13 • : -gradib MN WA .The Shadow -0 of Arifospfsafi.... Heroism of -the - B I cce Twoops—the 711 F 010 !iii . /PMPA I *f iL t • - " 1,, iedrieeil'atideate'tif the PttiSittitristeiloeitimq, At the present tiliid %mit. tity is almost devoid itfif f ,#ny sort of attite - -titM,igteresting enough W igan strangers fo ,unless it be the numerous • h ospitals inwhich at present, are, many thou -1406 o Optided keroeiL:-LbraVe 'Men whehave liacrliced'allt he etMifOrts'andilleasureadf hotite,. Viitai`pred'untolifittirathi r ps and Ivritiitinfii in per t 4, Ding their lives' for their clantry. • • In passing through the-hospitals and looking 3 lois the li ibbless and sick Victims of this accursed f:Ftebellimii noes-. heart is filled with minded ; pride andlorrow at the sight of *brave young f „..?On 7 the light and joy .cf. many, a home—cut doWn t ilt streagiliandglory offall their mpg. anmhopil. , Yet it Is wonderful tblvitnesi the uniturm cheerfulness which they evince oven , :while suffering from tike severest wounds. 'ln .„. (. 1 the hundreds of 4imps that I have visited these' hospital's, conversed: sy4y these patients and written letters dictated by them to friends at home, I ha've found no Word of regret, but the cheerful tons! 'throughout, and itf - cases 'where death is inevitable, there, is still theszime "'iiiitisfied 101 l and expression which clearly shows .'tlheirappreiiiatithi of tlie mitg-nitiide of the object for which they are sacrificing:thdinselves.* Our : hearts bleed for-the' - mothers that bore r':. liable tneit,'for- the • younn - vives left deiotat; c torahs sisters whol• wilt *aft in vain for their 4' ileturo*:•! Alas! ' • • "No eiore return - • ITill sisters, brothers all unite. t another and abetter workL", • 'After the gallant charge .of Duncan's IBlack -.Brigadeenathe.quter works of Petersburg, who 'l, will,stand up and say, _that "poor 'old Shwa" swill not fight: As the blacks approached, the, .irebels stood Upon their :works with 'a! klack . taunting them to come on, With all_the, • 'odious epithets which the genius ofblackguaild ,l ism has invented. Notwithstanding all.this, the blacks malted on undaunted, - and . after a terri ,ble struggle; in-wilieh some—rebel cannon were 'captured And - immediately:turned • upon their ;late owners, and with-the terrible bayonet dealt `''`Oittdeith 'tight and left; sparing none who fell An their way, taking not ti single PriOne'r, they %-iempelled• the remainder to the in utter confu: Rion t6ithe woods in their rear, and held the *nand which to-day 'gives Grant , a position -'here he can any time lay, Petersburg . in - ashes. ' ' This heroic' art of the colored soldiers has raised them very high in the estimation of our ,aleveteransoind hereafter, th 4 will be found • aide by side in the hottest of the fight for their .:arbuntry and 'universal 'freedom, and so they will fight on, until no spot shall"be saddened by the footprints ofsingle,ilave.. The 'bill amendatory.of the Enrolling -act was passed last niglit in - the evening session of the Senate by a vote bf 24 to 7. The Commuta tion clause is strickerf out, and all'drafts he e after made are to be for such term oft times the President_shall direct; not eiceeding 'one year. Each district is 'to be 'allowed for the number of inea , voluntering up to the Erne of draft and Via number deducted from the num -ler to be drafted. to be • hoped that the House will yet ac quiesce in this action 'of the Senate,. The ques tion is simply, shall the contest, for the sup pression of the rebellion be continued or aban • .doned If it is to be continued,'Ve mgt have th i e additional' troops necessary to do se, and to get them the commutation law must be repeal ' ed. The" cause requires the men, not money; and he who votes to exempt any drafted man , waffle of serving efficientliwithont furnishing an exempt substitute, simply votes to insure the ' eventual sateen of the rebellion. " The news from the front is still Very encour aging. Petersburg can be taken at any time Grant sees fit. -Grant is aiming at a deeper . tame than the taking of that town. One more 'sneelef' rim