVe mean to giro our conbiniers full satinfactien, , bat,
we cannot do so and compete with the low priced . +tootles
goods, Wedepend ontirely:npoa the' krlpertority of :lbw
goods we offer, and the fairness, of our teethed of &risk
buninenv. '
(Wein left , kt ouryoca's Book, their*,
DIREOTIO2I 4 B FOR 31SASURE3fENT.
Take the exactsize of the 'waist, without' arty ttiliniv:'
sac.. The exact-length required, end the size arootad,
the bottotn spring. Also if the skirt is to be largt,
venal, or medium size at the top,tinti whether a tranUfr
plain round Ail t, ,".3.1. A. JOlsi EA, •
Nott worth Sth St ,PlOidelphia.
Over the Waxidgwv.,
mug 184 f
VAT& AND WINTER
NFITLY.—Mits. E. Catovnwinatd inform her `file* mai the Fuldi,e)eaeraliy, that she has just,retnrtmlfroln
New York and hti .
rtdelphla with a large , . and - vaffed
sortraent. of and TIITIC,y Goods, Ladies .Dress .
and Cloak Trimmingri, dc., k:: Her asedrtnient consists ler
velvet )3 4 , n i tots . • , do Idinirning Colber t ', ,
Silk do Ribbons, Silks and Velvets ,
Eittavr do- 'Velvet Itibbonsti ro
Mourning do , • , „BngAish, Fropett,and
Ladles Bydhl Bats -" • can FlOwers, .• • '
do BPanish• dry- - ; ; ; •
dO "do Rouohes ' •
Children's WoOli Hoods, Frent/3 tdiint.; -
do Fancy do Zephyr Wool, , ,
dtr lEttibroiddrodCayieghettria`d tern - t
- rfeatiietts r .
Iteod t1064 , 1i ilkurTiltrintiogn
Plmiot.:,4tll:2.colore Pre4SitneY
.4344'•, -
Ladles Dress Cape Belts apd Belting
' I.do Mourning Oar) Silk Card aud Tisteldri 1 ; •
stamping f,lr Braiding or e,t
Rnahroder,y_dono prctswr
All artrinvaed to call: - . 'Oct '2,4 Itt'bra'
T W,i GENTLEMEN'S.
vy 8T0.1114, and, swum _TIAN LTAAb;
TOM; No'. 814 Cheetnut Vtibet; roar dC4:;,ri3 beTher Oat
Kloptinititel,P;Plantelplito. F'aTAcniaritstentnnvgivint
to ordereil Shirts. A. perfect gparanteed.. tereone at
a dietancd can 'order by ant coUotvittr Mita Ateasarea
Size around the Neck ;
;,1 .
u. Chent'utianr the Arnie -"
; q--Watett.. ,
'e d Wrist
..I,4 l gth oft A.rsont a rtfroinFextrepf back.
to middle et nd :
liag . tlfof bidet , : , , 3
Writ
. 2 2-
. .
..Tr E N + NEDY & NILL:---La to
111 k undororgned have associated them
selves in the pra . ctice ofitlteilliv In the Boveral - 034 , 1 1 fir
Frank , in Count OlDre on - Market Stinot, in the roota•
heretofore occupied by T. B. Kennedy. - - •
T. B. KVINZD:I.
T.I. NILL.
June 17, 'Kt
A_ TTORNEY AT LAW.=fl.
SON', REILLY, .4a3rney at Letc.:-.Crice on Miit ,
kei z.it. formerly occupied by Reilly areal,
pli site the Court Ronne, Chatubertiburg, pa. All 16gell
hueinnvii elitrusted to him 'will receive prompt ritteathiell•
lie will peittict in adjoining Counties: Junel7.
13=
QTUMBAUGII & nigwART-,
nrßvs at Law. Chamberslwrg. Pn.. give their nigh,
viamt atipetion tr the Praetiro et' their Ptofeeeion. !)I'.
John s teu . Ar t. a ge nt fat% procuring Minty MOrMitt
Pengions, and ertenratma of - Pay, • A.
.I!Ur Office in the Town tint. - Jnne
f.-& W. S. STENGER, Attar
, ner at Law, Chambershairg, Pn, Colleetkilit
promptly. ritteaded to. W. Stenger, District „ Attar
ney and nzeilt. fur procnring Pensions. 'Bonney 3101
and Arrears of ray. Office in rtnnklin Bnildin
door from the corner. 'June it
NAT EVERETT; Attorney at Lau.
011ie° in Mrs.Sitr.d'is dwelling..4llrectly 4pp,,
site the C- - nrt.flonse, Chambersbnrg, Pa. Will peantlee
in lb° several Courts of Franklin-and Fulton Conn - Mi.
Ali A 4 egal business ,euirristed to his care will• meet , *
prianyt attentiou„,, -June 17,1863.
31:DOWELL SIIATTE, Attorpey
e at Zeno. Chrintbe'rsbn4. - Pn. 'Office In Mrs. Etta*
Building - A. 'Meetly opposite gip Court Muse: f.r!
June 17.1963.
Go. _sEILHAxgR Attorney — ag
Lam, Chambersbnrg, Pa. .oifice—Main BhM
above Queen, in the main formerly occupied by 8: Sdfi
or. Eau. .Jtinel47, IN& .
( . IEORCiE EIATER & E. J. BORE-
EntAkE, diaonieitt at Law, hvn removed to: Or
room on Mato Street, one oporSoutti of Eystor's 4tora.
• '
S.. CLARIC,' Attorney at Law, - }its
4jreinnve4' °Mee a leer Ean of hisfollges
Icocatioo, (n )Inrkq.st rect. (6antb-side) -- June 17,
CALVIN ATTA DUN.CAN, Att OrliqS/4
.retne. Office on vinrket-Sireet, in Lawyer's .Row,
opuirito the Conrt Ilonte. , - • June 17. %8.,
Ti L. PLETCHER,',Attorney at Zak
".ollerthiti'g:Pa. ()theft East liarketatteik
nearly" itelhe Court goose., Jnne 'fl3
.
Lba. K. WCLURE, Atorney-agt
4.3lAmberaburg, Pa. Office in - the .Prezttais
,Reporifor- Juno 115.v4313.
WATSON ROW, Attorney
' 4 , Lute, Greendastle,Vi. • Teo 3.lrd
, . .
„Lißtintto ..- : --)
,
TEETH_ INSERTED ON A.1143-I§R
, BA.z.—Dit. lit sclicosatß,.orao stilt at Waved
tlVllee tin l: AST id-kIIKET - STR BHT, npar the Franklin
Railroad. Dontistry in all ith branches attended tOidtk
all the -mixlern„improventents. Raving publiAted., Is
(Vila commuillty,.far more than two years, that teeth gni
Antheris in every way CHEAPER AND ft EIT hR Oise
keeth on my other material,l would say that 1 . A till ve•
-no reaso'n to change my opliiion,for there are Many fleoN
_sons in Chanaberelturg nud vicinity for whom I iumn-
Inserted ti.eth on AslBER•Whomin testify to theirshisik
, tier merit. -
N. R. All work warranted to give satisfaction,nr,
_ass
Clilirg,e. ; Tooth' extracted Without - pain With llerifrat
safety, - without taking Pliloruform, :For further Infor
mation call at the Mee: [June 17, net: ,
R W: W. -011. L OSSER-,- &Twit
Dentist—The undersigned has removed tills'Ofilesi
root die! Mnnsinn douse to the rquidence ‘if Mr Alba
Noel.Northweit corner of the
,Ditunond. and iminedi
stay opposite the Franklin - Hotel! Ofrice on theenti
cold floor—entrance through the passage, to diarist&
as you ascend thestlirs.
4tinc. 17. 1803. ,
W. W ..-iterfLOS ER.
REID, .19,0*-
tig, has ramoYeli his od - C's ironvilse corner or tbs
Pub itSghare,ivherohepractieed so many years., tO.Ttis
earner of Main nmiQueen Streets. allUTe
DMZ F‘toie.Ctittmhersbntg, Pa..' hore he will he plaiiiseit
,toracqya the callapf hlsfrientla. Punel7., VW&
. - ,
_II
V.- 4 R.R AW - re - tunas his thaiiks
D • - A. . :
to the citizens of Franklin connty, for theilb-,
;eta! -encuitragetnent bestowed hm him the last Vireo
;ecru; and invites those who have not made trim. of
lIMICED - PlallY to:do so. consultations free. _All ,coi
snide caseli can rely, on a more speedy cure thati ?cinder
nriYothersystent. Dr. S. has removed - to - Nortfr4raf*
street-a Abort distance below .the peint r where he abscn-
found ready to attend to calls either in town or cotintry.,
Wherknot absent on'professional business. . : L
lune 17 1136 - 3 , .
, . „ .. :•• -
.4.QNTGIOMEn.Y_ will
attend promptly to all calla In hie line,: 01116 es
uinatreet;'nert door , ta. the Eagle hotel. and natty
opposite the ree iden ee of the non. George Chamber&
CharebEirdhirre, jnnel7, 1: 86 3. ' 1.1
BROWN,' Electrical Ph - g'si-
W. , iefan. Office in Ptinsklin Building, -19zue
PURKFT Srnr.r.r, Pornbersburg, Pn.
The `above. treats :al 'Chronic Dliseasee by meant se
f*ALVANIBM nod tbo different mcidificntione of BLBC-
T as discovered And Aanght by Prof. Bonin.
N0e. 5 4.8341 , ' . • '..
i~9
[dmilol7,''o3.l
7 R . 3. 0. RI.OIIARDS will atticnd
JUlF,ipioniptly to MT cane in hie tine. Office ottltain
Street mex t door to Spangler's Drng Store.,
Omen horse—From 7 to 9, A. EL; ZZ to 216 d
P.K- June '1,181;14.
~
• •
.:.,.. Woks anir, *tattontrg....i
iSP STORE,-=WATSON ,sz, 861 1 (
ve dinned a t' thei'r Store Room, on . the NOilte
wmtCnrner.-of the' Diamond,; opposite .Franklirelialk
Chambereburr, Pa., an entirely new stock of
*insisting of BOARS:of ainn;s4 eyery -description=
-tionery of all kiuds ; ;Entelopes, Steel Pens, Inli„. b.
Aleo 'a large assortment of WALL PATER, WINIIIDW
IfLIN DS; various; pricmand a gterit'r4 ety of NOVVIII
ANDI. FANCY ARTICLES, Picture°, Fans, Vases: Ladies'.
and . resew Baskets, '&e. Fancy•Sorip and Pinegg.
A a good Assortment ofiVoisted. Shetland Wool, La.
, and a great variety of goo& too titimarota to inSert t.
ichiell they invite the attention of. the Public, antt• rep.
- spectluily salicitn share of the' public patronage: -,,,' -
flott.e Pain azicl Cxami a a our stock. ' . •
Jititel7'63. WATSON 8 S O I~.
AS: 13. S'ATITIt Sz . , c0.,-
' BOOKSELLEIIiAND PUBLISITEitS_,
hnuficturers of plankatutMemorandum Booker, Pbpse
el-
graph Albums, Manifold Writers. Marble Paper,"&e.Olti.
27 south &tenth Street, abovo Chestnut. - ) 'lli," •
Blank work of every description, for COuntz Ofitqemb
Ratels.Con citing Muses; an'h Public Offices done- ttr ec.
der. Orders left With S. S....SutrrOcit, phamberalrirsita
..
promptly attended to. sent 30 ° 6M -jr,
&t:•;`, 7 ,
Rj3A NARD T. FELLOWS,:
KOLISR AND:SION PAINITII
RAINER, (1-I.4AZIER, AND PARS'It
HANpEB,"STIOP
ft the Old - jtemoi:g' Buildiirg, (n2i
next dooi .to Fpitiltr
,Cars fr ive Aranufactory, pppsit?, s f
and . ,
„
- COP:Slin OF SEco - gr• Ahl) M.A.P.itit
•
• Chimbersbuig - v ia.
I respectfully tate_tilla method of thankir% thatelti-
ZOTIA of Chiunbersbnrg and' vicinity forth° veryliverso
t patronage Y. have r,eeeired:at: their hand, for itheitast
year, (InY.4list this idsee,) and flattering tnyedlf
:that t have done; end and anc- stilt ;Stewed toat,fthlt
very best work In, my lino, I solicit a continuance e.f post
T.•FELOIWI3.
- SA retipettittui rekx Joan ofnlynatirms-qa)net
;Ff Ster,Thrt.MCLenalian , Cot. A. tfetinre.'ll2i.lfr.
, fliechThg Presbyterian Wreath, Dr.RithardsiTir.
,nl' If, Kieffer .t , Co.iGennatt Itef'd manger:4. Allison
Eyeter; Wm. C. Syster, and any others for vtinani-fltave
donn irork--tbr eharactoof kr,oth done, and
..4nne"l7,:'fa tf. -111t2.81
A L TOUVB. RAIITNERSIEFA
iII Notice-is hoTeby giien that the •anderefraewi have
ltdedAY eittlefed Into partrattehip;th.the Coaele4tekeag
b us Wee a,lartatts Yariotie .braachea. under the ns 4 4 l ° 4 : 4
petirei , l Foltz .- 4 1.`he said !hie mitt do business at- the
attsndi lateli liecapte&hr P'4lllntrY.T.eifraV Cal gat
aroeld respectrallyaottelt a continuance of the pehre
• tiattohitite.;' PIaNNIIT P£lB/111.,..
N0e6,061. G.C.ROLTZ.
, a 1';
Pg' N. 171
attarnegst at tab).
'l3ijgoiriano.
JOHN' dTßWAlitii