-A w 1 i I it j i :i i 1 1 '; -a . 1 - H i i T " ' i - ill - ", J's Hi - i i OR WROXfl. WHEN RIGHT, TO BE KEPT RIGHT, ViEX WRONG, TO UK PCT RIGHT. TiIUIlSP.VY::::::::::::::::::::::MAKCII 28. Fort PIckeus. The country is sick at heart over the necessary withdrawal of Auderson from Fort Sumter. It haef better stop crying over what can't be helped, and spend its time i preventing a similar humiliation at Fort Pickens. Says the New York Tribune: If not relieved iu six weeks from this time, Fort Pickens will have to be abandoned just like Furt Sumter, and fc-r the same reason. Fort Pickens and its approaches are being gradually commanded by sand batteries. If it be not forthwith garrisoued and pro visioned for a siege, it cannot be done at all. It must be surrendered without a blow; for the United States must suffer no defeats. If the Government cannot main tain the position, it ought to yield it up without a struggle. If this be done, then the Confederate States will become one of the nations of the world; and the United States of America will cease to be a first rate power. We know that the Administration does not contemplate this, for in that cise it would H3 disgracefully betray the country a3 did Buchauan. As it does not purpose this, it must mean to maintain the integ rity of the Union; and to this the holding Fort Fickens seems to us absolutely essen tial. The only question, then, is what is necessary to accomplish that purpose. The first step is to garrison the fort, and pro vision it forthwith to its utmost capacity. But this is not all. When garrisoned anil provisioned, it will still be attacked by the revolutionary forces under competent offi cers. No matter how full of men the fort may be, a seige is a mere question of time. After a few weeks of battery in breach, its walls will be a heap of ruins, and the be sieging forces will mount to the assault. For garrisons and provisions alone will not secure the fort nor the dignity of the United States. The siege will be successful unless it is raised. It can be raised only by a superi or land force driving off the besieging force. Three or four thousand nica can take the fort by the regular process of a siege in three or four weeks from the the opening of the batteries, if undisturb. ed. But five or seven thousand men will at once arrest their proceedings and drive them from the siege; all their works will be destroyed and their battering trains taken by such a force. The Uuited States must therefore instantly begin to organize this force to raise tho s,iegc of Fort Pick ens. If this work is begun at once, the revo lutionary authorities will be driven to adopt one of two courses. Either they must abandon all idea of a siege and leave the fort unassailed, or they must hold iti readiness a force of five or six thousand men to support and cover the siege opera tions. To this the Uuited States must be ready to respond by ten thousand men, which will still suffiee to raise the siege. Thus it will become, like the siege of Se vastopol, a real trial of strength between the two parties. The revolutionary States cannot possibly raise, and arm, and support, and concen trate at Pcnsacola as many as 50,000 men; their whole population is not sufficient; and at least one-half of the population is for the Uuited States, and will refuse to bear arms, and cannot be trusted to bear arms for the purpose of attacking the Uni ted States in its own forts. But no matter how many men the rev olutionists can assemble, it is certain the United States can assemble, arm, support and pay, two to every one the revolution ists can concentrate and maintain on the spot. The revolutionist will therefore either be driven to wilhdruv their milita ry force or to see it destroyed. If they withdraw, their prestigo Is forecer gone, and the people will rise on thcui cr.d expel them from power, and tho Union is main tained. If they fight, their whole milita ry strength will be crushed on the sands of Peusacola, without onG act of violence of injury or war against any but those actually in arms assailing the United gtaf Inps; the people of the Gulf States will at once put down the revolu tionary usurpation, and the Union is maintained. IIow can troops be concentrated at Fort Pic-kens? Under the laws of 171) I and 1S07, the President cau embody and em ploy the whole militia fjr the purpose. It is the law of the United States that the United States authorities shall hold the United States forts, llesistance to a hos tile military force attacking them is the only mode of enforcing that law; and thus, under the existing law, tlia President can act without calling Congress together. Instant orders should be given in the proper quarters to the militia, in sufficient bodies, to hold themselves in readiness to march for embarkation vessels should be chartered to transport them as many of the regular army must be