the ground he yesteday occupied and Peteisburg must fall without an attack on tE s. c. GRANT AND DIEADE. It is always interesting to know bow great Wien appear In the'discharge of grave and re sponsible duties, and perhaps there are no two gien upon whine actions will follow such stu pendous results to the weal or wo o?our land, as of Lieut. Gen. Grant and Maj. Gen. Meade. The eye of the liberty loving world is directed to them, and every thing, either of in " Admit or well digested and successfully execut ed Plun,that tells of their respective characters, is taken up, read, studied and thought over as though in it were found the key that would unfold the secret of their ,power and greatness. The Tribune correspondent of the 20th ult.. thus de scribes them, as they appear in the field in the line of duty : Yon should see the brilliant cavalcade?, and tear the tramp and clanger of hoof and sabre • when Grant and Meade and their staffs and the whole mounted retinue of headquarters go sweeping by. Of course the small non on the small black horse leading the troop itiVrant. If you did not know it before, the soldiers who rush out to the road, or half halt on the march, and point him out to each other, have told you. The small black pacing horse, half a queen's pony,.half a king's Bucephalus, with arched neck _And chainiing bit, and small, alert, flexile ears, and short, mouse-like hair, and, great tail car 'sled royally like a banner; whose form is sym metry, spite of • the sloping hip, that belong to all pacers, whose muscles are watch-springs, whose impatient air Seems to resent his small size—this little black imp - of a horse, a horse -that is "all horse," is "Jeff. Davis," and Grant ta on,his back, The rider sits With uncommon grace, elmtrois" him with one small gatintleted hand, Waver once regards the torrent of horsemen that follow,looka neither right nor left, but never falls to acknowledge-- with a quick gesture the salutes of the soldiers—all-absorbed, all-obser ' mant,, silent, inscrutable, ho controls and moves mama as he does his horse. The rider at his side is not less worth mark ing well. The horse is the ideal war-horse, tall and powerful, and horse and rider look like a Facture • of helmeted knight of old, gaunt, tall, gsmnled, with the large Roman nose of will aaa power, and wearing 'a slouched hat, the wide brim bent gown all round, but not eel:- dealing the lightning glance of eyes that are terrible in anger—such is. Geo. G. Meade, no =blest Roman of them all, relentless fighter, ar.4 r 7,1 4 .,4";7=k voistrGe*.al; tergyhose, Gr4no tickbesit* to etekinrigeVgiiitte kreatest itilfebt4 The itde haa'l7 . 6e`rt faith:COM Ilarb6r . to Pro videnee Church, a distance of ten miles, and is made in the last two hours of daylight. is The location of the camp has been fixed, fires built, and inquiries are heard about the head quarter train, which must arrive before tents ean'beTitelleiband—supper --The,evening_ is chilly, and great coats era taken from the peniinebs of &tales and put-on. Boles and , boards areitdade , into seats, or rubber blankets. are thruwa,upon the ground -to ,41e on, and all: gather close to the crackling rail fire, and wait for theVcagons: Grant and Iti3ade:are engaged in conversation upon indifferent lopics appa rently.flad,llartuird-ditiqmgutis. Gen.lnglillssen4s . a„ man every, few minutes to. tid.'zind taitcrinp the Wagiini. 11i...Nstastillarne, hereon a flying visit, has gone to'sleep, - hisleet to the Are. Dana.strideslakand down as though the day had - not afforded sufficient exer cise. About 10 o'clock it ie reported that the train will be tip`iwan"lniur or tWo. In crossing a stream on a narrow-dam one or two wagons .had been cap§ized,bence the,delay„ „Xi.. Dana remarks that it Was "evidently:apiece of dam(u) "Grant rises,steps'towards the fire and says, "If we have nothing Virdi - se The sentence was never finished. . . Tae correlative to the, !' if " ,Ina, however, be imagined... That it was not, expressed was. because atthatinstant ,the General took a brand , from the fire and lighted hispipe,amaetinctuni patible withspeech.,: The messenger who brings the report as to the wagons has brought a sup ; ply of bread and butter and gingerbread, and a pail of water-has been fetched. Everybody laneheo, (Mem : A phenomenon—gust is no respecter of persons. Gen. Grant is as dusty as I am.) 