4 EMI tranklia arpooitoril, NEDNESDAY, DECEMBER, 9, 1863 jar Jogs K. Susxodx is authorized to subscripticas and contract for '.a.deertiactita IlbltbeSaeosrroas in the isatern THE lIEPFOR 1864. VOlume. , . "Vas FRlammx ItiposiTosy, will com mence its terrentl-firat troiunw with the new year, wrowidelyreml and more libcrallystipported, than in? other journel in ,the state out of the leading "Silica It is the largest Union newspaper in Penn dryania, ands unrivalled by any other rural jour sal in its lavish expenditgres for reliable Corres pondence, Editorial and !Allier Contributions, Tele graphing,,and everythindtiecessary to make b. com plete General and,local N,pwspaper. REPOSITOUT gives a cordial and earnest Sup port to the Administrations of President LINCOLN snit Governor Co ariE ;to t policy of a v'gorous prosecution of the War; to the nconditional Re nt:don of the United States out 'compromise with murderous Traitors; to the pd 'cy that exhausts every means within the power of a Government to suppress the Rebellion of Treason and Slavery; to the cause of our brave Soldirrs in the 'field;- to the Preservation in unclouded honor of the sa cred memory of our heroic, martyred dead. 'THE REPOSITORY sustains the Administration and the War because it has abiding faith in tIM Pal issue of this great struggle, by which land am bition and unholy thirst for power have made a Na tion mourn. It advoCates wor as the surest. the ipeediest,—indeed the only road to lasting and ho norable Peace; the only holse of a preserved Na tionality; and•it will steadily appeal to the People to sustain the constituted authorities in every !Tien tsin designed to give success to our arms and vic tory to the cause of the Union. ,THE REPOSITORY seeks no patronageSs e matter le favor. It aims to render the fullest possible re .tirtrio its patrons. and it amply remunerates them for the outlax of its subscription price. To the chi tette of Franklin and adjoining counties it is espe-, iilsili valuable for its complete Local Reports,.Cor reapondence, Markets, &e., and we feel well assured that the increase of its circulation will be no less -advantageous to the Union Cause, and to the pro motion of a healthy loyal sentiment in this-trying tion.r of our Country, than to its publishers. To snob ma believe the RRPOSITORY right in a Faithful but ever Independent support of the Government, we Itin with confidence appeal for sympathy and posi 11TO aid in'extending our already immense circula tion. Afir There are very few 'sibscribere to the REPORT )9IIY who could not add oar. NEW, responsible name Cs its list by the let of January. 1844. Let the friends :cif Union and Freedom make the effort • Taw REPOSITORY for MI will be especially' vain `able to FARMERR, An Agricultural Department will be regularly sustained, under the immediate con trol of the Skijor Editor, *rho devotei ranch of iris dine to Practical Agriculture; to the trial of Agri cultural Implements, and.laachinery: . to the ;movement of Stock, and to every method.proposing iconomical progress in the great Industrial pursuit 41' Southern Pennsylvania. BUSINESS MEN of all classes, will sna the Earns- Won't the best Advertising medium in the State out of the cities. We believe - that no country jour nal reaches so large a clasS of intelligent, progrej give, thrifty men as ,. does the REPOSITORY, and it, is !initial:it° to Advertisers. - Tcr, REPOSITDRY is furnished to subscribers at $2 'per annum in advance; 0r..V.50 if not paid within Abe year. All ricOscription accounts must be settled sianually. No paper serti out of the State unless paid for in advance. o ' Tax RZPOSITOgY is furnished to Soldiers in actual service at 25 cents for three months ; 50 cents for six months, or $l.OO for one year. This is less than the lost of the white paper. Ministers of Franklin tionnty.ln charge of congregations, are furnished :the paper at sl.s' per annum. Subscriptions and Advertiscinenta may be sent di ; rally to the publishers, or through any responsible I : Agency. Address M'CLURE & STONER, Proprietors, •,f MOLE copies of the ExPosltoßY can De ItidAt the counter, with or without wrap ioerst. Price five. cents. Persons ordering t itigle copies tot e mailed _ must enclose a 140 cent postage stamp. . TIEs. first notice of a bill in the U. S. Sen ate was given by Senator Lane, who sta aed his purpose to introduce a bill to repeal the t3QO commutation clause' of bhe con 'aeripilon bill, and to raise the pay of non .attirissioned officers and privates fifty per *Mt. ' :from EDWARD M'PEERsoN, late M. C. ...from, this district, was yesterdry chosen elerk_ot the - National Rowe of