concentrated at the nearest points practicable and the moment a gua is fired at Fort Pickens, the forces in sufficient bodies must be embark ed and landed and marched to raise the siejre. This course is demanded by the nation al honor and the national safety. If res olutely and promptly acted on, it will end the revolutionary outbreak just where it ousrht to be ended, now that it cannot be dealt with at Charleston. None of the disorders of civil war will mar the peace of any of the Revolutionary States, and they only will fall by the sword who draw the sword. The following appointments of Ministers to represent this (iovcrriuicnt at important foreign Courts have been made by Presi dent Lincoln and confirmed by the Senate: Charles Francis Adams, of Massachu setts, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to England. William M. Dayton, of New Jersey, En voy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipo tentiary to France. Cassias M. Clay, of Kentuek', Envoy Extraordinary and Miuister Plenipotentia ry to Spain. Norman B. Judd, of Illinois, Envoy Ex traordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Prussia. Thomas .Corvin, of Ohio, Envoy Extra ordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Mexico. , George P. Marsh, of Vermont, Minister 1'esident to Sardinia. (This may be raised to a first class mission when the President thinks proper.) Jacob S. Ilaldcman, of Pennsylvania, Minister Resident to Sweden and Norway. James Watson Webb, of New York, ed itor of the N. Y. Courier and IJnquircr, Minister Resident to Turkey. Robert M. Palmer, of Pennsylvania, our present Speaker of the State Senate, Miu ister Resident -to Ecuador. William S. Thayer, of the N. Y. Even ing Post, Cousul General to Egypt. Anson Burlingame, of Massachusetts, Minister to Austria. Henry S. San ford, of Connecticut, Min ister Resident at Belgium. Rufus King, of Wisconsin, Minister Res ident at Rome. Thos. J. Dyer, of Oregon; Commissioner for the Hawaiian Islands. Bradford R. Wood, of New York, Min ister Resident at Denmark. James O. Putnam, of New York, Consul to Havre. Ex-Congres'sman Frccmau II. Morse, of Maine, Consul to London. J. W. Nye, of New York, Governor of tho-Territory of Nevada. TriE Home Squadron of the Unitkp States. ft would appear that the Home Squadron is in a much more cdeient state and more nearly ready for service, than has been generally supposed, considering the success attending the efforts of Mr. Buchanan's traitorous secretaries to disor ganize the naval and military defences of the country in almost every department of the service. The list comprises 2G vessels, carrying 100 guns and 2,757 men, almost all ready for instant service, and all but three' or four in the port of New York. Th"i3 is the largest naval force ever concentrated in one squadron since the organization of the United States Na vy. It consists of more ships than the Channel fleet of England. It is obvious that importaut naval movements are in contemplation bv the Government. The Tariff. In the tariff bill, as pas sed, there was a most important provision for the benefit of our Pennsylvania inter est. The bill, as originally reported, im ported coal. By the shrewd sagacity of Mr. Covode, a change was made, so that the duty upon bituminous coals was put at one dollar per ton. This is worth to Western Pennsylvania a hundred thous and dollars a 3'ear,at the least. Pennsyl vania has. few representatives who are so careful of her interests as "honest John Covode," of Westmoreland. l'hiladeljriiia 1'ress. Locomotives, to be driven by Ameri- 1 can anthracite coal, are now constructing j by the Paris and Orleans Railway com pany, at their workshops at lrvy, under the direction of a Philadelphian, of the name of Milholland. The coal can be laid down on the line for 6.76 per ton, and the experiment annoys the English coal dealers very much. It is said to be ow ing to the enterprise of a French noble man recently in this country, whose at- i ten r ion was drawn -to the subject while travelling with Lord Lyons, the British ' miuister, over the Heading Haihvay. EDITORIAL H0TIRGS. The order for the evacuation of Fort Sumpter has not yet been issue J. g3X Sidney F. Von Bqniiorst hr.sbeen ap pointed Post Master at Pittsburg. BaThc Arkansas Convention h:.s decided Against Secession by a vote of 3'.) to 31. $2, Mr. Convin has accepted the Mission to Mexico, and bis nomination has been unan imously confirmed by the Senate. 