'After lunch all light pipes;iind'sinoke , as vigorously and silently as Indians in Council —waiting.forl the wagons. The waiter, rolled' in a single blanket, falls to sleep - at midnight Wakened to find tents pitched, ev'erybody turning in, and the fire flickering low. , The officer whose, tent he shares informia , him, that breakfast is ordered at four o'clock, It seems' just no time'till the shrill-bugled reveille rouses the camp.' Breakfast it dispatched; tents struck,' horses -mounted; all with astonishing celerity; aud again gallops headquarters cavalcade. To.:, day Grant rides his war-horse " Cincinnati," a tall bay, the handsomest horse in the ArMy and 'the best. --; , 'Gen. Grant is , the small man-in stature, yet broad ,shouldered, firmly knit, ,well built, of strong Muscular poWer, with a thoughtful, calm; cool and' Conternplative countenance-; alwayS digesting the grand plan of ultimate success; with the bravest• army of , modern ago always, moving before UlilltrB eye. - kits sees every move, knews its importance, and 'calculates as it wins. t Gen. Meade is ,the large - , stout, able-bodied man,,looking every whit a soldier. with a keen, penetrating eve, of bold, intrepid, fearless char' rder, who fights to *in; who shares the sol dier's' privations _and -does not shirk his 'risk., To these representative men we look ibr success. To them do we ,give our means and our power, (feeling assured that lioth will ho 'used for out benefit, in restoring the supremacy tit our goveremeut and crushing the BEBE • ‘• t I 2 • lONS. Front_ the ItiehniOndExamin or. June 13. The ConventiOn of Black Republicans in Baltimore have re-dominated for h'residenfcif their country Abraham Lincoln, the Illinois rail-splitter, and for Vice President Andrew Johnson, known in the West as the Tennessee tailor, one of the meanest of that craft ; wheth er they shall ever be elected or not depends upon the Confederate army altogether. It appears also that .Lincoln and his friends have, been lucky, for so far, hi the ill success Grant and Butler, and in their precise meas ure 0f.,i1l success. If either of these two had taken Richmond before the Convention, then Butler or Grant would have been nominated for President. 'lf they had been already and decisively defeated, and their armies cut to pieces, Ahem neither Lincoln or any other Black. Republican would have had the slighestchanee of election. . Lincoln then, and his gang have been lucky es,-we said so far. = But to win his election in November this indecisive work of the _Federal armies, neither triumphantly victorious nor hopelessly cut to pied—neither taking Rich mond nor taking . hyßichniond—w ill do at all. The Yankee nation is now holding itself pre pared to put . on its• most gracious smiles arid accord to us the same tender consideration which has been shown to the citizens of Vicks burg. Let them only haul 'down our flag on that auspicious morning, and read their Decla ration of Independence on our Capitol Square and Lincoln is already elected President. In this stage of thy business also, ltowever, our artily Hasa voice ; and it shall continue to baffle, repulse, and cut up the Federal fore( s, and finally' drive them from the soil of Virginia, us we fervently trust, trust, then this Baltimore nomina tion will nut gain Lincoln ,a single vote in No vember. In that case who NOR be the next President I , in the enemy's country 7 Not Fremont with his "radical abolition." The era for that school of politics will be peat. •But there re mains-another party—the Democrats , they be ing also divided, at the present into War De- • octets and Peace Democrats, but whowould all be Peace Democrats in the - event supposed—that is, in the event of a total failure of the Federal campaign of 1864. Now the very latest intel ligence brought us from that country by a'spec ial chunni4 informs