The Franklin repository. (Chambersburg, Pa.) 1863-1931, October 12, 1864, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    =Mit - a tinitert,
watineaday, 9etober 12, 1864.
UNION NATIONAL TICKET,
FOR PRESIDENT,
ABRAHAM: LINCOLN,
op ILLMOII3.
FOR VICE FRESIDMNT,
ANDREWIJOHNSON,
CM=
UNION ELECTORAL I!ICKE T.
EMI
_ '
SENATORIAL.
MORTOit M'AVCRAEL., - THOMAS CCNICLNGILM.
•
REPRESENTATIVE.
1. ROBERT P. RING. 111 ELAM, W. HALE
2.. CI. 3fORRIIION COATES. 114. CRAMER H. SURMA
3. Hvantr 115. JOUR WISTER.
. .
. .
4. WILLIAM B. KERN. ;16. DAVID M'CONAUGHN.
5. BARYON H. Jezass. - 17. DAVID W. Woons.
6. CHARLES H. R 1 NR. IS. IRAAC BENSON,
1. ROBERT PARKE. ;19. Jolts' PArrov.
8. WILLIAM TATUM !W. BAIIVEL B.• DICK.
9.-JOHIN A. itIRSTAND. 1 2L 'EVEIt4II9 BIEREP.- •
10. RICHARD IL CORTF.LL. - 1 20. JOHN P. PENNEY. N.,
11. EDWARD RALIDAY. BBLNEZ'R 3rJuXicrx.
12. CHARLES F. REED. ',24, JOHN W. BLANCIIARD.
THE ARMY TOTE.
We are not sanguine that the Army vote
will give the . Union party a very great
lain this year over the vote for. Gov. Cur
tin of 1863. It is generally anticipated
that from twenty to thirty thousand will
he added to the Union vote by the amend
ed Constitution conferring suffrage upon
our brave soldiers in the field ; but the're
suit will not vindicate finch calculations.
It mast be borne in mind that very many
soldiers are not voters. Perhaps one
fourth are minors. and another fraction is
made up of sliens—these two classes ta—
king quite one-third; and it may be much
more in some cases, from the men in ser
vice, who 'can exercise the right of suf
frage.. Again—very many of those who
,are citizens of the United States and of
proper age,- willjlose their votes because
of the exigencies of the service, and neglect
to have assessments made and taxes paid
in proper season. The armies of Gens.
Grant and Sheridan have been on the
move for two weeks past; engaged in
skirmishes 'or battles daily during that
time, and it would be wonderful indeed
if hundreds would not fail to have them
selves assessed, or if assessed by their
friends at home, thir receipts must in
very many cases fail to reach them, owing
to their daily movements
. and changes of
position.
Gen. Sheridan's army commenced its
victoriona march nearly three weeks ago,
and bat few if any have had time since
then to procure assessments, tax receipts,
-tickets, &c., to enable them to vote; and
himdreds - of tax receipts mailed to them
must necessarily fail to reach them. us the
lines between Martinsburg and that army
are very precariouk. We doubt not that
fullY one thousand Union votes in Sheri
dan's army will be lost because of their
rapid movements and the ceaseless service
demanded of. that gallant command in its
pursuit of the vandal Early ; and the same
reasons must lose the Union cause thou
sands of Uni;m votes in the Army of Gen.
Grant. We presume that most' of our sol
diers have been assessed by their Union
friends at home, and their receipts for
warded; but fully one-third must have
failed to reach the soldiers in time to en
able them to vote yesterday. In General
Sherman's army, where there are not less
than three hundred ,voters from this leg
' islittive district, it•is possible that the en
tire vote may be lost, and certainly not
one-andf of it can be secured. Tickets and
receipts were - forwarded in due time to
reach that army ten days before the elec
tion, bad not the lines of communication
been interrupted; but the rebel Gen. For
rest has taken the stump there and will
most likely prevent the blanks, tickets,
receipts, &c., froth reaching Atlanta in
• time. A few Franklin and Perry soldiers
off the line from Chattanooga to Dalton
may vote; but we look for but small re
turns from the Army of the Cmnberland.
The- same causes will defeat hundreds of
proxies. But few reached the county from
any of the armies in - time to be cast yes
terday,, and very many are doubtless on
• the way 'and must be lost. It must be
' - borne hi mind, too, that Gets. Lee and
Hood are by no means indifferent as to
the result of this election. Their organs
have not concealed the fact that the de
feUt of the Union party at home depends
upon the defeat of the Union armies in the
tield;'and-Lee, Early and Hood have been
boldly announced as the men who were
to give triumph to the Peace men in the
North by rebel victories •over Sherman,
Sheridan and-Grant. In thiS"programme
thdy have failed; but they'lrave one hope
le l, and that will doubtless be exhausted
,to rsiO their sinking cause. If Lee and
Early and Hood cannot defeat onr armies
° for the benefit of Peace men in the North,
• they probably took thebstump yesterday
wherever it was at all practicable and en
gaged our troops so as to prevent them
from voting. They know - as well as do
Peace men in the North how Union sol
diets will vote; and next to their bullets,
_ rebelszdread soldiers' ballots just now.
Another fact -that has been generally
forgotten in estimating the soldiers' vote,
is the large army vote polled last year by
t!tirloughed soldiers. All \khe sick and
wounded soldiers belonging lo the State
were . yery justly- transferred to hospitals
in the State and thus enabled to vote, and
many others were furloughed from the
ranks. In all `there were probably as
Many as ten thousand soldiers voted in
the State last year, and nearly all Of them
.voted for Gov. Curtin. Now, if there
shall be-thirty thousand v4tes cast in the
field, the advantage to - the Union party
will not be ntucli greater than the ten
thousand cast at home gave ns last year.
Of the recruits sent to the field within the
last two months a large fraction of them
were members of the Democratic party,
and they will not have learned how sadly
that 'party strengthens their foes in sea•
son to make their vote yesterday for the
cause for which they peril their lives. Of
the soldiers' vote cast •yesterday, there-
fore, we count on one-third of it aH againot
as; and in an armypoll of thirty.thousand,
we would gain 'but little Over the army
vote last year. In Franklin county there
- acre about one hundred and fifty soldiers
voted in 1863. This year, With a full and
fair vote in the field, we should have six
hundred cast. ditil not less than fair hun
dred Union majority; but with our armies
,m the march: with important lines inter-
rupted 4 and the want of proper intbrma
tion among the soldiers as to the details
necessary to be observed to receive their
votes, we do not calculate that more than
two hundred majority can be safely count
ed on for this county from the army.—
Possibly matters may have gone better
than we antieipate ; but we do not see
good reason to expect it. By November
the Soldiers will understand' the complica
ted machinery by which their votes -cap
be 'given; and President Lincoln will have
double the majority cast yesterday for the
local tickets in Pennsylvania. , We have
abiding faith-in the success of the Union
cause on the home Vote; but of all men
the heroic soldiers, who have given us vic
tory over treason, deserve to vindicate'
their own cause at the ballot-box, and
mingle their loyal ballots with their "loyal
friends at home to drive treachery in con
fusion and shame from the power it would
prostitute to the peril of our sacred Na
tionality.