13? John Sherman has been elected L-ui- i ted States Senator from Ohio. E,The water was let into the canal on last Wednesday. J&gg-Ripe strawberries were on sale at New Orleans on the 1st iist. tgy-For the first thrc in many yenrs the President's mansion contains young children. jgigf- The American Dollar Monthly for April is to hand. It is a sprightly aud inter esting magazine. Tom Ileycr, the retired pugilist, is said to have the inside track for the United States Marshalship of New York. !fit, George Bergncr, of the Ilarrisburg Telegraph, has been appointed Post Master for that city. E2LThe two indictments against G07. Floyd in the Court at Washington have been dismissed as untenable. BJV. Lieut. Slemmer, the commandant at Fort Pickens, is to be promoted for courage, zeal aud efficiency. " EJ" The governmental property in Texas, which ha- by the treachery of Gen. Twiggs been surrendered to that State, is estimated to be worth 1 ,300,000. It is generally rumored that Dr. Wm. Elder, of Philadelphia, will be the new Super intendent of the Census, in place of J. C. G. Kennedy. E?s Ladies should prepare for an extreme change of habit. A Paris letter-writer says that the ladies are coming out 'J without hoops, wadding, cr anything else." g" They make two hundred Balmoral skirts daily, at the Tcntoosuc mills, Pittsficld, Mass. The red from coal-tar with which they are colored, is said to be stunningly brilliant. Spurgeon occasionally comes out with a good thin "Brethren," he said, "if (d had referred the ark to a committee on naval affairs, it's my opinion it wouldn't have been built yet." E$ President Lincoln's Inaugural, con sisting of some three thousand words, was telegraphed to New Orleans entire in the short ppace of three hours after the commence ment of its delivery at Washington. B7J,, The foreign Ministers at Washington are unanimously of the opinion that no Euro pean power will recognize the Southern Con federacy until the independence of the sece ding State3 is fully admitted by the United States Government. 3. Chas. Francis Adams has been ap pointed Minister to England. He is the third of his family who has represented the United States at the Court of Si. James, Jolin Adams, his grandfather, and John Quincy Adams, his father, having formerly filled the position. Louisiana has a fancy block of marble at the Washington monument, to enter into the construction of that barbarous pile, with the following inscription on its side: "Pre sentee by the State of Louisiana ever faith ful to the Constitution and the Union.'' Very appropriate. gt, A horrible murder was committed in Juniata county a couple of weeks since, by two men, who entered a house and shot an old man named Henry Akcrs, for the purpose of robbing him. They obtained only a few dollars for their pains, however. The mur derers were arrested and lodged in jail. Egy The mileage from Oregon is $13,000. The Presidential electors of that State would not agree to send one of their number to bring the electoral vote, but all three came, and divided the $15,000 between them. One draws the whole from the Treasury, and then shares with his associates. EgSo, As an Indication of the revolution go ing on in Japan, we may mention the fact that Ilor. Townsend Harris, our minister to that country, by a proclamation, called upon American citizens to observe the 20th of No vember as a day of Thanksgiving the first occasion of thejuir!- doubtless, ever observed in those inlands. PU A man, whose name is not given, met with a terribleuccident in Graham township, Clearfield county, recently. He was cflgaged in prying logs, when the hand-spike Hew out of his hand, striking him on the thro2i, and cutting a bole in it so large that the move ments of his tongue are plainly discernible, lie may recover. EgThe School Committee of Charleston" have been arraigned by some one for employ ing Northern teachers. In their defence they say : "Nor has the board failed to look through the South, from Norfolk to New Orleans, for coadjutors in this work seeking through colleges and academies in vain. The teach er's profession, unhappily, seems but little appreciated and cultivated at the South." Xif, "Carrie Leigh" in the last Hollidays burg Standard, desirc3 to how she can make her lover kiss her oftcner, hug her more nu merously, and show a higher degree of affec tion toward her in general, than he now does. According to her story, her "accepted" is a veritable iceberg, and if our ad vice were asked, we would recommend a thorough course of thawing out, by meant of blisters, red pepper tea, and siwh gentle stimulating agencies. . Iep-.rntp diii?.ise-s rcqr.iro depcrtei empdir. TSae Aristocratic ncpuhlic. The London li of March 2, un : The bet thine dor the ain.ive he;;d, kp that can be doi.o is ihat which will be done, if .North or t-outii have any wisdom left to guide its counsels. As the Union cannot he re-established am! could not continue if it were the only course left 13 to make the inevitable separation as peaceful, jls equitable, :n:d as bloodless as possible. IN cither the North nor the uih can desire a civil war to settle their Iiiiciencos ; and the N..ut!i, more espec ially, in the existence of the black taint of slavery, which has brought about the North to deprecate the tiring of a gun, or the shedding of a