us of these two further facts : that, the populir mind became at once wildly agitated on the announcement of this Baltimore nomination and_that in Maryland, especially, disturbance was apprehended.' In fact the Democrats ‘ of the North, who have waited four years, not too patiently, trusting to regain the . power and profit which they but lately held to be a Democratic inheritance,' must naturally be provoked beyond endurance at this audacious attempt off,,incoln and - Ssward to tideroughshod over them four years more. We learn that the - Democrats are now uni versally turning their thoughts to Franklin_ Pierce and the Connoieticut'Seyinour as-their nominees for President and Viee.President.— To give them the least chance of electing those two advocates of peace, Grant must be defeated,. the invasion must collapse and die out. and the very name of war must become a word of horror, uttered with loathing, and execration. There fore, it is the interest of the Democrats to do their very uttermost to :Deakin the Federal army, dis credit Federal finance, in short to extinguish the. war altogether, in order to exiing,uish the party which invented the :car 'and governs it and lives by it. The last insignificant fact, which comes to us by special advices is, that immediately on the Baltimore' nomination, gold' reye to one hundred and ninety-seven.. Gold is a sense tive substance, and it feels another shiver, and sinks back a little moie into its crypts, at the idea of another four years tit' Lincoln and Chase, and those 'dreadful paper-mills and steam-pres ses, the smoke of whose, fatal machinery. as condeth up for ever and ev*f - Here, then are the elernents of trouble and storm,'which happily threaten to interfere, not with Lincoln's election, tint with the peace . of Yankee society. Before 'November the whole North may be writhing in intestine convul sions; her brute mass now pressing us soheavi ly may be flung off, and this Confederacy may be standing elect, redeemed,' radiant, trium phant; shaking her invincible locks in the sun. For all this we look to the Confederate Artily. Lee, Beauregard and Admen can b'otii give the Yankees a President and make us rid of them and their President for ever. t tie fi fimktin ilepositon, tiambc,isbrg, '4114r - ftILL SIGNED. Thetiresideut hiss-"=signed and approved th act to Increase thd,paf.of soldiers in the Unite* -States 'army. 'lt providis that on and after the first*of May, and during the continuance of the present rebellion,- the - pay per month of non connaissioned-,ufficers and_ prititt gic•mili tary service shall' be as Sergeant Mnjeri, — s26 ; Virlerinair 174 Commissary Sergeants of cavalry, artillery and infantry. L 544.); -Sergeants of ordnance, ; suppers and miners ; and_ poutonierti, $r.34 ; Corporals of ordnance, Sappers and miners' and ponteifiers, $2O; privates of ,engitieers and tirdnanee; df the first class, $18; and of the second clays,-$l6; Corporals of cavalry, Artillery and infantry, ".$ '; Chief 'hirWers cavalry; sl.3`; . thgWrs, - SIG-;','farriers and blachsinitlA of artillery,' $18; privates of cavalry, artillery and,infuntry,sl6; ,principal musicians of ar- Allier,' and infantry, $:?:2; Jeaders of brigade and regimental bands, $75; ; :hospital stewards of the • first class, $33; hos pital stewards of the second class, $25; :hospi tal stewards of the third class, $43. ' All non-commissioned officers and privates' in ' the'regular 'army; serving "under 'enlist - Meets made pribr , to July 23,1861', - stroll-have the pri vilige of re-enlisting. for a, term 'of three.years,' in their respective organizations, until theist of August next, anct all such non-commissioned of ficera and privates so re-enlisting, shall lie enti tled, to the bounties mentioned ih the joint res— olution of Congress, approved JiinuarylA 1864: cases where the Government shall fur nish transportation mid subsistence todiiicharg ed officers and soldiers from the place of their dischurge,tolhe - place of their enrolment or or iginal-muster into the service, they shall,not be entitled to travel, pay or commutation of subsis tent°. • - COMFORT BEFORE ,lAPP,EAR/MWEEL—Ifost people ar4,: too apt„to saeriqe comfort to ap-' pearances, to subject their own fomilies to manifold privation& and discomfort in ordr to• astonish with a'show ofuilluenee a few aequain tanc,es who seldom visit them;.and .who only laugh at their foolish and peurile attempt at dis playing a little superior upholstery in a room which none of ,Vje family dare.mahe iise of. \lany is the houge-we have - seen wherein the "parlor Iva§ erammed,with useless stutf-while not k single .room was comfortably: furnish ed., - , Every .family should seek first the' utmost comfort fur its own members-that its means will compass and then, if there is a surplus of funds which they know not,what efse - to do with, C lei It ' evoted to the purchnie,of something to ' case the eyei of strangers--or rather to et- eit .envy in their bosoms; for.e.uell things .gen era ly occasion far more,' envy than pleasure am ng riv,al householders. Those apartments of a se which are most used shOuld' receive the most attention. Tim dining-room and sleep ing apartments should receive the most especial care, , for on these does the' health, (and conse quently the comfort and happiness) of the fami ly ,pre-eminently - depend. In short, seek first your own comfort, and the "appeartmees" will take care of themselves. • i . TIM. Washington Republican says:—A happy thought has occurred to the Secretary of war, which it gives u's pleitsure_:to *cord: Firit. He ordered Colonel Greene to organ-__ ize'the Freedman's Village, for the protection of the bll;ck man and his family, upon the Arlington estate, belonging to the rebel Gen eral Lee. That village is a success. Secondly. He has bimaelf recently selected a site upon the same estate for a national Ceme tery for the burial of loyal-soldiers who dio in Virginia- from wounds inflicted by Lee's orders. General 51eigs has been dire7:fed.to super Vise the laying-out of the grounds. How appropiate that Lee's lands'should be liediented to two such noble purposes—the free living black man whom Lee would enslave, and the bodies of the dead soldiers whom Lee had killed in a wicked cause! Let this record stand to the everlasting credit of Secretary Stanton. -SEGEEt 8 IN. LlFE—Keep the law of duty now ever before you ; let it be ) our never-fail ing pillar of light. .Be brave, and on the squarA with your conscience to_ the last. Your suc cess in life may not, be equal to your hdpes or your deserts; it is nit man to insure success. The best and ,wisest of us may fail in the strug gle; but we may have our consolatioMeven then. To gain the world's applause, and snatch its fleeting spoils, is not man's sole and ; proper business here.. Immortality smiles forth on the Keene, and beckons him ever onward, In the race ror those _eternal honors which the world can neither give miic . take away—the prize which all may strive for, and no one strive'in vain.—Dr. Markham. PROFESSOR - S., of Dickinson College is not .much given to joking. Occasionally, however, this rein 'of his disposition is excited, and then his hits are of the hardest kind, and double edged. One morning, not long ago. he found a horse' in the recitation room. The. Class had collected and with solemn countenances awaited the entrance of the Professor. He came in, looked around deliberately, first upon the horse then upon the class, and remarknd at the same time twitching his shirt collar, "Ahern ! You've got a new classmate, I see. Pm glad it's a horse, 'there were jackasses cnonglr be - fore." thaw TO SPOIL A GIRL—TeII her she is a little lady, and must not run, 'and make her a sunbonnet a yard deep, .to keep her from tan ning. .Do not 1e her - play with her male cousins. "they ate:so rude." Tell her not to speak loud it is so masculine; and that Toad laughing is quite. ungenteel. Teach her music, but never mind her spelling. Give , her ear rings at six years of age. Teach hetto set-her cap for beaux at eleven. And after.yout pains taking, if she does not grow up a simpering, utirettecting nobody, that cannot answer a love letter without 801110 smart old aunt to, help her, give her up—aho is past' all remedy. BE ON GOOD TERMS WITH You PIL LOW.