THERE is no truth whatever in the state
ment of the Spirit of last iveek, thatipres
tient Lincoln - offered Gen. McClellan the
"highest command in the army," the "best
civil position within his gift," and propos
ed to "support McClellan for the Presi
dency in 1868," if McClellan would with
draw now.- It is wholly false and has not
even the merit of
_plausibility, and it is
hardly reasonable- to - suppose that the.
Spirit did not know better when it pub
lished the kittement with a displayed
heading. Gen. McClellan snits Mr. Lin
cohi about as Well as a Presidential can
didate as any other "cessation of hostili
ties" candidate. and he is most welcome
to run as far as he can get, which may
amount to two and probably three States.
While the SpiriN 11111)11 is in on M'Clelhin,
can it tell its:readers why he holds his coin
missiomas Ma* General and draws his
pay, without pretending to render service::
Scott tried that and failed: 'Woodward
tried it and failetl, and the, people have no
more a - Oction for such a fraud upon the
treasury no* than they had then. Let
us know about it!.
GrIZAyI. Meade, Hancock, Burn
side, Warren. Butler. Sheridan, Slug - than,
Thomas, Hooker and others unite in de
claring that the war is -not a fitilure, and
that it must very soon achieve its crown
ing success by the destruction of tr.cason
and the restoration of Union'. - Sharpe,
Stenger, Duncan, and the Spirit declare
the war a failure and demand Peace. -Who
is right—Pence orators or War Generals ?
THE Democrats have made a gain in
Comiecticut—that is a sort of a gain—and
being wholly unused to that sort of thing
the Spirit gets up a rooster and crows
lustily. The victory consists in ther gain
ing two towns and losing nine towns: but
as they didn't fose all the towns in the
State. they are jolly! 'lima for thedaud
of steady habits!
DEJAWARE has' elected a majority of
Democratic inspectors—the vote being
very light. At the imn eleetiou the eops
didn't vote, and this tine• they stole a
march on the Union men. 'Wait till No
verither—there will be a fair light then.
LIST Spring, after the adjournment of the leg
islature, ihetighe Spirit could hare had no mo
tive to withhold the truth,. it declaged that Mr.
M'Clure had done - everything in his power to pro
cure indemnity for our military damages. Here
is its language on the sultiect vu the .14411 . 0 f May
last. in a leading editorial : - •
"It is due to the cause of truth to Nay, that no
one could have given a more cordial, e f ficient and
earnest support to the measure than did COL. MC
CLURE. He um: in Harrisburg time and again
using his personal influence with his party to se
cure the passage of the bill. We do not admire
the Colonel's politics, nor do, we swear by hint in
those matters, but we will girl. hint credit forbeine
FAITHFUL TO THE INTERESTS OF HIS OWN SECII
-
TION."
Such were its declarations when the Dditor of
this paper was not a candidate, and when the
,Spirit supposed-it might venture to tell the truth
for once without injury to its party. But on Sat
urday last an edition of the Spirit was printed,
when it was too lute' to.contradict anything that
might appear in its columns, and among its ed
itorials we End the following:
"It is-true that Dol. KClure did end some
time at Harrisburg, last winter, and we stated in
our issue of the lejth bf May that he had gives a
cordial support to the claim bill. then we
hare had some reason to doubt the correctness of
tchat we then said, and are induced to believe that
he had 'other fish to fn-,' about that time, at-the
Hendquartern of Shoddy."
When did the Spirit change 'its mind? Did it
discover its error just three days before the elec
tion! And if it was in error why did it not give
some reason for its change of base? Again the
sauce paper says: •
"We have it on the authority of a prominent
member of the'Republiean party who has been
spending some film , in the western portion of the
State, that the reason g iven by the Republican
members, of the fast legislatnre, from that MT
tion, for opposing the appropriation of money for
tie relief of the Citizens: of Chambersburg, was
theinutter distrust and want of confidence in Mc-
Clure. They, say that if he had opposed the meas
ure it would have received more favor at their
hands; and that if he is elected to the next legisla
ture it will drive many of them from the support of
any bill for the relief of our Citizens. The inter
ests of our Citizens require the election of - Sharpe
and Mitchell to the legislature."
Not content with confronting its own voltudary
declaration that Mr. M'Clure had been "faithful
to the interests of his own section," it goes further
and manufactures a shallow falsehood to prejudice
voters, by charging the defeat of the indemnity
measurhe same man it complimented in the
highest terms us its advocate. If the efhorts of
Mr. 'Velure were prejudicial to the bill, it is
strange indeed that it was not discovered lice win
ter. Mr. Sharpe and the friends, of the measure
:who labored with him, must have been singularly
not to NPe it just at that thin. They did not
hesitate to call MI Mr. Met:lore in every emer
gency to aid the measure, and it was' not until
it is as hoped that a few votes might 'Winn& for
the lb.:operatic ticket that the thlsehood was con
ceived and the Spirit wax made to filther it.
18 now too late to effect the suffrages of
the people of Franklin count• on this question.
Their verdict e 4 made, and with it, whatever it
may be, we shall be well etnitamt. If it is against
ns, w e trust that ilu one will regret it more, and
that no one will suflhr more thereby, than the
IA riter hereof; but we are not willing that volun
tary and enaselema efforts made in belialf of the
suffering people of the border, shall he perverted
and thlsified as the Spirit hus•attengrted. Did it
not forget the golden:Tule when it allowed-its eol-
WHIM to utter tittltettlelitli a,, palpably 'falba! and so
flagrantly unjust? .
Most earnestly do Copperhead papers tabor,
to prove the war a " taiture"—mogt pergigtently
do they lihel the olln#ry of our bralti armies to
juKtif) their tre:twor i l -- 'The Philsolelphin Sooday
Mercury of the 9th inst., makes its strongest ap
peal to men to vote the M'Clellan ticket by man
ufacturing a despatchdeclaring that onr army has
been terribly defeated. seen in the face of offi
cial diipatches showing our steady success, in or
der to bolster up the Copperheads, falsehoods are
invented to give victories to the rebels. Witness
the following dispatch published Most eonspicu- .
ously in the Mercury on Synday laid, every word
of which is treasonable and wholly false:
IN - Agar:GT(2o,Oct. 8-5 P. Si.