drop of blood in the conflict. The 1'rovisioual (Jovcrnuicnt of the South which has. just been formed under tho Presidency of 3.1 r. Jefferson Davis whose name has at last emerged out of the chaos as the Washington or rather as the Calhoun of the movement ha:-? but to declare to the North, and to the several f t:tes of Europe to which it is about to accredit its Embassadors, that it desires a peaceable separation and equitable division of the com m on proper ty, as well as a fair share of the common debts and liabilities of the defunct Union, to enlist upon its side the good wishes of all sensible and practicable men. The North has only to refuse the proposition, and insist upon settling tho depute by force of amis, to incur the disapprobation of the world, and put itself out of the pale of ordinary sympathy, as utterly un reasonable and impracticable. Slavery or non-slavery is 1:0 longer the question. The quarrel has outgrown its original in centive, and the South, strong enough to do as it plea?cs, takes its stand upon its inherent right to retire from a partnership that has become intolerable. That 31 r. Buchanan, if he had been neither pusil lanimous nor in collusion with the South, might, by an adequate display of vigor at the very first murmur of secession have prevented all the mischief that has since occurred, may be quite true ; but it is no answer to present requirements,: to the logic cf circumstances. The disruption of the American Union is as much a fait accomjili as the English revolution of or the cui-j) d'etat that set Napoleon III upon the throne ; aud if there be any statcsnninslun in tne jsortn or Coiim. rue only wise policy is to acknowledge it, and j make the best of it. Independently of all the questions that it may hereafter have to settle with the f Free Democratic llcpublic of the North and Host, the Aristocratic Jtqubue of the South lias entered upon a career of much perplexity and peril. lKi adhert nee to the great economic truth that free trade s the best and only profitable policy be tween commercial communities, aud the dependence of Great Dritnin upon the pi ogress of its cotton fields wiil make it many friends in this country. Hut our friendship will do it no particular service, it will have many foes to combat within and around it. It will have, moreover, to pursue a course of conduct toward its next neighbor, Mexico, and its near neigh bor Cuba, so aggressive and grasping as to render it highly probable that the first 3Tears of its independence wiil be years in which the services of great generals will be more acceptable, if not mo. e ab-olutely necessary, than the services of orators aud statesmen. Should there be an insuncc tiou of the slaves, it will doubtless, be quenched in the blood of the unhappy ncgroes ; and what shall be the reward of the able general who shall deliver his country from the calamity '! Should there be a Avar against already tottering pre doomed 3Iexico for the annexation of new States in which negro slavery may bo planted, aud cotton or sugar grown for the consumption of voracious England, which reward will be too high for the great captain of the South to ask at the grateful hands of the white aristocracy ' Ciesar will make his appearance, and take his chance of the liruiuses aud Cassiuscs that may oppose liiui by word or dagger. And more than all, if Cuba be annexed, and Spain conquered in tho attempt to retain it, may not the ambitious general who shall dothedeed ask and obtain what he pleases from the aristocracy of col or : It is obvious that 3Ir. Calhoun's doc trine, carried to its legitimate length, con tains within itself the germ of the down fall of llepublicanism. Already the slave holders costitute an oligarchy, and from an oligarchy to a despotism the gradua tions arc not very slow or painful, even in times of peace, while they are facile as the descensus a vend in periods of public danger, when war, offensive or defensive, opens the career of victory to an ambi tious and successful soldier who has auda city enough to snatch at a crown and sceptre. There may be nothing positive ly new under the sun ; but iu modern times, or within the record of history, the world has not seen such a llcpublic or such a system of government as that which has sprung into existence upon the shores, of the 3Icxican Gulf." Its short history is the marvel of our time, and its contin ued existence will be one of the most singular problems of our civilization. We have received the first number cf the new Huntingdon ' paper, the Dorc 'ingmcn's Advocate. It is well edited, neatly printed, and presents altogether a comely appearance. It is devoted to the interests of the workinr men of lluntiu" dou county. Success to it. B$,IIon. G. W. Scranton, member of I Congress, died at his residence, at Scran 5 ton, on Sunday. SoutSierEi lfancies. J?e How's Alngasir.e, published at New