Represen tativeii receiving 101 votes to 69 for I;Itm. Emerson Etheridge. This is s o well merit ad compliment alike to an eminently meni als and competent gentleman and to the state. • TIBIAE is nothing, new from the Ariny of • the Ctunberland. It is understood, how tiat its diiisions are advancing in every direction 'almost, bringing in hund reds oftstraggiers -from the region of Dal tein. The Rebel papers say that although Bragg has been relieved, no successor has 113 yet been appointed. General Hardee ttiaimands ,the Rebel army vice Bragg, by iriTtub of seniority of rank, he being,a Lieu tenant General. klioN. SCHUYLER. COLFAX, of Indiana, chosen Speaker of Congress on the first imllot by the decisive vote of 101 to 42 for ;Oa and balance scattering. The ultra Thiee Copperheads and the less manly Con litityatives t seem to inix well, although .betkagree in embarrassing the government every possible manner. Mr. Colfax is a *roughly loyal man ; a most earnest friend of the admsnistration, etnineritly able 'as a , • amentanan, id editor by profess ion. He has just entered his fifth term. The Co • Pperheads had hit upon a bril- Rant . plan to , defraud the administration majority out of "tho organization of _the House. Mr. Etheridge, the Copperhead Clerk, had resolved not to call some half a dozen Union Stntes r in the election of Spea key, because of some technical informality in i 9meertificates of election ; but-the House Joy: the. decisive vote of 74 to 94 instructed hiia-to do his duty, sod his courage failing, the plot failed also and- the organiiation was effected without ,thlfteulty, • • . THE. ARMY OF THE TOMAC. Another chapter been ...deli to the history of the heroic •but ill s4arred Army of the Potomdc. Again it ha crossed the Pappahannock" and the Rapidan to engage .the army of Lee; agaiik it ha retraced its steps without delivering - batoe, although the hostile armies stood race ttb face:for for ty-eight hours; and now it, is in its old en campment, Alipirit T l and apparently put poseles.s, ttnlesa;theproteetioniof Washing ton can be deemed the mission of eighty thousand of the braiiest and best troops on the continent. • Tryonlibe worse than useless to attempt to disguise the National disaivointment at c t this result; and at once abs ' rd and futile are the various excuses an explanations given by newspaper correspo , dents for the failure. That the movement was not a merereconnoisanCe, but designed as an of fensive campaign against Ike, is as maul : . fest to an • intelligent public! as if General Meade-had so &dared his purpose; and the allegation that Lee had een reinforced by part of Longstreet's army is too ridicu lous to deceive any one. Longstreet was just - then, and is. still, in greater need of reinforcements than any °facer on either side engaged in this war. ; It may have been wise forj . .Meade not to, attack on Monday the 30th Ult., when his forces were disposed loll' the purpose, his t 4: f batteries in position, and hi 4 storming par ties chosen and assigned their places; but it seems most :iruprob ble that there was not a time and a place when General. Meade could and : should ha e given battle to Lee with every prospect f success. If, as is stated in ;the corresp'mdence of one of the New York papers, the failure was measurably or wholly okving to senior corps commanders refusing to reinforce General Warren on the extreme left, because it would subordinate them ori the field, then Meade wants a few Generals shot before If he can move with Safety. , however, the campaign was conceived by General Meade and the army was marched] and handled in accordance with his orders, then has he demonstrated his ineapacit4 for the respon sible position; and brave nd skillful as he confessedly is at the head of a corps, he I should be displaced. Gen. Meade's army is v4tly- superior to Lee's in point of Tnumberls. He had 'cer tainly one-third more ef+ient men when be crossed the Rapidan than could be mar shaled against him; and, to retreat without battle four days.before his" rations were ex hausted, is one of the mo4t lamentable ex hibitions of weakness even of the many which have fallen to the hard lot of the Army of the Potomac. I' he found his en emy too well prepared fo him, then he was outgeneraled ; and a Naj,oleon would have sought some otherroute tri the vast terri tory of Virginia, rather than to halt three days in mingled hesitation and preparation to carrylhe line of Mine iltun by assault. Considering that the destruction of Lee's army is now the great necessity to termi nate the war,, the magtlltude of Meade's failure can scarcely be estimated. Had Lee 'been