I have but very little to say. Grant and Meade
have made a desperate movement and have been
defeated. We have lost, since last Friday week,
over thirty thousand men,and are on the retreat.
Secretary Stanton, although Gen. Grant is in
the city to-day, has not the courage to tell the
truth. The fact is, a gr4at disaster has happened
to the Army of the Potomac.
13irney's corps has been cut to pieces. -
Tin rebel papers are just beginning to appre
ciate the tact that vandalism such as the plunder
ing and burning of Chambershurg is a losing game.
The Charleston Mercury of a late date forgets that
the war a "failure," and says:
"Whoa Early asuumedthe tai gi'essive and cross
ed the Potomac into Maryland, we ventured to.
express the opinion that such a movement could
produce nothing but-:evil to our cause. The sub
sequent burning down of Gliambersburg and the
military flourishes about Washington only confirm
ed our fears Time has passed on, and now iresee
realized the fruits of this expedition. The army
it raised itf' in the Valley of \ expedition.
before Early.
It has defeated him in two battles. NOr is this all.
"Thew two battles have aided principally in The
entbreemeut of the draft now going Oil in that
country, and will thus add tens tit thousands more
to our enemies in the tiehL To our comprehen
sion it was "fear that Etirly's expedition into
Maryland was like that oh Gen. Longstreet to
Knoxville.• It was part of that kind ut policy
which has continually clogged our success and de
stroyed its fruits before they are realized. It is
this which, has cost us the half of Georgia. Gen.
Hood was tilithful,to ib when he seat all of his as.
valry away and insured the fall of Atlanta."
THE follim mg pointed letter from lion. Win.
M. Meredith. Attorney General, to the great Union
itio.ting in Philadelphia on Siturdny tells the whole
story ima very few words:
Ge »denten : I regret notch that the eate of my
health preventt n » • from accepting your invita
tion to addreitA the Union meeting on Saturday
evening next.
It is, in my opinion, impossible to over estimate
the importance of the approaching elections. At
the name time, I have entire confidence in the re
sult, as I cannot believe that the people ,of the
loyal Staten Hill suddenly check their own victo
noini'eareer in thecanse of God. truth Hilt]. liberty,
to join the supporters of the Chicago platform.
in biting the dust idignominious submission.
I Wm, gentlemen, with great esteem, -
Your olWilient servant, \V. lil_ MEnttorrn.
PIIII.APEIP.U.k. G H 44.
To Ja,. 11. time. c. Biddle, Esq „and unwrs. Committee
Copperlieudd of the hear) comities in the
North-east seem determined to have the war n
failure.by murdering our -soldiers\ who are there
to enforce the draft. Last week Mr. L. K. Lease,
a member of Capt. Stroud's company, was nun ,
dered by some cowardly Copperhead is ambunh,
while he was riding along the public road in Mon
roe county. Need any one be told how t ,t , nut -
derer will vote at the next election Cit loyal
men vute'with such, men
THE facts elicited at Indianapolis oii the trial
of Dodd, one of the Sone of Liberty, are truly
frightful. They show the existence of a conspi
racy even more tetriiile Olin that of Jeff Davis
6z . Co., in the South, and that it is manipulated
by that arch traitor Vallandigham, 1,%h0 has put
forcvardtMcClellan as his tool to get this Covent
meat in hi , ellitches.
318. `iris. the Democratic candidate for Dis
triet Attorney in Fulton, has been dratted, and is
is
now skulkit , way in the Jmountains to avoid ar
rest as ade erter. Although thus openly defying
the laws, a al retn•ang to aid the government in
its at rugith• with treason, he was elected yesterday
to the responsible office of Prosecuting Attorney'
of Fulton county. ._- ,
THE AO devotes considerable space to portray
outrages alleged tolave been committed by Sher
idan's troops in the valley, quoted frtim the Rich
mond Enquirer, When ChntraterubtagWas bunt
'ed, it devoted - two (Minium to paliate the atrocity.
Natural enough—it adheres with great fidelity to
its friends
CAPT. D. B. It'Kutnts, formerly Colonel of
the 158th Penna. lufantryotuposed largely of
drafted iiien from this eminty—bas been paroled
by the rebels and is now at home. He wax cap
tured aboiti two monthil ago, and was confined
at Charleston.
THE election for the adoption or rejection of the
new•eonstitution in Mai 7 land takes place to-mor
mw and next day. There is no doubt of its adop
tion by a decided majority, and Maryland will
thus take her rank ssith the Free States of the
Union.
'4 SEALED- M1)081116 will be received by Gov.
Curtin until the 18th inst., for the erection of the
proposed extension of the State Capitol buildings.
POLITICAL INTELLIGENCE.
—Union Soldiers, remember! Geo. H. Pendle
lon, the Peace candidate for Vice President
voted against the increase of your pay, in Con
grebs
—Gcn. 'McClellan belongs to a party that never
resigns an office—hence ho holds on to his Major-
Getibralship and draws $6,000 a year. He is
pattern of an economist.
—Thomas I). Elliot, of^ the First District of
Massachusetts, and John It. Alley, of the Fifth
District; were on ThyOday renominated for Can,
Kress by the liepubli4s.
=Many of the DemOcratic newspapers speak
'of the Union soldiers being "Lincoln's hirelings."
Is this not ' a
reflection upon Gen. M'Clellan, who
draws the salary of a Major General..
—The nation that votes for Vullandighaufs can
didate for Prt4ident, says the N. Y. Tribune, is a
nation that has already perished ! True, but that
nation will not be the American people.
—Geu. McClellan, in his letter of acceptance,
talks about economy in the government. It illy
heroines him, who takes six thousand dollars a
year out of the national treasury for doing nothing,
to say much on this subject.
—The 6th corps—the boys who are ;Aiming
the victories in the Shenandoah Valley—recently
voted for President, and the tooting wait—Lincoln
MIA McClellan 2,0041 What campaign docu
ments they are sending . Its from the field.
—Daniel S. Dickinson thinks it is too much of
a strain on APClellan's muscles to be riding two
horses in the Presidential race, am! that the pre&
ent high price of breeches does not justify the
effini, considering the certain consequences to
enhue.
—floe. John A. Peters, in a speech at Portland,
MlliTlV,"brotght down the housi!" withjthe remark:
"If McClellan couldn't take Richnidud, making
Wa s hington Lia base, you may safely swear he
will new take Washington, makindßichmondhis
*
base."
—McClellan, having at 11111, tinik.in that life
whieNconititutes his public record, Ibsen CollllPC
ti'll with railroads, doubtless canie,ti regard it as
dangerous to "stand on the platforiti," from those
signs which are usually found on the doors of pas
senger cars.
—Union victorieshavo cheapened prices and
restored the Nation to hope and cheerfulness.=
liad the Democratic' party_ been in pow‘r one
month ago, we would have had no victories—the
armies and fleets 'would have been withdrawn;
and the Rebellion instead of, standing on its last
legs, wonld he
.iohilant in the concession of South-
tbe franklin Ilepasitorp, 414ambersbuta, Pa.
em independence. The crushing of the Rebellion
will restore old prices and former times.
—Fernando Wood-is out fur McClellan on the
_ground that McClellan; if elected, will carry out
the Chicago Platform, without reference to his in
dividual views: Many others are for McClellan,
on the ground that McClellan has discarded the
Platform, stands on his own, and will 'du, as he
pleases. , Somebody would be cheated, if McClel
lan shod be elected: which, however, cannot
happen. has hardly a ghost of a ehimee. But
he has all he deserves to have. -
—The Colonel of a New York regithent, now
in the trenches before Petersburg thus writes
home to his father. The writer never yet voted
'any other than the regular Democratic ticket :
"The blanks Lave been forvvirded` to us to
vote. I slutithave to vote for Lincoln, not Oa ac
count of himself, his party - , or for ecoumny'ssakre:
bet because of the Chicago platform, and the real
necessity - of showing the Rebels that, we mean
business. That peace is only to be obtained on
tilus of submit:4mm. '['he n'-eiectimi of Lincoln
will be dreadfid to them."
—We take the following signiticientseutences
front Thompsou s s Bank Reporter:
"Tu our view, pewee is near at hand. If Lin
coln is re-elected, the South will gii'e tip, and the
Union Hill he iv-e.taldishail williout-'4.-establiA
ing Slavery. If McClellan is elecbld, the. Union
will be re-establi•lied with Slaver), as Uetitre the
rebellion. With Meeldtan, the Southern drat) trill
to engrafted on the debt of the country, 1!
".Slavory ended „or Sla;t ery •perpetuhted, G the
great point the election. The second great
point is the Contillerate debt. All other questhais
are 1)l2Ull rtikdehnl,"
—Gen. JAI! A: Logan is home, is Illinois. He
has just come up from annoying the 13etbehi at At
'Mita. John was oh%as s a tease. A McClellan
Committee wrote to him at Atlanta, (legging him
to indorse the- Ching. Platform. He took his
pencil and wrote on the' b4ek of his lust Order
congratulating l& troops upon the ;I"nion victo
ries. the words-Etruse am!" and: mailed it to
the Committee. Logan well o i *s: •
"There are flow only two parlieei those alo
support and eneouttule the Rebels, a n d the'seNVlll)
oppose them. lionest own truty htf deltoleil with
the oppMtitiou, hut the tendency Of supporting .
the Chit:ago nominees is to strenutheu the rebel-
lie mv' too that at Atlanta he iheard only
au , emcee ;team. for McClellan, bud thst the
demonstillfittlllllllllllll the privates prove that they
have no stock in the Chicago concern.
—Robert Ilreckittridge's rejertion of. tin
terms of Pence prepared for the Country the
conspirators at Clusago, brought down the lant - so
in his lust speech at Cincinnati. Br sai,"); - :
“:.sly excellent friend speaks of the South zr3
'his erring la ethrens But I do not )NTSIIIIIIII'II
to be my Southern brethren who have tried their
ten' hest to cut my throat. [Applause.]' Iltave
a brave young son, twenty-one years of age,-who
bus been lighting Iron the beginning of this war,
on our side. lie was captured, and they Miro
him now under the tire of the batteries at Charles
ton. Well, I would cheerfully go ]there and tak e
hi4lacr, hat as GO(' is uty judAt4, I would not
agree to bring him home by making peace on the
terms which these men pnmoie. [Great Ap
pianos.]
,leff•rson Davis visited New
id, and in his speeches at Portland and Angus;
t. and other Eastern cities lie made repeated
protestations of his' th.ivotion-to the Union. At
Portland, Maine, he wound up an,elab rate.eitio.
gy of the Union %%all thew words:
"If, at rule future time, a .ea I nut u 'igled
tvith . the dust, and the arm of iulimt sini has
been nerved for deeds of itinulioo;l, Joni' of
oar should burst upon our city. I feel th. r, , _
lying upon his inheriting the iintinet of his an
tors and mine, I nut) pledge hint in that peril, s
hour to standJ,y your side in the tit...teller it .
hearthstoDes, m tai 4taittilig the tor rot a
flag whose out and snidlied
in ninny a battle bs Sett lied hind, has never been
stained v. ith dishonor, and will, I trust, forevi:r
fly as free as, the breeze which mitbbb
. •
Dix. no his arrival at soadasky,ou on
day last was serenaded, and thus briefly rofe'rred
to the political cionpaign :
I will say one word, however, on the subject
which lies nearest lo the heart of eVery loyal plan
—I mean the rebellion. It has been my convic
tion from the beginning that wis can have no hon
orable peace until the insurgent armies are din
peysed and the-Leader s of the rebellion expelled
from the ,country. [Loud Cheers.] I believe that
a cessation of Ithstilities would lead iuevitabi and
direcf4 to a recoguitioii e 1 the insurgent - States;,
and when I say this I Mid hardly- add that I can
have , no part in anyyplitical movement of which.
the Chicago idattorin . is the basis. [Renewed
cheering and applause.] No, fellow-citizens, the
only hope of securing an honorable peace—a peace
hich shall restore the Thies and Constitution- 7
lies in a steady persistent and unremitting prose
cution of the war—[great applause]—and I be
lieve the.judgment of every right thinking man
ill soon bring him to this conclusion:" -
—We bet; of.erery ..lmerican not to lose night
of the Right,ttf-the majority constitutionally ex
pressed, whAlhis war fol. the Union upholds
a4ninst ektAblish, or Free (over:Uncut utterly
perish. 'rho Kenturky!Breckinridge well said in
a recent speech:
" If Mr. Lincoln was the worst President that
ever lived,- it is the duty ofthe American people
to re-elect him;, because it is the duty of the Ameri
can people to put a final and crushing termination
upon this idea that there it , to he a faction and in
surrection every time a man is elected that a mi
nority in the nation- don't like. fat is to bin
der another outbreak of the kind ? It from .1
pealing the same revolutionaryseenes `.ll lathe
ruin of the country, this doctrine of State Rights,
that a State can conic and go., as it likes. They
talk about a permanent cessation of arms, avow
edly to make peace, with men who hare had no
other object than that they would not have this
President to bta their President. My friend Who
has preceded me calls them, 'my Southern breth
ern.'" , _
Andrew T. M. Zinolds, of Grand Rap
ids, Michigan, a War Democrat, publishes a state
ment of the reams why he cannot support Mc-
Cle'lnn. Ile says: •
Ihave examined the ground carefully, andshavo
come to the conclusion that -I cannot, conscien
tiously, support the nominees of the Chicago CLin--
rention. The platform is in no sense satisfactory.
The , idea of peace on ally - other terms than at the
point of the bay inlet is suicidal. Any other peace
means disunion and disgrace, and I cannot lend
it my support; nor can 1 fraternize with the lead-:
ing spirits of the convention that made the nomi
nations. McClellan 1 like personally, have no-,
doubt of his patriotism; but while I admire his,
military qualities, like poor Tray, he is found m.
bad company.
He further suggests that while McClellan was
commanding in the field, Gee. H. ,Pendleton was,
doing nil he could in COngress to erimunel hie
movements for the suppression of the rebellion;
and while McClellan was nominated for his war
prestige, Pendleton was nominated for his oppo
sition to the war. The Work', seems, thereflire,'
to give good reasons , why he cannot ipipport the
Chicago nomination's, and doubtless Otany other
War Democrats see it in the same light..
ica• l
. —General Ullman h 'chased the ,rebele cow
pletely out of the district ound Morgunzia,.l4
—The rebels hi Lonisian, have been driven
from the AtchalOnya, lositigtine cannon, coma
erable 'stores and came priKoners. ‘
—Secretary Stant o n has ordered that mono
round on bounty-junipers shall be returnetitotheM
only after they hare served their terms and recei
ved an honorable discharge.
—ln one week the army of Sheridan fought two
battles, gained two signal victories, and pursued
the demoralized and broken columns of Early
eighty- seven miles.
Roseerans reports that Vern—Ewing
made good his retreat to Rolla, losing but few men
while the loss of the east} will be about 1000.
A St. Louis dispatch states that Price's mnin army
attempted to cross the Osage river at Castle Rock
yesterday, but was preventM.
—General Wilson, who has just returned from
Sheridan 's headquarters ot:Harrisonhnryi, 'repro
SUMMARY OF WAR NEWS
Bents that the destruction and capture of Rebel
properly by our cavalry, in their' late 'great raid
in the ivicinity of Staunton, were 'on a colossal
scale, land most complete in their executon.
Mere than 100 mills were destroyed, the Central
Rnilrohd was badly cut up, and a herd of 2,400.
Cattle and sheep were bniught back to Flarrisint
burg. 1 The latter prize compensates for the cat
tle th,.
ft lately made by the Rebels on James
River:
—An official desimtch from General Gillen, com
manding in East TenneSsee, states thht he has
driveti the Rebel cavalry; tender General Vaughn
from the line of the Holston ricer. He has battl
ed the bridge near Cares Station, and is destroy
ing the railroad in -order Jo prevent the „Rebels
from drawing supplies from East Tennessee. In
form:lkm has also been received that Generri Her
bridge has capturt4 the exteukive Suit vvurks near
Abingdon, Vs.," from - AMA . the Rebels 'drily a
large ,supply of that impirtant necessary.
. _ .
—lt has been asZertitined by ColonOl WellS,
provoskmarsfial of the sohtlieru defences of Wash
ington, that thetuliels have been for some time
bllsilY, engaged in digging up dead bodies ori the
battle-field of tin. Wilderness, and stripping off
the clothing to ht ;old for rage. It had been
known that trains werej running from Richntoud
to a point a few milesbelowl , redericksburg,and,
touch speculation arose ;upon the probable object
of railroad operations in that *linty: it turns
out that these trains urt run for the purpose of
transporting tti RMhtnond the de•,bris of the
ltil
deruess battles. old iron, bags. &c. • learn
that l'aiou and rebel Bodies are both exhumed
be thee' jackals &I}!, ganbeiitg
pitolen. The-bit!kinedi these truicl a direetea
in romialosionedofficerit of.the rebel army
—The Louisville Journal state's that at 'Lex-
EMEMIMINM
bridge,,who started on a raid through eastern
Kruttick) into Virginia; about h%o . o,eqks a:g10, iu
eommand of a splendidly mounted expedition. It
is said that his March throi(fi Pound Gap %VAS et:
fected % / without diffieulty, nq enemy being present,
to
,oppose him. fie citidin led his tuareli through .
westrni Virginia, and, a taw' days ago mitt - tired
the important salt works ` near Abittgdon.l His
raid was unexpected, and the rebels had tie for
midable force to oppose hint in big movements.
f khingdon war captured without a fight, us the
force garrisoning the place was nut :sufficfent to
Mild it against the overwhelming numbers brought
to'bear against it by Gent. lltirbridge. The slle-
Niss of the expedition 3vill prove quite damaging
the'rehelm, as. the de4ntetion of tae
js, L ll . 14 which cannot easily he replay - ed.
—Gem Slierrtun is looking utter the reitel raid:
ere iu his tear. Seerutary Stanton's official gm
- gette nays that tlyn. Thomas wan sent. to Nash
ville_ to "rant the troops and drive Forrest
rion our lines, while Sheriniiii directed his' st-ten-
to th• mainsehel twisty in the vicinity of Ithinta.
On Thursday Gen. JUhn E. Smith defeated the
rebel,: :under Gen. Erencb, at Alatoona,
latter were dnven 19ini the field with heitvy loss.
Gen. ilomai telegraiihs that the enemy retreat
(4 on Wednesday night from Alutoona, moving
in the direetipn of pantie. Gene. Rimeeeau ur
Washlane had not been heard from, but it was
'resumed that they were pushing the enemy.—
Hen. Granger reports from Huntsville - that two
captured rebels state that they left Forrest at
Lawrencoburg on Tiigsday night crossing south.
Unofficial accounts say that the fight hetwetti
Smith and French %%as severe, the lattei leaving
1000 killyd and woniided in our hands) From
Florence there is statement that „Morgan hao
cornered Forrest acid eaptuied - transpoi tation.
—The Richmond liapt:rs attribute Gen. Rarley'a
(kfeat in the Shenandoah Valley to bad nmnage
not, and call :upon: Gen. Lee to retrieve their
fortnnes. want of co-operation, they oily, niece
than tim preponderating numbers of the Union ar-,
Inv has caused their late disasters, and the pres- !
once of two Lieuted i ant-Generals, instead of co
operating, hasprevented concentration. They al
io find fault with their eavakymen, whO should
be in the trenches at Petersburg, and their places
supplied by real Cavalry, when their rererSes might
be repaired. Neither party, they say, can perma
nently hold the vulley; the events of, which they
cull.mere episodes Of the wuf—they elate and de
.press, but do not permanently injure or destroy.
They call for a thorUugh, radical change of com
manders and 'of trotMs in the valley';also, a com
plete reform (tithe aria =wanting a remdar army,
• with its real 'and compact organization!, and its
firm and nuyieldingdisripline. The papers place
great reliance upon Gen. Longstreet, who is to
Change the aspect of affairs in the valles j • accord
ing to theirlielief. •
PERSONAL. _
—Gen: Grant and staff were at Biliimore on
Friday morning.
•
—AdmiratPortor has been ordered to the com
mand of the North ABantic Squadron. i
—Hon. G.A. Grow, while in Alexandria recent;
y, put in-,a si‘cond 'representative recruit.
—The Governor General of Nova ScOtia paid a
friendly visit to the President on Thursday.
S. Baldwin, late Chief Juslice Of the SU
preme Court of California, died on the.3oth nit.
-President Lincoln on Thursday received
present of an album from Omit SandOr Vienna,
father-in-law of Prince3letternich.
—John Lynch, the newßepublieannoeMber of
Congress from the Portland; Maine, , distriet, was
horn there of Irish parents,, and "began life as a
cart driver, and has worked himself up to the:po
sition of an intelligent and ivealthly merchant and
honored citizen.
Hon. Thomas F, Marshall died on the
22d ult., in Woodford County, Ky., aged- sixty
four years,_ He cs -. 4s one of the Most eloquent
men the country ever produced, and but for ex
cesses that'imslaved him, might have risen to the
highest eminence. ,
—Col. L. B. Pierce, 12th Pennsylvania Cav
alry; Cipt..S. E. Gross, 20th Pennsylvania Criv
nd Surgeon David Rush, published us - dis
use the service, are honorably exempted, stab
factory evidence having been furnished the De•
partment refutingthe charges ascribed.
—A beautiful example of Christian patriotism
has bedn given by a Catholic priest in Detroit.
The pious and beloved pastor of St. Patrick's
Chapel, on Adelaid'e. street, Father jatnea Hennesy
was drafted in the drawing fir the sixth Ward.
His many friends at once gathered around him,
and preparations were made to furnish . him with
a substitute r , -Father Hennesy said, "No I cannot
permit thisi Jily country• has called upon me for
personal service, and I will have no other mango
for me.., I will takemy own place in`the army."
We know nothing' grander in the history• of the
draft than. this pafriotleiconduct. The tleterniin,
atitm of the coriseientinnei and patriotic priest is
fixed. , Members of his congregation have in vain
'offered to gminte the field for him: But his fine
sense of duty to his country'and the law. will
not permit him to serve his eountry'by substitu
tion. ,
EINANCIAL.
--The next :I I:11)6e Loan of the United States,
to be awardest to the highest bidiers, is to be 0n.5-'
20' giars 6 percent. Boiids. The aaount now ply
posed to be awarded is $40,000,000 ;lone quarter
of the awards td be received in tir Twelve month's'
Certificates of Treasury Indebtednesii, and the re
mainder in Legal Tender-of Nationasnk Noses.
The following,are the official proposal/ The'hid
ding will be opened at noon ob-Frid!ay, OctOber
14. The payments are called for on the 20th and
21 it of October: one-half by each da;te. The ZS
per cent. proposed to be taken in Certificates of
Indebtedness must be paid in on the first install
ment. The Loan is placed before the public in
its Most acceptible form, and will, no doubt, com
mand large offers throughout the country, without
interfering with the long 6 per cent. Stock of 1891,
recently awarded, and at the same time relieving
the market of the Millions of Certificates of In
debtedness, at par and interest, which are now
selling at 95 per cent.
' IS THE WARFAILURE?
' If there is oue man in is country who knows
better than another Whet er the war is ti failure,
it is Jefferson Davis, an his earnest- effort to
preserve *shattered arrnies from utter despair
is the best answer to timrOckless Copperheads of
the North who are declaring that our armiesbave
achieved nothing. As Georgia, weary of sacri
fices.to destroy the bent of governments, threaten
ed-to return to the folds of the old Union because
the war is a failure on7tho side of treason, Jeff.
Davis went to Macon-two weeks ago and appeal- 4
ed to his dispirited an{aies and people not to ablui
'don the cause of crime, dark and:even hope
less asitS prospects looked. We give his speeil
entire as publishedin his Own organ, and commend
it to-tlie candid consideration of every Ndrthem
man. If it don't seal the lips of blatanteopper
heads who hats' ever libled our gallant armies,
then must - they' be as hieligibit to shank. as they
have been regardless of truth:
.-
I runes and Gatlemett. Friends and Fellow•citi
zras—lL would have gladdened my heart to have
met you in pro:merit}. instead of adversity. But
friend.; arc 4Layth together in adversity: The shin
of a ceorgiam who Mught through the first Relit,.
Mom 1 would he untrue td myself if I should ftir
get the State in her day of peril. ,
Mott though mill:y.6'l7e tors befulimi our Grins
from Decatur to Jonesboro—our cause is not lost.
Sherman catgut keep up his long liuout eotnufuni
cation, and retreat, sooner or litter, he must ; and
when that day comes the tote that held the army
of the French Empire in its retreat fromMoseow
will. hi' reacted. :Our cavalry and our people will
harrass and destrm, his army as did LW CORNiCkfl '
that of Nopoleon ; and the Yankee ticncral, like 1
hitn..will escape with only a body guard. How
can this he the most speedily etiCcred I By the
almoners of litsid'h arms recanting to their posts;
and will they not I (an they •tee the haniMetd
elites, can they hear the wail of their_suffering;
moat . ) -women and children, stud not Comet By,
what influenves they are made to - stay away.it ix:
'not neee.sary to speak. If there is one- who will
'stay away at this hour he is tam orthey of Bt.) dame
of Georgian. To the Wolll4'll 110 appeal is ilektlV
sar). They armlike the Spartan mothers of old.
I know,ol one , win, has lost all her sobs, except
one of eight years. She wrote that she wanted
ins to resene a place for him in the ranks. --,- :
The venerable General Polk, to whom I read
the letter, knew that woman well, and said it was
characteristic of her; but' I will not weary you by
turning aside lb relate the various incidents of
giving up the last min to the cause of our country,
known to me. W herever ego we find the hearts
and hands of our noble n omen enlisted. They
are seen whereever the eye may' fall or the step
turn. They have one duty to pectoral, to buy up
the hearts of our people. I know the deep disgrace
felt by Georgia at our annyfalling back froniDal
ton to the interior of the State. was not of
those who considered Atlanta lost whei our army
crossed the 'Chattahoochee. I resolved that it shnuld
not, and I then put a man in commihd Who I kneiv
would 'strike it manly blow for the city, and mativ
a Yankee's blood was made to n;airish the soil
before the prize-was won. It doci not become us
to revert to disaster. Let the dead bury the dead.
11:3, with one arm and 'one effort, endeavor to
crush: Sherman.
—'l anugoing to the army to confer with our Gen
erals./ end must be the defeat of our enemy.lt has' been said that I abandoned Georgia to her
fate.: Shame upon such falsehOod. Where could
the author have been 'when Walker, !when Polk„
and when GenerahStephen D. Lee was sent to
her assistance. Miserable man. The man who'
uttered this was a scoundrel. He was not a man
to save our country. If I knew that ugeneriddid
not possess the right qualities to command would
I not be wrong if he was nor -remand? 'Why,
when our army was falling back front Northern
Georgia I even heard that I had sent Bragg with
pontoons to cross it to Cuba. But !we must be
ehoritoble. The moo who can speculate ought.to
be made to take up his musket. When the war
is over and our independence won, and we will
establish our independence, who will be our aris
tocracy? I hope the limping soldier. To the
_young ladies I would 'say that when choosing be
tween an empty sleeve and the man who had re- .
!pained at home and grown rich., always take the
empty sleeve.
But the old men remain at home and make
bread. 13tit'shtmld they know of any young man
keeping away from the service,-who cannot be
mad.e• to go any other, way, let them write to the
Executive. I read all letters sent me from the
people, but I have not the time to reply to them.
You hare not many men between eighteen and
forty : fire' left. The boys, God bless the boys
are,
as rapidly as they become old enough, going
to the field. The city of Macon is filled with
stores, sick and wounded.' It must not be aban
doned when threatened, but when the enemy
come, instead of calling on Hood's army for de
fense,'lthe old men must fight, and when - the eihi , %
my is driven beyond Chattanooga, they, too, Can
join in the general rejoicing. Your prisoners/are
kept as a sort of-Yankee capital. I have' heard
that one of their Generals said that, their ex
change woulddefeatSherman. I have tried every
tneans; conceded everything to effect an exchange,
but to no . purpose.
Butler, the beast, with whom no Commissioner
of Exchange would hold intercourse, had publish
ed in -the newspapers that if we would consent
to the exchange ofnegroes, all difficulties might
b 6 removed. This is. reported as an effort of his
to get himself whitewashed, by holding intercourse,
with gentlemen. If an exchange could be effec
ted, I don's know but that I nughtlae induced to'
recognize Butler. But in the future every effort
will be given, as far as possible, to effect the eud.
We want our soldiers in the field; and we want
the sick andwounded to return home. It is not
proper for me to speak of - thenumber of men in
the field, but this I will sa , that two-thirds of Vim
Men are absent, s, ame wounded , but must
of them absent wit leave. The man who re-
pents and goes bac to his commander voluntarily,
appeals strongly to executive clemency. But sup
pose-he stays away until the war is over, dad his
comrades return home, and when every!man'a
history will be told, where will he shield himself?
It is upon these reflections that I rely to make
men return to their duty, but after conferring
With our Generals at head-quarters, if there be
any other remedy it shall be applied. I love my
friends, and I forgive my enemies..
I have been asked to send reinforcements from
Virginia to Georgia. In Virginia the disparity
in numbers is just as great as it is in Georgui.—
, Then I have been asked why the army sent to the
Shenandoah Valley was not sent here.- It :was be.
cause an army of the enemy had penetrated/hat
valley to the very gates of Lynchburg, and Gen.
Early was sent to drive them back. - Thia he not
only successfully did, but, crossing the Potomac,
camel well nigh capturing, Washington' itself, and
forced Grant to send two corps of his army to
protect it. This the enemy. denominated a raid.
If so, Silent:lan's march into Georgia isi a raid.
What would prevent them now, if Early was
withdrawn, from taking Lynchburg, and putting
a complete cordon of men around Richmond. .I
counseled with that great and grave soldier, Gen.
Lee, upon all- theie points. My mind roamed
over the whole field. With this we can succeed.
if one-half the men now abient without leave
will return to duty, we can defeat the enemy.
With that lope I am going to the front. I may
not realize this hope, but I know there are men
there who have looked death in the face too often
to despond now. Let no one des fond. Let no
One distrust, and remember that if genius is the
e.nu ideal hope is the reality.
Ins picture Of the national Ancrifice invited by
Gen. McClellan is vivid and striking. jt itchy thd
venerable and eloquent Robert J. Ilreckinridge,
of Kentucky:
" Now, for God's sake, and fur your country's' ,
sake, ,look at it. Here we are, after between
three and four years' war ;'after spending Nice or
three thousand millions of dollars; after spilling
the blood of a million of wiz brothers, and consign
ing five hundred thousand of them to their graves;
after compering an extent of territory ,500 miles
in igngth by six hundred in breadth, we have an
army in every State of the Confederacy, and a
majority of them under our control; we have
ev
ery stronghold taken from them, except Mobile ,
and Charleston and Richmond; mid, notwithstancV
in g all this, we are asked, sag we were a set of,
poltroons, to disgrace ourselves to the latest gen'A'
oration_ of nankin, to sacrifice everything we.-1
have fought for, and that is worth living for, and -
make all the world say free government is worth- CoulaTE's HONEY SOAP.—Tbis celebrated
less; that it cannot take care of itself. God Al- Tonxr SOAP, in such universal demand, Is mmissfeoni
mighty in Heaven grant that every man who ut- the CIIOICEST material, Is MILD and . =OW= 12 1 1 tA
Mrs such a thought may be chocked until he be- nature, FRAGRAN TLY Bcr-vrElh and extremely RIZRZE/'
- VIAL its action upon the akin. Forma, by a
come 'n penitent and better map." and Fancy goods, Dealerk )I"ar
October 12, 1864.
~~:~~~~r;~~~~
Pennsylvania 'Election !
A Union Congressional Delegation !
,UNION LEGISLATURE IN BOTH
BRANCHES !
GEN. KOONTZ PRETTY CERTAINLY
ELECTED TO CONGRESS!,
UNION HOME VOTE REDUCED BY
VOLUNTEERS!
The, Army Volt Will Give A Decisive Ution Victory !
CLOSE HOME VOTE IN FRANKLIN !
UNION COUNTY TICKET CERTAINLY ELECTED!
Tice County.
The Democratic majority in the county will be
just about 100, and Kimmel) will probably have
I•Li over King, on the home Cote. M'Clure
(Union) gains some 300 over his tick6t, and will
have a majority - of 200 over Mitchell for Assem•
Sharpe gains considerably on his party and
will have some 300 majority in this county over
Roath. If there is any sort of an-electioit in tho
army, we shall have a majority of from 200 to
300 on the soldier vote 'of the county, and elect
the entire Union county ticket. Considering that
a number of soldiers voted here last year, and
that many volunteered within sixty days, the
Union Men of Franklin have done well. We do
not donbt that tie entire Union County ticket is
successful by from 200 to 300 majority.
coorreem.
Adams gives Coffmtb about 3 . 75; - Franklin about
So 100 1 Fulton probably 200 and Bedford 400, while)
So ereet gives Koontz from 800 to 1,000. On
e home vote Koontz will be beaten probably
00; but his majority on the army vote moat be
from 500 to 800, and he is undoubtedly elected.
The Judgeship.
Judge Kimmel] gains a little on his party vote
in this county, but scarcely holds his own in Bed:
ford and Somerset, and is probably defeated by
the home vote. We regard Kilig's election 'its
tally assured.
The State.
The vote in the State on the hatne vote will be
close. There being no State - ticket it is difficult
to make an accurate estimate. The Union men
bare Undoubtedly gained two and probably four
'members' of Congresa, and will certainly, have a
41/Aded majority in the popular vote on the !mini
nd army vote.
* Philadelphia and Allegheny each gave Borne
€l,OOO Union majority, and in Lnzerne the Union
'men gain largely. In The interior - counties the
rtnion men lose regularly but.n‘ot heavily.
Desperate as has been the effort of the Peace
men, the. State is safe beyond doubt for Preside&
Line°ln
Franklin County Election
We give herewith the partial returns received
from the several districts of the county, in con
nection with
~tables of the vote for Congress in
18112:
Conereu, Covreat.'64., Prel47u4re
Ii
c B
zkr.rus Ward Joe 119 111
South Ward 197 179 59
Antrim - 394 416 4
Concord'
'Dry Run..__. 84 82
Fayetteville.— 203 152 30
Greenvilimpe.. 153 89 61
Guilford 118 139 ....
Han/tore 95 124 ...
Letterkenny .. 124 209 ...
London. 75 80 ...
Lurgan 88 118
IdataL 118 84
Montgomery.. 181 126 146
oms - town ..... 65 123 ...
112. 46 ...
Quincy 154 269 t . _
Southampton, . 57 58 ...
St. Thomas— _ 136 ...
SulphiarSpring 36 45 ...
;Warren 55 • 50
Washington._ 301 261 44
'Welsh Run... 71 143 ...
--- -
3124 3148
The - Election in Sherman 's Army.
' We have a dispatch from Chattanooga, dated
yesterday, stating that the State Commissicalers
have not been able to get to Atlanta, or to for
ward the election blanks. It is probable, there
fore, that most of the vote in that army, if not all
of it, will be lost. A ntunber of tickets Were sent
there some weeks ago„and elections may have
have been held; but it is not likely that anything
lilre a fittl vote has been polled, as most of thi
tax receipts were with the Commissioners. More
are about 300 voters in that army from Franklin
and Perry, and fully 200 Union majority would
have been given on a full vote.
GRANT AND SHERIDAN VICTORIO
A Bloody Repulse of the
Rebels by Blarney !
PHIL. SHERIDAN ROUTS THE REBELS
IN THE VALLEY AGAIN!
For several days before the election the Peace
men flooded the country with false reports of dis
aster to Grant's army; but an official diipatch
from Gen. Grant shows that he has been victori
ous and is steadily closing around Richmond. He
says that our entire loss last Friday in killed,
wounded and missing does not exceed 300, *bile'
that of the 'enemy exceed 1,000, including Gen.
Gregg (rebel) and Col. Haskell. Gen. Riney
now holds one of the inner line of fortifications of
Richmond. _ •
Gen. Sheridan has resolved to put an end, to
rebel occupation of the valley. He finind the far
mers there devoting their time to,murdering our
troops, and he devastated the whole valley ,de
stroying all provisions, barns, mills, &c.„- and fell
back to Woodstock. While fulling back he was
attacked by the rebels in strong force, and he
routed theta thoroughly, capturing 15 guns, five
hundred prisoners- and pursued the broken col
'limns nearly twenty miles. -
DR. RA DWAY 'S CURE FOR THE MISERA.-
Bias—Renovating 'Resolvent cures all Skin Diseases, Fe
ver Surer Ulcers, Sore Reads, Sore Legs, Scrolhlk
NoSes, Glandular Swellings. One tools bottles
of this marvellous remedy will cure the most horrible case.
If you would enjoy life, take this medicine, it will cure
you. If you have taken six bottles of any Sansparille
and are still uncured, discontinue its use. If six pestles
fail to cure you try• something else. Redway'sßenovalialf
Resolvent is warranted to cure the worst Ames° by the
use of six bottles. Price 11,00. Sold by Druggists
BtAxnuttmstat.—Ladies and Gentlemen if you
wesh to miuTS, addrera the undendgned, who will rand
you without money and without orlon, valuable laibrzna
tion that will enable ydu to marry happy and aPeraid7, .
respeotive of age, wealth or beauty. This information will
coat you nothing, and if you wish to many. I ohmic
fully assist you. All Wiens strictly coutkiemtiaL Theate•
aired information rent by ret u rn matt and no quer:haw
asked. Addrers &Orli B. Lantnairr, Greenpoint, Lap
Co, New York. oetl2-2M
•
ANODYNE CORDIAL, the Mother's Friend and
Child's Relief—This valuable medicine is an foes&
at MILLER'S NEW DRUG STORE. next &or west of
linanie Hotel. It Is for superior to all Soothing Bros,
Or any other preparation for children in Teething, Eholie,
Distrrhea, or inward palm -