Orleans, has some ue eloj men is and theo ries in reference to the present revolution. Here is an extract : 'Our women are all conservative, moral, religious and sensitively juodest, and ab hor the North for its infidelity, gross im morality, licentiousness, anarchy aud agra rianism". "Lis they and the clergy who lead and direct the Disunion movement. It is a gross mistake to suppose that Abolition alone is the cause cf dissension between the North and South. The Cav aliers, Jacobites and Huguenots, who settled the South, naturally hate, contemn and despise the Puritans who settled the North. The former are master races the latter a .lave race, -the descendants of the Saxon serfs. The former arc Mediterra nean races, descendants of the I'onians; for Cavaliers and Jacobites are of Norman dchcent, and the Normans were of Koman descent, and so were the Huguenots. The Saxons and Anglos, the ancestors of the Yankees, came from the cold and marshy region:; of the North, where man is little more than a cold-blooded, aiirphibious bi ped. "We :;re the most aristocratic people in the world, l'ride of ca--te and color and privilege, makes every white man an aris tooVat in feeling. Aristtierciey is the only salcguarfi of liberty, the only power watch ful and strong enoui:!i to exclude mon archial despotism. At the North, the progress ami tendency of opinion is to pure democracy, less government, anarchy and ngrarianism. Their haired of the South will accelerate tills noxious current of opinion, and anarchy wiil :;oun wind up in military dosr.-otism. There will be as ni-sir itth; militarv t'.espots the; e are now States, lor no usurper will wield mean:; suuiclent to conquer or fuse into one several States. It will be a great im provement in Northern affairs, a:;d the sooner it comes about the better. 3Iilita ry despotism is far preferable to Northern democracy, agruviaiiism, infidelity aud free love. "We were prepared by the unerring signs of the times to expect the election of Lincoln, and prepared to dis.':o've the Union sooner than submit. Our enemies, the stupid, sensual, ignorant masses uf the North, who are foolish us they arc do- prav d, could not read th 1 it t si"ns of the times, etid not circa in of c'lsun'on. but rushed on as heedlessly as a greedy drove of hungry hogs at tiie call of their owners. They were promised plunder, and find a famine; promised 'bread and given ar-tone.' Our enemies are starving and disorganised. The cold, naked, hungry masses are at war with their leaders. They are mute, paralyzed, panic-stricken, ami have no plan of action for the future Winter has set in, which will Hirirravuto their sufier ings, and prevent invasion of the South. They who deluded thorn must take care of them. The public lauds will neither food nor elctthe them ; they cannot plunder the South, and are cut off by their own wicked folly from the trade of the South which alone could relieve aud sustain them.' Y.oL'nr." in Tin: Sox-tit;. x Conff.d- TT.e .Jackson 31is.-is.-ipj Ian. the ieaunici" oeCv SMon paper m .uisMscinpi, ne- nouncw the Convention at Montir-jinery for transacting its business in secret ses sion. It insists that the Constitution must be submitted to the people.. The following, considering the source from which it emanates, is a very significant threat: There is no way of evpding the promises we have assumed ; hence, the conclusion at which we have arrived is unavoidable, viz : That the Constitution for the per manent Government, before 3itssissippi becomes a part to the compact, must be submitted directly to a vote of the people of the State. If it is not done, the ques tion of. the right of the people to ioi 111 their own Government may require prac tical solution before the new order is fully established. They wiil not hold themselves bound by a Government which ther had no hand in creating. It is evident "there will be trouble, if the 3Iontgomery Consti tution should not be submitted to the poo- j pie. Pauson Bkownuw on South Cako I.IN'A. Parson Drownlow does not seem to desire South Carolina's return to the Union. He says : "South Carolina has drawn more money from the National Treasury than any other State in the Union according to her population. She has haei a larger representation in Con gress than any other State of no greater white population. And she has paid less into the National Tieasury than any oili er State of equal population, consuming less of foreign importations. She has been a tax uyim the General Government and to get rid .of her and her burdens is a Godsend. Lot' her go, and God iu his mercv iorbid that she ever return !" Tiik Peach IU is. The editor of the Hural AciC7 Yorker, says he has continued his observations in regard to the condi tion of the peach buds, and finds thcui injured in Western New York more than at first disposed tolelicvc. There mav be a few saved near the lake shore, or in close proximity to some of our inland lakes and in a few favored localities, but the crop is gone. A Spanish paper, after a deliberate survey of the past, present, and future prospects of our country, kindly adviaes the United States to drop the idea of pur chasing Cuba, and to turn its attention to buying South Carolina. This is considered ' a fair hit. .J-J.".. -X. .XU Li-IM. j 1AKMU J't:owM.OAV WAM; T, Govi:i!M'.it or Tr.XNtssT.i:. ,'f r's H T jor V'.e urrr. rar:c;i J' or,-;:.