—The instant the head is laid' on the pil low is that in which conscience delivers its de crees. If it has conceived any evil design, it is surrounded by thorns. The softest down .is htiril under the restless head of the wicked. In man. to be happy, one. must be on good terms' with one's pillow, for the nightly reproaches it can make must be heard; yet it is never so deli cious, so' tranquil, as •after a day oh which one has perforined some good act, or when one is conscious of having spent it in some useful or substantial employment. • POVERTY AND RICIIES.—There is not such a mighty difference as some may imagine be tween the . poor and the rich. In pomp, show and opinion, there is ,a great deal but little as to the pleasure and conveniences of life. They enjoy the same earth, and air, and eaven; him ger and thirst make the poor• mars meat and drink as pleasant and relishing as all the varie ties which cover a rich man's table; and all the labor of a poor man is more healthful, and many time more 'pleasant,,too, than the ease and luxury of the rich. THE following conversation with a wounded rebel in one of the Washington hospitals is re ported: "What- ate you fighting for?" "Our,in &pen Immo," "Haven't you alwagg had YOuon dependence ?" "Yes, until this intM broke out." "WhO fifed'firstr "Why, I suppose we did ; as long as there was some firing to be done we thought we might as well commence!" • - 6 4. :.,alta u /-t ..„,„ E 17 7 V`: s - A , „, '' y i ; 6;' 1 i: - f,, EYSTERi Are in Receipt ef their L .~ ; =I fir! R 4 IT -g S 2 0"6. - 'IC •0 F -G ChO DS MEE _ ;~. Our assortment i 6 now complete, and we can offer to our frioadsolhondzoole!cs,worpnont of RE.S S poorAs EEO as can be found thistsideofThik . kclelpilia. We have. Prints at,lq, I.Bx, 22, 25 c9l 28 ets„ Printed'De Laines, All-toobe Lame , Silk 44 Wool,Olzallitll., *iintcd Shepherd'Pleidec'. - Wide and Narrx Check. B_l L K S • Bla i ck ,Fancy, in grbat pLrietY. Plain Bleak Grenadines, cleuble end. twisted, Embroidered Greuadines, double "e: twisted BALBI6It ALS.. Barnett's and Skeletons all prices. CORSETS All sized . and best qu'ality T R\l M M t Black Silk Trimming &ace, Black Silk Barl) - Bugle, Trixn ngle Dn'ttoni LINEN HANDKERC 'EFS. Eitibrcidered, llem Stich; 4 Mournjng and, Etilbroiderea iv colors' KID GLOVES Alexander's celebrated Kid (Paves,_ Silk. Lisle ,Thro?.(l, Cotton,. s+! 0, MOURNING G• 00 D S We ba:re now a separate apartment for M,ourning Goods, and our stoat.: is complete in every Particular. ani.ll4 All-Woul De Lmines, Cobutgs, Clashtheres Silk and 'Wool C'hallice, GRAPE GOODS Long Crapo Veils. from $2.50 to $7.00. - • Crape Falk] Tucked. Crape Falls Twilled „kRPETS! CARPETS” CARPETS!!! Caipets from 45 cents up, Ilarap Carpets, '9ll]lYo'of Carprta, MATTING White and CheekOd 1 34, ' Cocoa Matting QITEENISWAEE Qneensware in sets or by the piece. We are Pre- pared to-fll ordors for any quantity of COMMON AND 15HITE GRANITE WARE Our - stock is oorriPlete in every line,andif our friends want good bargains, all'we have to say is that this is the place to secure them_ finr - Call loon, before the ruth 21egis Meta Street, Clintabersburs, Pa. R.; slid '''eteettilft i Vre s tiamationt' , ' 1.1 I —'6 P,EC IA L ELEreTttpp t-, detAiiikh ON n. s —B.y . g i*tpli of a Writ of Election, Lover utrected. by Als - ViY.w-lEhe Curt rite, Governor of the UeMmouwealth, aceetirker ins hand a d the great scat of the State, at liarlisburir, on the :'lst day of Juno. 18131. aecording hi the preivisious Lan. act of tuelleneral Assembly of Pennsylvania, titled - An Act prescribing the time and manner o submitting to the people, for their appioval and ra ification, or - fejectnnrithe . proposedmatentlinents the Consti- , Lotion"— I i, - 6A3111F:1; BRANDI:High-Sheriff of OebontY of Franklin. do-hereby 'mike knuivn and ive this pub diitintice to the'Electoraof the cotintYof - Fraiiitlin, Wai f nu the let . Tuefgag.pf. sayrint..q. next. .(being the 2d day mouth;)StiochifElection will be held in the Several Election Itistricts establithrtt by law in said county, at which time they will ballet for or against certain proposed amendments to the Consti -tieWot this Common ww.ittli, which are as follows: .TherPtshoAl.e.ao,lidditiLltelseelitin to the - third article of constitution,(tp be' desitonifecl'as sec tion four. As ; - - F.c. 4. Whenever any Of the ,qUalified. electors afthis Cbinnion wealth shalt bent any aotualmi Mary lervice,dinder a r.ieto ' sitiouTrom the Presideutof the Coifed States, or by the authority of this ,wealth, such electors inay.exereise the right of suf Irage in all elections bythe citizens, under such reg ulations as are,orsha:ll be, prescribed by law, as fully as it they were ptient at their usual place of , etec- • ..tion." WE:C. 2. Thera shall bo:t*o additionalsectiodiito the eleventh article . orthe Con4itution, be,desig nated as, sections eight and iliac as follows:" SEG.'S: 'No bill snail bonasseil by tha,Legislatare containing wore than one subject which shall be clearly expie.cd in the title, excea ailproprilition bills. . - "Six. 9. No bpill shall bs: , passed by the Legida- turn granting anY Paw ena.or privileges, id any case, where the authoeity togrant snail. powers, or privi leges, has been, or may hereafter be, conferred upoh tho'nourts of this Commoriwcaltb." The said Elections ,will. be held throughout the County us follows: At the Court in the Borough of Chambers burg, for the North.Wardaf said Borough a.nd part of Guilford township. At the Public House of J. W. Taylor for the South, Ward of said Borough. • • At the Public House of John Gordon, at the West Point of Chambersburg, for the•towmhip,Of Hamil ton; Arthe School• House in, Fayetteville, for parts of the townships of Guilford'and @eon. At the Public, house of Martje , Shoemaiter; in Greenvillag'e, for part Of Green , township. • • - At the Western School house, in the town of :St. Thomils. fo'r St. Thomas township. -Al the School Rouse, in the town of Fannettatntrg, for the townsnip Metal. - : At the School Housolln the toirn of Roithuiy,Tor the township4f , . , - • At the House'of Joan Harvey; for Part of town ship of Fannett.; • • At the School House in the town of Concord, for part of the township of Fannett, and- -' At the new Stone School Howie,,in IHorrowtown distriet., for the other part of Fahnctt township. At the Mouse now occupied hi-Geo. Andei s'on. in the village of Quincy, for the township of Quincy. At the Western 'School House. in Waynesboro',, for the township of, Washington. Aft l hejlouse ofJohn Adams. in-Greencastle, for Antrim and part of the townships of Peters and ogtiomzry. -- ' •• . . At the &boot House, on the land of Michael Cook' ilYtirren township, for the township of Warren, At the Stratiburg School House for the 'township wf Letterkenn At the Muse of James , Mulleii, in the tciwri of Loudon for part of the township of Peters., At the Log Hou , e on the farm of Jacob Elltolt,for the Welsh. Run District, being post of Montgomery township. At the Muse of Thos, M'Afee, in Mereerebnrg, for farts of the townships of Peters and.Montgouaery. At the Mt. Rock School Hotise, in Sonuthampton two.. for part of the township of Southampton, , At, the Eastern SehoolMou e. in Orrstown. for the other part of Southampton township. And the said Act of Assembly, entitled "An Act relating to Electionsolthis Commonwealth," pass 7, ed,July 3,1839 further, provides. as follows, to wit: That the Inspectors end shall meet at the respective places appointed for holding the election in the District in which they may respect ively belong;, before 9. o'clock. on the morning of the 2d Tuesday ofOctober, and each of said Inspec tors shall nom - lint' one Clerk who shall be a qualfied voter of such Distt Mt. "In care the person who shall have received thel second highest number of votes for Inspector shall not attend on the day of -election, then the person who shall have received the second highest dumber of votes for Judge at - the next' preceding election.; shall act as Inspector in hisplace. And in +lase the person who .has 'received the highest number of votes for Inspector shall_ not attend, the person elected .T.l ,