shattered simultanebusly with the rout of Bragg, no human powler could have .res cued Longstreet, and muter would have come upon the South- Without a lingering hope of the success of the rebellion. Banks has done his part so far well ; Grant has nobly fulfilled his task ;(Burnside has won immortal' honors for hin_self and his brave command by holding the. key to East Ten nessee; but Meade has filed without a trial. unless an exhausting march and retreat, and the loss of a thousaUd men in desultory Warfare, can be called ati effort. Longstreet can now join Lee with* difficulty; and if Lee cannot be foughtl now, how is he to be fought when his best Lieutenant joins him with' twenty thousand additional troops? —Thus is the rebellion left to linger for a spring campaign, when a skilfully planned and promptly executed Movement could not have failed to destroy Lee, and with him the last great army ofd crime. Some one has fatally blundered. 'ill not Gen. Meade, who is it? GEN.-BANKSIEV TEXAS. -L. - We give on the first Ipage of to-day's pa pei a map shoWing the important operations at of Gen. Banks in Tex . It seems that the rebel Gen. Magruder as completely out generated blißanks, a d, notwithstanding themost extensive preparations of the rebels to defend the Texas cot:st, Gen. Banks made an easy and secure lodgment at Brownsville, the city and also Fort Brown, some L near the mouth of the Rio' Grande, captur ingdistance up the rive . Gen. Magruder confidently 'expected Gen. Banks to make an attack on the Sabine Pass or Galveston, and the advance of Gen. Franklin up the Bayou Teche, in Western Louisiana, partly confirmed the rebel . cOmmander that Gen. Banks would strike somewhere in co-operii ling distance from Ft nklin. Gen. Magru der. thus misled, Gen. Banks Passed - across the Gulf to BMzos antiago, an island a few miles above the mouth of the Rio Grande, and there laded his troops on the 2d ult. As soon -as ithe rebels saw that Gen. Banks was.therein force, Gen. Slaugh ter, the commander of Fort Brown, evacu ated the works and also the city of Browns- Ville, first settin g fire .to it. The Union troops and a number i lof loyal citizens resist ed the effort to destroy the city, and afar _," spirited street. fight , the fire was gnished. Gen. Bank - s now holds the river ; the sacred fields of Pala Alto and Resaci de ht Palma; Corpus Cbristi and Aransas. City —both captured on 'he 15th ult., with over. -the -,frituktitt:-ttliestiorp i lattembei 9, 180; one hundred prisoners and several guns; nearly one-third of the•eoast ofTexas; and he will, doubtless soon penetrate into the heart of the State. The maveurent into Texas has been se verely criticised by many journals as a fruit less enterprise ; and those who sought to justify - it generally did so on the ground that it was necessary to guard against the movements of the French in Mexico. We .have reason to believe that the movement was not undertaken for that purpose, at though the actions or the French may have been a secondary consideration in planning the enterprise. Texas has as large a pop ulation of loyal people as any State involv ed in the rebellion, and they have suffered every possible privation and brutality, and many have been cruelly murdered for refu sing to- join in the war upon their govern ment. The territory of the 'State is very large and the population but sparse, and thousands have eluded-the rebel conscrip tion and organized secretly to aid in the deliverance ,of the State from the brutal foes of the Republic. They will gladly rise up ; strengthen the Union army, and aid in directing it to successful results, and thus secure its vast supplies of cattle to our troops. Another controlling reason for the enter prise is the fact that thousands of negroes have been run off from Missouri, Arkanias, Mississippi, Alabama. and Louisiana into Texas by the rebels. Official information fixes the number in the State, of able-bodied men, as nearly 100,000, and they are fast defying all restraint under rebel" ule. They have learned of the Abolitionists: of the Emancipation Proclamation ; of the induce ments to enlist in the Union service and 'receive good rations, clothing, care and Freedom, and they are, .ready to hail Gen. Banks as a deliverer, and swell the ranks of his army immensely. It is believed that from 30,000 to 50,000 negro recraits may be obtained in Texas ; and, considering the uniform heroism they have displayed in the. field ; the small ratio of mortality from dis ease in the tropical -climates, as compared with whites, this alone is a strong incentive Tor the movenient of Gen.• Banks. _ The rebels in the trans-Mississippi States —Texas, Arkansas and Missouri—are by this 'success of Gen. Banks completely iso lated; the• blockade running on the Rio Grande is entirely broken' up, and the French can be watched closely should they occupy Matamoras. Upon the whole, we regard the enterprise as a most momentous one, and if successful, as it So clearly promises, must be productive of mighty results tend ing to suppress the rebellion. Thus does 'light break on . the Old Flag in every quar ter of the continent, and its coming - triumph cannot be long delayed. THE DETY OF THE GOVERNOR. Under the above caption the Spirit of last week gives us the fallowing chapter of generous advice to Gov. Curtin, and oTigi. nal history as to Govs. eymour and Parker: "Wkat is Gov. Curtin about! Does he intend that Pennsylvania shall do anything towards filling up her quota' before January, or would he rather that the draft should be again enfOrced? Why has he not 104, , before this called an extra session of thelegislature or made some ether provision to pay a suita ble bounty to recruits?. The Governor of_ New Jersey, whom no doubt Curtin consid ers 'disloyal,' furnished more4men under the -last call than did `the great State of Penn sylvania. The 'disloyal' cities of New York and Brooklyn have already furnished eight thousand men under the present call, and eipect to have their quotas full before the first of January; and the 'disloyal' governor of that State is using every energy to fill the entire quota of the State. What is the loyal Governor of Pennsylvania doing ? He has issued a.flimsy, milk and water proClama tion, and fallen back exhausted by the effort." Gov. Curtin is faithfully discharging his duty alike to the State and the Nation. He is not raising troops for the simple rea son that he has no_power or authority what ever to do so. He has not called a session of the_ legislature, because that body could notin any way facilitate the raising pf troops under. existing regulations. • Gov. Curtin Could not now organize a regiment or even a company of volunteers. The call is made for •enlistments in the old regiments, and the War Department has appointed its own agents and recruiting officers in all the States to procure men. He bas been to Washington at least twice 10 confer with the National authorities, and has uniformly given the assurance that more troops could be raised•by forming new regiments; but the economy and necessity for filling up the old organizations are so imperative that the National atithorities deem it best to adhere to the regulations now in operation through the Provost Marshals. They should know best, and we accept their judgment as well matured and wise, considering all the inte rests of the different sections of the North. The Spirit ought tb know that Gov. Curtin has no authority Vs appoint recruiting offi cers, or to authorize the formation of com-: panics or regiments, and if so, its censure of the Executive is as malicious as it is false. If it does not know the publicly proclaimed policy of the War Department relative to volunteers, then its ignorance is 'pitiable, The idlegations that the Governor of New Jersey has " furnishedmore men under the last call than the great• State of Pennsylva nia," and that the cities of New York and Brooklyn "have already furnished 8,000 men under the present call," are probably about as nearly true as the Spirit usually gets-.—that iiajust *holly untrue. The State of New Jersey and the State of New York, including the cities of Brooklyn and New York, have not-furnished a single mail un der the late call. The 'cities named have been trying in vain to fill their quotalunder the previous call, to'avoid the draft and may have furnished some four or `five 'thousand men but they have never met:the demand of the late draft fully and have' yet to make the first effort to raise men ttnder*the last call for 300,000. In deference to Governor Seymour's " friends" of New York and Brooklyn, those cities made large appropri ations to procure substitutes and pay com mutation for certain classes, biii - they have not yet filled the old requisition. So with New Jersey. Gov. Parker Arembled lest his " friends," should _imitate Gov. Sey mour's in a little innocent butchery, rob bery and arson, and he : begged to be, allow ed to raise volunteers. Be was so author ized, and fabulous . sums were offered, but beyond a few thousand unmanageable sub stitutes, he did nothing for the army, and his old quota is still largely deficient, while the quota for. the new call is to fill entire. While all this fussand flummery prevailed in New York and New jeisey under_their semi-loyal Executives, Pennsylvania quietly nd faithfully enforced the draft in every county, excepting in the intensely Demo cratic regions of Schuylkill, Luzerne : and Carbon, where the "friends" of the Si*, Judge Woodward and Jeff Davis have voted the Democratic ticket. according,to contract, and demand that the draft shall-be stopped according to Democratic promises. - —Weleg the Spirit _to tell the truth once in a while just for the sake of variety. A CLERICAL correspondent wri tes us from the Southern coast protesting against the rapid tendency to amalgamation. He says that he has been called upon to perform the marriage service repeatedly where the bride was mulatto, qiiadroon or octoroon, and he calls upon Congress to arrest this unnatu ral mingling of the races, which; to use his own language, "threatens the annihilatiOn of the white race in the 'United States." • We beg our correspondent to- quiet his fears on the subject He cites some half a dozen cases to vindicate his apprehensions ; but not one of them presents the union of a northern man with the southern negress. All the happy grooms Were either south erners or foreigners, and they have been adopting no novel social system. Slavery has never fastened its desolation on any land without carrying the social evil of amal gamation with it; and the 'Crime has been peculiar to the chivalric and opulent rather than to the lowly. Had our correspondent cast a thought as to the origin of the mu lattb, quadroon and octoroon brides of whom he speaks, he might have cherished a rea sonable suspicion that amalgamation is not just dawning upon the world ? but has blot ted and binned the Whole social organiza tion of the South ever since slavery came with its endless train of crime. ' In the North, where the negro race is free and not the legitimate prey of a brutal master's lust, amalganiation is very rare, and embraces only the most• abandoned of both sexes; and we regard the deitruction of Slavery as the only hope_ of dealing a death-blow to that unnatural evil. Slavery ha's been its parent, its shield, its apologist and stripped it Of •its:hideous moral defor mity by bringing 'virtuous wives and daugh ters and sensual sons in' daily contact with ; and when its great foundation is destroyed, the Whole structure of- social pollution will fall with it. The remedy is not in Congress, but in the moral tone of the people;• and that seems to be progres sing well toward a better and brighter Na-" tionality, free from, the blistering stains of both legalized and lawless mingling of the distinct races of the Continent. • ANDY JORNSON, of Tennessee, is described as feeling splendid — his eye on the Presiden cy and his hand on three salaries; Gover. nor, Senatorand General ! THE above extract is just now going the rounds of the 'Democratic papers, and it is a most malicious and unjust imputation upcin one, of the purest patriots of the Na tion: Gov. Johnston, is not a Senator. and is not a General. He is the Military Gov ernor of Tennessee, and we doubt whether he has ever been paid a farthing for his ser vices. He has been a life long Democrat; sharOd the honors of his party liberally, and proved himself ever worthy of them. When Treason unmasked itself in the U. S. Senate; he boldly declared himself for the preservation of the Republic at every cost and hazard, and he has maintained his fidelity and patriotism with matchless ear nestness and consistency. He has suffered more for his• devatidn to the goVernment than all the copperhead scribblers in the State who are thus recklessly misrepresent ing him, and it illy becomes them thus to defame one of the Nation's noblest and most self-sacrificing defenders in its hour of peril. Such-a man is Andrew' Johnson of Tennessee, TETE late victories of the Union armies in Tennessee confuse the Spirit. In its lead ing article of last week in two consecutive paiagraphs it advises war and peace--,:ven geance and magnanimity. It urges that the rebel army of Lee be driven into Aid mond, there to be " starved out by siege " or pushed further South, "where the - com bined armies of Meade and Grant will wipe out the last vestige of rebellion;" and in the next breath it wants the rebels sugar plum med with amnesty proclamations show ing " the, magnanimity of greatness and power." , It is strongly in favor of the war against the rebels provided the rebels are not to be hurt! It sliould read Grant out of the Democratic party. He is the most anti-Democratic of our Democratic Gener als, and acts if he reallk believed that rebbLmurdereis shaidd '..be slaughtered in battle just like other men I COL. W. S. QUAY has been appointed chief of Transportation by Gov.. Curtin, in place of Maj. Sees, deceased: Col. Quay is eminently.qUalified for the position, and will make a faithful and ',acceptable officer. He entered the service as Colonel' of otig of the nine months' regiments, lint was com pelled by protracted ills 0 to resign his. command. At the-battle of Vredericksburg, although then out of service, he volunteered . on General Humphreys staff, and went through the terrible ordeal of death that division encountered, acting with consum mate courage and skill: - THE Riehmond En quirer rejoices that Maj. White—Senator from Indiana, county- Pa.—was detected inchis effort to escape as a Surgeon, because, as it says, "he is a no torious Black ReinibtiCin ; a Member of the New York Senate, and his absenee makes an:Opposition majority in that body." The Enquirer is needlessly zealous in the cause of the Copperhead i i.' Major White's ab sence does not quite give its " friends " majority in the Senate. At best they can but tie the Senate and the organization is in the hands of the Union men. THE Lancaster . Examirier says thatithe health of Hon. Thaddeus Stevens is excel lent—much better" than it waS a year' ago at the opening of COngress. The Country could but illy 'spare from the Nationaleouncils the oldest and ablestyhampion of Freedom just when the death struggle of slavery is about to becoine history. • -- Ta Philadelphia Bulletin of Friday last says : • . As the time approaches for a new Presi dential election, and the people cast their eyes about for a candidate, there is no one so generally looked to ail Abraham Lincoln. Other men may have the requisite talents and virtues; but none, impress the people as being so Well entitled to the neat term- of four years as the. man who has so faithfully guided the _republic through the terrible storms of civil war. There is a 'general feel ing that after a term of war he is entitled to a term of peace; and that other, men, mili tary and civil, 'must defer their claims at least until the year 1868. ARMY OF THE POTOMAC. MEADE RETIRES TO BRANDY STATION. : Ds 3 poi tot% tztliklto ol Dczy Di THE REBEL WORKS TOO STRONG TO ASSAULT I:EMU:VIAETERS ARMY OF THE POTOMAC, Dec. 2.—The Army of the Potomac cresse.l the Rapidan in three columns on the 26th of NOvember ' 'and concentrated the following day on } fine Run. The enemy occupied the hills on the opposite 'aid'e"of the stream, in full' force. His position, naturally a very strong one , was found to )eintrenched along his entire line, his works,being a continua tion of thowon the Rapidan, to learn which was the object of this movement. The enoniv's position was too formidable to be carried byassault. The great difficulty of keeping up the supplies of the troops at this season of the year at 'any distance from the railroad as well. as the impractibility of the country for military operations, prevent ed a - more ,extensive movement, - and the army returned to the north side of the Rapi dan. The falling back to our present position was accomplished without loss of men or property. The entire casualties will not exceed one thousand in killed, wounded and missing. A few men who forded Mill run and lay on picket duty during the night were frozen and several bodies of rebel skirmishers were sent' to their rear on stretchers. MARRIED. On the ad lost., by the Iles. Wesley Howe, Mr. Sow mos Mosmeof Breen township, to Miss Jiffs Matas, nen Funkstown. On the 3d inst,, by the Rev,, J. C. Smith, Rev. EM Alftryt, Maur, of Ilegerstown Circuit. -United Brethern in Christ," to Jline AMANDA. C., daughter of Daniel Yaukey of Quincy township, this county. On the Ist 'nat., by the Rev. , Thoe . as Barnhaft, Mr. WK. F. Beaton. of Abingdon, Va., to Mine Jums B. Ku ma, of Chambersburg. Pa. On the 3d inst., by the Bev. 3. Dickson, Mr. Aux B (56 Rol?, of Montour Co., Pa., to Miss MART Baftwisna of this preen. DIED. On the 23d nit.. iu Guilford township, of Diptheria, REIIECOA MAROARIT, only daughter of Wm. and Mary, Ferguson, aged 5 years, 4 month, and 13 days. Oa the 15th alt., near Waynesharo, Mr. ISUCHAHL LlT rid', aged about 68 years. On the 27th ult., near Waynesboro. of Diptheria, ELIZADETH, aged 10 years, 4 months and 11- dava, and 31 ANY, danghters of Jacob Ilees, aged 8 yearz,,7 mouths and .6 days. On the 21st ult., In Waynesboro, Mr. Cmtzlats Dien; Sr.. aged 73 years, 3 months and 4 days. - On the sth . In Guilford township. of Typhoid Fever JOHN T. Itzurazw, in the 48th year bf his age. His ead, was peace. On the 23d tilt., near Illertersburg, Mr. Saxon Joint s vox, aged 71 years. '` On thel9th inst., in Franklin Grove. 111., of Pulmon ary Consumption, Mrs. °ARMF''• D., wife of Dr. G. W. Ileaitt, and daughter 'of Mr. Henry •Miller, Esq., Of Greencastle, Franklin co„ Pa. On the 6th Inst.. Gamma Hamra', son . of Henry and Catharine Carl, aged 8 years and 18 days. . - On the 6th inst" - tramt, inf,nt, daughter et David and Sarah Flack, aged three months and five days. . , Sleep, darling little Lizzie sleep, Not in thy cradle bed, But where the angels guard shall keep, • Among the silent dead. iqcorge Steck 4. Co's - Pianos.—Clesesor Bratuos, Aug. 1863 , -Mr. J. E. GOULD; Seventh and ehestnutstreets, Philadelphia.—Dras Sm.—Gaving had requent opportunities of examining the Pianos made by Messrs. George Steck . New York, during the pest few years, in the practice of my profession as Tuner, I pronounce them the moat perfect instruments I have ever seen, In point of touch, equality, and singing toile theymai defy comparison with any and all ether makes, while in the upper two oetaTe (treble notes) they are incompara bly the finest I hale any knowledge of ' •CJ E. SARGENT, Tuner of Name ' , . Sept 334 m 007 Cliestnnu St, Philida. • . - Fp,..t GROUND PRIMA, COrjantlttr Sweet Marjory, and Spicee-of an kinds et Miller Ileneheee. Also a Preparation fa curb* Perk aid Beef, which everybody should have. It keeps the the neat rile% and ,preventa worms from go:thigh:lto It. '• , - MORTON'S Gold Pens 'are noir sold Ett, the same prices ite l befere the conintenceet of the yrs!' this is entirely owing to -the Manufacturer's impieiiew mentsin enachinery,hts Present large Retell & ll ama and Cash-In-Advance System tier, until be contmenee4 advertiaing,his btygEteestras•done on Credit and ark* lath the Trade. - The Morton Gold Pens are the only ones mad at Preea,as the makers of all other gold pens charge th o Peetnitim on thepold, Government Tax, d.c.; but Mertaa law In no ease changed his prices, Wholesale or Kind,: Of the great nutsthe t rs sent by mall to all pelts of thi world during the past few years, not one in a "1 " 1 " 1/4 hastened to reach its destination in safety; showing that the Mertens:3od Pen can be obtained by any 0.4 * In every pert of the world, at the %WAG price, - goatees, only excepted. - Reader, you Can have an enduring, always read/0121 reliable Gold Pen, exactly, adapted to your band ant style of writing, which will do your writing Putt/ cheaper than Steel Peas; and at the present allnoSt universal Ifigh•Preseure Price of everything, you dan have. a Morton Gold Pen cheaper, in proportion ,to. tbi labor spent upon it and Material need, than any other Gold Pen in the World. If you want one, tall tin Allnuroer, No. 23 Maiden Line', New York, or iptlosia stamp Rs , eircular. deed-6m! POPTT.L.d.I3 CLOT/215V .1101.78/1. Sizj attd Market &rear, Philadelphia. Popular Clothing House r Sixth and Market - Streets. popular ClothingAfouee, Sixth and Market Street*. Popular Clothing llonse, Sixth and Market stout. - Wanantaker a Brown IVenariptker a Brown Wanamakor a . ,,Brotru. Popular Clothing lionse, Sixth - odd Market Streete.- Popular Clothing Boise, Sixth and Market Stream. Popular Clothing House, Sixth and Market Stream.: Oak Hall " Oat Hall Oak Elan, Oak Hall; -oak Hall, Oak Hall, Oak Hulk Oak „HAIL - Popular Clothing House, Sixth and Market - Streets' , Popular Clothing Honse, Sixth and Market Strettke. - ' Popular Clothing House, Sixth and Market Streets. Wanamaker & Brown. Wanamaker k Brown. Wanamaker & Brown, Popular Clothing House, Sixth and Market etreets. , 4 Popular Clothing Bonne,. Sixth and 'Market Street/,',- Popular-Clothing Holten, Sixth and Market Street& Oak' Hall, Oak Hall, Oak Halt, 'Oak Hall, Oak Hull, Oak Hall, Oak Hall, Oak Hall, 'N. B.—We hare an Immense stock of DEADY-MADA CLOTHING that cannot be surpitaied for style, work* mauship or lowness in price. also. special Depsrtramail for Boys' Clothing and Gents' YIIIINISHIND GOODS. SPECIAL NO./MS.—Thera is no Clothing Store in Maar bersburg that has for sato any. totals - manufactured bp us. W. k , • nor 11.1 m .Pulmonary Consumption:a Durable Disectot& —A Ctst,L-TO CON4UMPTIVES.—The undersigned having been restored tb health in a tow weeks. by Atari simpleremedy; after having suffered several years wit& &severe lung affection. and that dread disease, Coup sumption—is anxious tomato known to his fellow-saS• ferers the means of cure. To all who desire it, he will mind a copy of the pee*. Cription need (free of charge), with the directions , ft,il Pteparing and uting the same, which they will find sure cureTorConsnmption, Asthma, Brouchitie,CongLii Colds, Ac. .The only object of the advertiser in sending the Prescrlptio n is to benefit the afliicted, and spread rte. formation 'which he conceives to be invaluable; and - hi hopes every sufferer will try his remedy, as it will-awl them nothing, and may prove a blessing. ' Parties wishing the prescription will please address Rev. EDWARD A. WTLSON, slept 30.3 m Williamsburg, Kings Co., New Toit.. Prevention of Incrustation in Steam Boil. ers.—WINANS'ANTI-INCRASSTATION POWDER rifAt, MOVES ANDTREVENTS THE DEPOSIT OPSOMai. AND WITHOUT INJII RIC TO THE IRON: Sivax YU, ix,. • References In all parts or the conntryoria: Albria* Gas CO.; Eaton, Gilbert & Co., and others, Troy; SyrN. cnse, Rochester, &nbrirn, Ac;; John Gibson t• Phelps,Cbarles Ensign, John R. Evans •&Co.,Jewett Root,and others, Buffalo: Cleveland, Collinkbus Ranei Ac.; Geo. Shield. Mile@ Greenwood, ittichell# Rammelabirg; and 40 others in Cincinnati; and thronsG;- out the West; Indiattopolls, Dayton, Terre Baste, Lie gansport,' Chicago. Spring& eld, St. Louis, St. Paul, &C. &c.; to ,Coat about 40 to GOcenta per Noah.. Per clam iwiaddress • R. N. WINANS, Y.O„ Box No.o `Madame Poifer's Cuiattre Ba 4am hattAtv tested the truth that there are first principles In Medi. eine al - there Jelin Science, and this Medicine is ecrttr pounded on principles suited to the manifold nature tif Man f The cure of Colds is in -keeping open the posea t and creating a gentle internal warmth, and this is eau*. ed by thence o f this lifedieine. Itii remedial quail** are based on ite power ti:kassist the healthy and ous:circulation ablOod through the:lungs, it enlivens the mucks and assists the skin to perform its duties a regulating the heat of the system. and in gently thrown lug off the waste substance fromt he surface of the body It is not a' violent remedy, brit emollient, warmini searching and effective. Sold by all druggist at' la. and YS eentsimr bottle. Duly '.12. SHAKE AND BURN ! Sintke and Burn! Shake and Burn 1 ! I—This is the life of agony endure 6. by the sufferer from /ever and Agno, He wanders lilts au uncertain shadow, never knowing what aliment he may be prostrated, and therefore disinclined. to give any serious attention to business. This is the conditiOn di thousands in town and country. It Is no exageratiete to say that Bever and Ague kills more people than *O7 twenty other diseases in America. Fora sure and speed cure of this terrible affliction:we take great pleastu:e Ia recommending HOSTTEITER'S STOBAOII BITTERS. which have already achieved a wide repitation for rapid and powerful effects in renovating the prostrated by this disease. For sale by Druggists at:peelers geit erally everywhere. . aorll lm The Confessions and Experience of - an It „ cond.—Published Pre the benefit, and is a wainlng scut - . A CA.I;ION TO YOUNG MEN " ' ' who suffer from Nervous Debility, Preinature teak, GI Manhood, etc.., supplying at tbe same time ‘ Tug MEANS OF SELF CUBE, , By one who has cured hi mself aftar being put to a groat expense and itijuii through medical humbug and quackery. - • By enclosing a Reit-paid addressed, Wave, slag 4 copies may be had Of tbd author. NATELiNrrI t gA,TrAiß i ssq" - Bedford, Kings county, may 20,6313 • QEICTI. CURES VtiREB ! • c,VIC I SI ; Ccwi !—.The .711,4 net—Doctor Radway guarantees that hia READY RELIEF will not keep the patient DI doubt as to certainty of cure. In all came where PAM is experienced RAPWAY'S READY RELIEF will, IA& few minutes. prove its nirisvellons efficacy, and one bet ile is sufficient te satisfy the Most skeptical of ita supe riority to all other "remedies, 'in coring Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Gout; Pain, Aches, and other lam:title,— while in attacks of Dlarrhtea, Bilious Cholla, Inflame- Bon of the Bowels, Chills and Fever, one or two dtiseer b sufficient. In cases of SprainseStrains, Crarnps,BPaiMt headache, &c, its application externally Will - atopiipy ordinany pain, and one bottle cure any ordinary dime* Price 25 eta. For sale at Miller & lienshey's Phiunberit. burg. 'Ciiirrrox..,- - We have this day ob.taine4 a Patent for - Um Mamdkctures, known u " FAMILY DYE COLOES. 4 , „ The Dyes manufactured by other : persons, Wader the name of . ( Domestle Dyes," 40.,, lire Made In idolatiowsit , our Patent. - We caution all persons reaklng:or selling die Stet, hereafter, that we shall pretetnte" for all initingeimalr of far rights. , ' Boston, Oct. 130.80: Encrr2s4t] HOW7I & BTVTENN $26. Employment !--Agento! Wanted !—Weivili payirorn $26 tog/roper mop Show d ellexpensesjOacikee Agents.or give a oommiesion. -Particubtrs geritfree... Adilregs ERINSIMI MAMM Co A Cmers. .R.. 111. 110/0 General Agent, Mil n, Ohio. sprit 29, WS • El Oak [Sall 11 WALL ST.,l4sw UutY22,'63-ertci.. Eli2l