-; ,'. P-Pcr t,,e Iv!:oxtbe (Tcr::i.) ;, i' While upcu the subject of cf;;-V""': will take ctcn?io:i to state, thatV but one office in the whole ou- would have, and that is the oftieo ci '('-.' cruor of Tennessee. - This office v,eV.-v; like to fill, for the following foarrt-T"1 to wit : 1. The Governor will have sme-h tod for or against the heresy of secession f , two years to come, and we would fiil the office, so as to assist in cruiLin out the monster disunion. ' 5 The governor has the control cf heavy patronage in the railroads and banks of the State, and these are now in hands of the secessionists, who dsserre turning out, and who must be swept from office, or the public interests will suffcr and the State Treasury will bleed at ever- pore a . We would like to fill the position account cf its honors, and as a means of rebuking those vile southern calumniators of ours, who continually say that no ote respects our cpiuiou or person, tvta in Tensicssce. 4. Not being rich, we would like to lj the office for two years for the sake of the three thousand dollars per annum. And finally, unless the union rartv agree upon a candidate, and there is a free fight in the matter, we may be counted in The people of the State know n, and we have no need of canvassing. Hut if the great union party shall harmonise in bringing out a candidate, we shsll supnort him, irrespective of old party associations,. Tin: Charleston correspondent of the New York TriLmic, alluding to tie pki that 20,010 men would be required to reinforce I'ort Sampler, says: "I will modestij- venture an opiuiun on this j oint, and if I should happen to Le wrong, it would only be once in three times. Uive thousand regulars and ma lines four thousand of the former aud one of the latter judiciously distributed would be able to do what is now reported wiil 1 1 q u ire t we 1'; ty thou sn 1; d 11 .en to do. That number would be more than opiul to the forces of the Carolinians, and it is no credit to sdy that the United States army asks no advantage of four to one. There would unquestionably be a jreuerd and perhaps sanguinary engagement, for while ships engaged the batteries on Sul livan's and Morris' Islands, troops would assault them in the rear. The Carolina forces weuld be divided bv the liartor, w ithout being able to co-oj crate. They have no ships to count en, no fiying lirtil-er-, or other appointments Lot with ex press reference to the particular v.ork'cf reducing Yt. i?v.inn-r. A ""re hi tie rear" has hardly been thought of; certain ly it was not before General l-'eauresrurd took command. 1 venture to 1 1 say tl.at alniOot any officer of the Army, equal to the undertaking, would agree to relieve Ft. Sumpter with five thoasai 1 1: . i:-r-luding a proper propcrtion :;' i:i the right sort of ships. 1 v : " s -and,- or even ten thousand 1;.. i superabundance. . . We were .1. n lie Si rciiion .-1. 1. . .l.": . .( ,'. :. t. iii.-t., a olo ring, containing a hu:!; r ' lion of the hair from the head of o -' Wushi:.g:o:i, set in r carl, with blue r. Hineied ground work. This vnlini' le rir.g is 111 the possesion of Dr. I.e::iiiirtg, tie representative from the county of Care May. It was presented ly General Wash ington to Lieut. Somors, of the iT:itci States Navy. Lieut Somers vas kilioJ :.t Algicrsiri IS 12. and this rclie-. with his personal e ffects, fell into the hands w his sister, Mrs. Keen, of I'hihioVfin, tnJ from her to Jier leral heir, Mrs. Cer-un, the mother of Dr. 3.e::niinj:. Died. On Tuesday, the 19th iu.-:., t her residence in Clearfield county. -V Mauy Gaicma:;. wife if Mr. Jokn V Garman, aged G3 years. .-ciiU wanted to sell the Krw cvin; Machine. We s ill rrivc a connm' or y.w wiiKcs at from Si-': lo otO per raon'o. and expenses paid. The Kiut Is a n-w madiict mi l very simple in its construction. A raa wanv.nrded our Machine ly tU Iuuii trial Association of Farmers and J.fiLfi':f?. held Rt Cliambtrsi.urjr, I'a., at it? cxl.il:'i)a i'i 1 800; over the (.'.rover k KaLcr, :u: J l'-flu' Machines. It is e-jual to any niacUnc in av.d the is but fifteen dollars. It. JAMKS, (lencral A-t-nt K. S. M. Co . ." Ohio. vr.U OB WOlUv OF ALL KINDS NEATLY AND EXPEDITIOUSLY EXECUTED AT THE "ALLEG II ASIAN" OFFICE, HIGH St., EUENSBtTtb pA' rvBLiCATiox orfice: DAVIS & JONES' BUILDINvJ t'P sTAU" TUinD lOOU BACK- I " GIVK VP A CAM- in ir
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers