wyJEiil Aft' Aw i' a4IIl J' J' iw' s-y A, B Editor and Proprietor. j.'TOUli I1UTCIIIXSOX, Publisher. I WOULR RATHER BE RIGHT TITAN PRESIDENT. IIekry Clay. TERMS-200 PER AXJV17M. VOLUME 3. DIRECTORY. LIST OF I'OST OFFICES. Post Ofices. Post Masters. Districts. Barm's Creek, Bethel Station 'Urrolltown, he33 Springs, Jre330n, Josepli uraaam, luuci. Enoch Reese, Blacklick. William M. Jones, Carroll. Daul. Litzinger, Chest. Wm. V. Young, Washint'a. John Thompson, Ebensburg Ebensburj; Fallen Tiuibcr, Isaac Thompson, AVhite. .-I.mtvin. J . jl. U tiriSl v, ixiillllfciu. Hemlock, Johnstown, Loretto, Mineral Point, Manster, Pcrshiug, riattsville, Roseland, St. Augustine, Scalp Level, Somnan, Siintnerhill, Summit, Wiimore, vi..... 1 . . . . , , , m. .M uougu, I. E. Chandler, V. shields E. Wissinger, A. Durbin. Washt'n. Johnst'wn. Loretto. Conem'gh. Munster. Francis Clement, Conem'gh Andrew J Ferral, busq nan. a. W: Bowman. 'White. Wri. Ryan, Sr., Georjre Conrad, B M'Colgan, B. F. Slick, Clearfield. Richland. Washt'n. Miss M. Gillesnifc. Washt'n. Morris Keil, S'inerhill CHURC5IES, 3IIXISTERS, &C. Presbyterian Ret. D. IIauuisox, Pastor. Preicliing every Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock, and in the evening at 3 o'clock. Sab bath School at 1 o'clock, A. M. Prayer meet every Thursday evening at 6 o'clock. Methodist Episcopal Ch urch Rkv. S. T. Snow, Preacher in charge. Rev. W. Loxo, Assis tant. Preaching every Sabbath, ftltcrnately at 10 o'clock in the morning, or 7 in the evening. Sabbath School at J o'clock, A. M. rniyer meeting every Thursday evening, at 7 o'clock. Wrick Independent Rev Ll. R. Powell, J'utor. Preaching every Sabbath morning ut 10 o'clock, and in the evening at C o'clock. S-ibbith School ut 1 o'clock. P. M. Prayer meeting on the first Monday evening of each raonth and on every Tuesday, Thursday and Friday evening, excepting the first week in each month. Calvini.-nc 'ictlodlst Rev. Jonx Williams, pastor. Preaching every Sabbath eveuing at 2 aud C o'clock. Sabbath School at 10 o'clock, A. M. Prayer meeting every Friday evening, ( at 7 o'clock. Society every Tuesday evening at 7 o'clock. Disciples Ret. W. Llovd. Patcr. Prcach iaareverv Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock. Particular liap itts Rev. David Jexkixs, Pastor. Preaching every .-abbath evening at 3 o'clock. Sabbath School at at 1 o'clock, P. M. CdthoHclliv. M. J. Mitchell, Pastor. Services every Sabbath morning at 10$ o'clock arid Vespers at 4 o'clock in the evening. MAILS ARRIVE. E:tst?rn, daily, ut 10 o'clock, A. M. Western, ' " at 9 o'clock, P. M. MAILS CLOSE. Eastern, daily, at 4J o'clock. P. M. Western. at S o'clock, P. M. CjrThft mails from RutIer,lndiana,Strongs to.va. ic, arrive on Thursday oi' cicli week, a: 5 o'clock, P. M. Leave Ebsnsburg on Friday of each week, .t s A. M. fThe mails from Newman's Mills, Car-ro".I:-jvvn, iz., arrive on Monday, Wednesday feai Friday of each week, at 3 o'clock, P. M. Li.ivs Ebeniburg oa Tuesdiys, Thursdays zi Saturdays, at 7 o'clock, A. IlilLROAU SCHEDULE CRESSON STATION. West Express Train leaves at ' Fas'. Line " " Mail Train " 8.51 7.35 7.42 12.17 6.50 A. M. P. M. P M. P. M. P. M. A. M. A. M. P. M. P. M. P. M. P. M. A. M. East Express Train 4 Fast Line " Mail Train it VvILMORE STATION. V7eat Express Train leaves at " Fast Line " Mail Train 14 C.13 0.18 8.U9 7.20 11 55 C.23 East Express Trair " Fast. Line " Mail Train it COl'STY OFFICERS. Judges cf the Courts President, Hon. Geo Taylor, Huntingdon; Associates, George W Easley, Henry C. Devine. Prolhonotary Joseph M'Donald. Ptgister and Recorder Edward V. Lvtle. SheriJ Johu Ruck. District Attorney. Philip S. Noon. County Commissioners D. T. Storm, Jame3 Cooper, Peter J. Little. Treasurer Thomas Callin. Poor House Directors Jacob Homer, Wil liam Douglass, George Dtluuy. Poor House Treasurer. George C. K. Zabin. Poor House Steward. James J. Kaylor. Zfcrcantile Appraiser John Farrell. Aulitors John F. Stull, Thouia3 J. Nel son, Edward R Donnegan. Couaty Surveyor. E. A. Vickroy. Coroner. James S. Todd. Sup't. of Common Schools Wm. A. Scott. EBCXSaritG IXOK. OFFICERS. Justices of the Peace. David II. Roberts Harrison Kinkead. liuryess George Huntlev. School Director E. J. Mill?, Dr. John M. Jones, Isaac Evans. EAST WjI!D. Constable Thomas Todd. Town Council Wm. Davis. Daniel J. Davis. L.J. Waters, John Thompson, Jr., David W. Jones. Inspectors John W. Roberts. L. Rodgers. Judye of Election Thomas J. Davis. Assessor Thomas P Davis. WEST WAIID. Constable M. M. O'Neill. Toxcn Council William Kittell, II. Kinkead, il1:aJn,ton Edward D. Evans, Thomas j Inspectors 3. D. Thomas, Robert Evans Jvdje cf Election John Lloyo. or Richard T. Davi EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4-1862. ON TO RICHMOND! The Govemmcut having resolved to adopt a more vigorous policy, the Macker el Brigade is once more in a high state of excitement, and has maae a Constitutional reconnoissanee. The ecstatic Orpheus C. Kerr gives all the details, and likewise favors us with much iatcrestingintelligetjee concerning the character of this struggle, considered as a white man's war, and the lamentable internal condition of tho well known Southern Confederacy : , FROM WASHINGTON. If tired Nature's swf-et restorer, balmy Sleep, should ever tako it into her head to invade our distracted country, she would meet with less resistance in Washington than it is possible for the able bodied mind to comprehend. Xotwithstandingthe fact that President Lincoln is an honest man. my boy, the geuius of liberty has opened a large wholesale establishment here, s nd the tendency to repose is so general tha the authorities are just able to wink at .re cession sympathizers. It takes so long to iret the news of the war from New ork that our citizens grow languid in the inter vals. On Monday, indeed, an enterprising chap from Nantucket opened a Museum on the outskirts of the town, by way of varying the monotony, and oolite a numer ous crowd assembled to witness the per formance. This Museum comprised a real two-shilling piece, inclosed in a strong :iass case, to preserve it from the violence of the mob, and even respectable old mar ried men go to see it, for the sake of past associations. On the occasion of my visit to this unique establishment, I arrived shortly before thfi. exhibition began, and found a brilliant array of beauty and fash ion for an aduience. It was quite interest ing, my boy, to hear the conversation going ou. There was a fine youn chap just in front of me who has recently been appoint ed to the staff of the commander-in-Chief in consequence of his great experience in the coal business, and says he to another Lubin's Extracts chap : 'Fwed'?ick, who is that wavishingcreat chah ovah they-ar, with the Peach Orchard eyes and Lehigh hair?" "Aw, Dimmy," says Lubin's Extracts, "that's the great heiress. She's worth eiahty thousand postage stamps " "The wed kind," says the young staff chap eairerly "is it the sticky, wed kind, Fwed ?" "No." says Lubin's Extracts, scornfully, "it's the green ten cent kind." "Intwojooce me," says the staff chap excitedly, "intwojooce me, Fwed ; Iitiust know her upon my soul I must." Upon his soul, my boy he said upon his :oul 1 When it is possible for an in inoduction to take place upon such a place as that, my boy, it will ba comparatively easy t- maneuver an elephant brigade on the extreme poiut of an infant needle. When the manager of the Museum came out to lecture upon his great natural curiositj, there was immediate silence; and wheti the case was uncovered, reveal ing the quarter to full view, several very old :entlemeu fainted. Alas, they remem bered the time when but no matter now no matter now. "Ladies and gentlemen," says the man ager, pointing solemnly' to his treasure, 'the rare aud beautiful coin which you now behold was well known to our fore fathers, who stamped the figure of Liberty upon it, in order to show the world that this is the only country where a man is ut liberty to deal in slaves by way of financial speculation. This rare coin disappeared as soon as the Liberty I speak of seemed to be "enlarged, nor will it re-appear again in this country while there are so many brokers ahead." Ou quitting this admirable moral exhi bition, my boy, I did not return to this city, but went immediately dowu to Acco mac, to attend the great Union meeting. Accoiuac, my boj, has at length determin ed that this war shall be vigorously carried on, even if it takes several public speakers to say so. There was a large meeting at Ac-comae, several new liquor shops having been opened thcro recently, and the. speakers were as pluquent as it is possible for men to be when advising other men to do what they don't care to do themselves. 'lhou-ih the General of the Mackerel Brigade, was seated upon the highest bar rel ou the platform, my boy, aud blew his nose louder than any one else, he did not wish to be seen, nor did he intend that the assemblage should call upon him for the speech' sticking out of his side pocket; but when the throng found him to be the most prominent figure in tight, th?y thoughtlessly called upon him to say something. The general laid aside his fan with some embarrassment, and savs he : "My children, I love you. My children," says the general, motioning to his aid to f.!l. the tutnbler ngiirj. ;T dare eiy you expect me to say something, and though I am unprepared to speak, there i3 one j thing I will say. If anything goes wrong j in this war, nobody is to blame, as I alone am responsible. Bless you, my children." As the idol of the populace finished these remarks, and resumed hi3 tumbler aud fan, there was but one sentiment in the whole of that vast assemblage, aud a democratic chap immediately went and telegraphed to Syracuse that the prospects for a Democratic President in 1805 were beautiful. The meeting m:ght have lasted another week, my boy, thereby rendering the Union cause utterly invincible, but for the imprudence of an insane chap, who proposed that some of the young men present should enlist. This malapropos and singularly inconsistent suggestion broke up the assemblage in disorder vol unteering being just what no one thought of doiug. Greatly edified and encouraged by what I had heard, my boy, I made all haste for Paris, where I found the Mack eral Brigade and Commodore Head's fleet in great excitement over the case of an Irish gentleman who believed this to be a white man's war, and had started for Parish just fourteen minutes after landing in this country, for the express purpose of protesting against any labor being per formed by negroes, while there were white men to do it. Colonel Wobert Wobinsou, of the Anatomical Cavalry, quieted him by saying that, although a number of negroes were then engaged in digging trenches, a new line of holes in a far more unhealthy place would be commenced in the morninir, and that none but Iriahmeu should be permitted to dig them. On the night previous to my arrival, my boy, while all the Mackerels were watching the stars with a viw to prevent any surprise from that quarter, the South ern Confederacy on the other side of Duck Lake trained four large fowling-pieces upon their peaceful camp from behind a wood-pile, and commenced a ferocious ear splitting bombardment. It was some hours before our men could be got into position to return the Sre, as Captain Bob .Shorty had forgotten where they had put the Orange County Howitzers when last using them. The fleet, too, was some what delayed iu getting into action, as Commodore Head experienced some diffi culty in unlocking the box into which he ahvays puts his spectacles and slow-match before retiring at night. Finally, howev er, the howitzers were discovered behind some boards, and the spcetables aud slow match were forthcoming, and our troops were pouring a hot fire across Duck Lake befcre the Confederacy had got more than two-thii'ds of the way back to Richmond. Next morning, my boy, the Conic Section cro.-sed the Lake and chased away every thing on the opposite shore except the before mentioned wood-pile. Having crossed the treacherous element to view 'he immediate scenes of these pro ceedings, and learned from Capt. Viiihim Brown that or.r pickets were within teu miles of the Confederacy's Capital, I was about to make some remark, when a mes senger came riding forward in a great per spirationv and says he : "Our pickets have been driven in." "Ila !" says Yilliam "is the Confederacy again advancing upon the United States of America V "Our pickets," says the messenger, im pressively,"havebceu driven in; they have been driven into Richmond." "Ah !" says Yilliam, pleasantly, "then send out some more pickets." I strolled away from the pair, my boy, reflecting upou the possibility of enough Maekeral pickets reaching Richmond in this way to make the Union sentiment stronger than ever. When very near this city, on my return Rome, 1 met a chap who was ou his wav to a lawyer's to get his exemption from the draft duly filed. "See here, my patriotic invalid," says I, skeptically, "how do you come to be exempt V "1 am exempt," says he, in a profound ly melancholy manner, "because 1 am suffering from a broken Ueait." "Hem," says I, "It's true," says he sniffling dismally. "I asked the female I love to have me. She said 1 had not enough postage stamns to suit her ideas cf personal revenue, and she didn't carp to do my washing. That was enough ; my heart is broken, and I am not an able-bodied man." Drafting, my boy, is of a nature to de velop the seeds of disease iu the hitherto healthy human system, seeds which, if suffered to fructit', will be likely to ulti mate in what gentlemen of burglarious ceconipli-ihiuents would chastely and bo tanically denominate a very large sized "plant." Yours, seriously, OuTiiErs C. Kerb. Charles Dickens is fifty yrs of eg. Terrible Slorj of" tlie Rebellion, A correspondent of the N. Y. Times, who writes from Springfield, Missouri, tells the following sad tale of the conse quences of the rebellion : The tender mercies of secession are cruel. I have just heard the sad story of a widow who had buried two sons and a daughter since the outbreak of the rebel lion. Ilsr three children all fell by the hand of violence. She lived in the "White River country a land of hills aud ignorance. In that country she and her family stood almost alone upon the side of the National Union. Her neighbors were advocates cf rebellion, aud even before the arrival of our army in Springfield, all loyal citizens were warned that they must !eave their homes or die. It was little the poor widow had to leave a miseiable log cabin and small patch of hillside but such as it wa, she was preparing to abandon it when her son Harvey left her in search of employment. She packed his bundle with a heavy heart, took a silk handkerchief from htr neck, gave it to him, and kissed him good-bye, never expecting to see him again. He had not beon gone many days wnen her persecution began Her little boy was one evening bringing in wood for the fire, when a shot was heard a bullet struck the log under his arm, and he dropped it with a scream. The ball had just missed his heart. Joy at his escape from death was henceforth mingled with gloomy apprehension. Next she heard of the death of Harvey, lie fouud a home and fancying himse'f secure, was alone at work in the field. The family with whom he lived were ab sent. "When they returned at nxn they found his dead body in the house, pierced by a bullet. His torn cap and other signs witnessed to the severity of his struggle before ho yielded to his murderer. From this time the family of Mis. Willis lived in constant fear. One day a gun was fired at them as they sat at din Der. Often they saw men prowling about with guns, looking for the young men. One inau was bol 1 enough to come into the cabin in search of them. At night they all hid in the woods and slept. The poor woman was one day gatheriug corn in the garden, and William was sitting upon the fence. "Don't sit there Yvrilliam," faid his mother, "you are too fair a mark for a shot." William went to the doer aud sat upon the step. "William," said his sister "you are not safe there. Couie iuto the house." He obeyed. He was sitting between two beds, when suddeuly another shot rang upon the air, and the widow's second sou, Samuel, whom she had not uiticed sitting by another door, rose to his feet, stairirered a few steps toward his mother, and fell, a corpse, before her. "I never wished any one in torment before," she said, "but 1 wish tLemau that killed him was there." Her three oldest sons at once left the cabin and fled over the hills. They are all m the National Army to-day. Samu el's sister wa.-hed the cold clay, and dressed it for the grave. Alter two days the se cession neighbors came to bury him. At first the frantic mother refused to let them touch his body. At last she cousented. The clods were falling upon the coffin, each sound awakening an echo in her heart, when a whipporwill fluttered down, with its melancholy cry, and settled in the open grave. The note so terrified the conscience-stricken wretches that they fled ii: dismay. Two of her children were now in the tomb. Three had escaped for their lives. The unhappy woman was left with her two daughteis and three small children, helpless aud alone. She was obliged to go thirty miles upou horseback to mill for food, and afterwards to re urn on foot, leading her horse by the bridle, with the sack of meal upon his back. On her re turn, she met her children about a mile and a half from her own house. In h-r neighbor's yard her two boys, aged ten :md twelve vcars. were diiruing another jrave the grave of an old man, murdered in her absence for the crime of loyalty to i the Union. Together wiih a white-headed patriot, w ho tottered wih age, they placed ; the corpse upon a board, roiled if, unpre- pared-lor burial nml uncoffincd, into the shallow pit, and then covered it with ! earth. Such ave the trials of loyal citizens ! in the border slave States, and wherever rebellion has been in power. The widow now escaped for refuge to I this city. Ar.d here, to crown her sorrows, j in the absence of her three oldest remain ing eons, a drunken soldier shot her daughter Mary, as she was standing in the door of her house. Is it auy wouder Aa' thi woman's hair in gray, her .frtkes j full of wrinkles, or that she should say, j with tremulous tones "I feel that I shall not live long. The only thing which sustains me is the love of Christ." Northern people know nothing of the horrors of war. Horace Greeley's Response 1'resldent Lincoln. Last week we published the letter of President Lincoln to Mr. Greeley, in an swer to the appeal of the latter in behalf of "Twenty Millions" of loyalists. Here with is Mr. Greeley's response : Dear Sir : Although I did not antic ipate nor seek any reply to uiy former letter unless through your official acts, I thank you for having accorded one, siuce it eniibles me to say explicitly that noth ing was further from my thought than to impeach in any manner the sincerity or the intensity of your devotion to the sa ving of the Uuion. I never doubted, and have no friend who doubts, that you de sire, before and above all else, to re-establish the now derided authority and vindi cate the territorial integrity of the Repub lie. I iutended to raise only this question Do you propose to do thi3 oy recogni zing, obeying, and enforcing the laws, or by ignoring, disregarding, and in effect defying them ? 1 stand upou the law of the land. The humblest has a clear right to invoke its protection aud support against even the highest. That law in strict accordance with the law of Nations, of Nature, and of God declares that every traitor now eu gaged in the infernal woik of destroying our country has forfeited thereby all claim or color of right lawfully to hold human being in Slavery. I ask of you a clear and public recognition that this law is to be obeyed wherever the National author ity is respected. I cite to you instances wherein men fleeing from bondage to traitors to the protection of our flag have been assaulted, wounded and murdered by soldiers of the Uuiou unpunished and unrebuked by your General Commanding to prove that it is your duty to take actiou in the premises action that will cause the law to be proclaimed and obeyed wherever your authority or that of the Union is recognized as paramount. The Rebellion is strengthened, the National cause is imperiled, by every hour's delay to strike Treason this staggering blow. When Fremont proclaimed Freedom to the slaves of Rebels, you constrained him to modify his proclamation into rigid ac coi dance with the terms cf the existing law. It was your clear right to do so. 1 now ask of you conformity to the principle so sternly enforced upou him. 1 ask you to instruct ydtir Geneialsand Commodores that no loyal jeron certainly none wil ling to render service to the National cause is henceforth to be regarded as the slave of any traitor. While no rightful Government was ever before assailed by so wanton and wicked a rebellion as that of the slaveholders against our National life, I am sure none ever before hesitated at so simple and primary an act of self-defeuse as to relieve those who ivould serve and save it from chattel servitude to those who are wading through reas of blood to subvert aud destroy it. Future genera tions will with difficulty realize that there could have been hesitation ou this point. Sixty years of general and boundless sub serviency to the Slave Power do not ade quately explain it. Mr. President, I beseech you to open your eyes to the fajt that the devotees if Slavery everywhere' just as much iu Maryland as iu Mississippi, in Washington as iu Richmond are to day your enemies, and the implacable Iocs cf every effort to re-establish the National authority by the discomfiture of its assailants. Their Pres ident is not Abraham Lincoln but Jeffer son Davis. You may draft them to serve in tin; war ; but they will only fight under the Rebel flag. There is not in New York to day a man who really believes in Sla very, loves it, aud desires its j erpetu-ition, who heartily desires the crushing out of the Rebellion. He would much rather save the Republic by buying up and pen sioning off its assailants. His "Union a? it was" is a Union of which you were not President, and no one who truly wished Freedom to all ever could be. If the e are truths, Mr. President, they arc surely oi the gravest importance -, i . n , n , - and l ou cannot saieiv anpronen me gr-. i . , . ,i .Rate bv good end you so intently ;v , , , . J ... -1 our deadly . , .iv nnst in which tllPW loe is not nunueu i,-v . br cTlVft.O red. lie walks i "1'Oal. knowing well Ins weak . mnt r.nwillm'MV hrtravin? his i ,t yoa to may see and take advan- ; tear . . , i -.-. i i-i r niv - r- . - : rf nt ir. tioa rr ranr. mat uis up nrcutu- f eion may prove prophetic. i That rou tcny not unseasonably per- NUMBER 50. ceive these vital truths as they will shine forth on the pages of History that they may be read by our children irradiated by the glory of our National salvation, not rendered lurid by the blood-red glow of National conflagration and ruin that you may promptly and practically realize that Slavery is to be vanquished only by Liberty is the fervent and anxious prayer of Yours, truly, HORACE GREELEY. New York, August 24, 1862. Traitors at Home. Following are a few extracts from a speech delivered at a War Meeting in the District" of Columbia, recently, by L. E. Crittenden : "What is the history of this war? Cit izens hung in presence of their families, for no crime but love of their country ; wounded soldiers, with the cry of mercy on their lips, barbarously slaughtered. Would to Heaven that I could stop hero ; but the very grave, sacred everywhei from the attack cf every animal but the hyena and the traitor, has been desecra ted, and the uncorrupted flesh stripped from the bodies of our soldiers, and their bones kept this moment as treasured relics of the battle, tell a story of more than devilish inhumanity, to which the mind woull give no credence that depended upon anything but the most conclusive testimony. Ah ! gentlemeu, the causes of this quarrel are in the past. Let them be there. With tlum we have nothing to do. Hesitation, compromise, negotiation, delay timid counsels, all are words that belong to the past. Ours is the business, and ours the duty, of protecting this coun try and the Government, at the expense of our lives, if need be, and to see to it that the history we are this day making shall not be one of which our children may be ashamed. "Mr. President, since the commence ment of this war there has been ono im portant omission. To hundreds of our soldiers, whose bodies lie upon rebel ground, it has been a fatal one. Wre have suffered men, whose hearts were as full ot treason as the shambles are with offal, to breathe the same air that we do, to walk the same street that we do, and to sit at the same table. "When this rebellion broke into overt acts, every traitor who had a spark of honor about him left and went to his native place. None remained among us but those whose nature qualified them for exercising the business of pimps and spies ; and they arc here to-dayf and carrying out their work. I say, gentlemen, that we cannot, expect the Government to look after these men we cannot expect the military governors and provost marshals to do it we must do it ourselves. There are many ways you may tell a traitor. They are not noisy. They do not proclaim their affection for Jeff Davis; but when you see men going through such times as these, and not manifesting one word of sympathy for the Government in its struggle, and not one word favoring the putting down of this rebellion, mark him and spot him. He is a worse traitor than if he were in the enemy's country." JCSf A "correspondent, writing from Buffalo, announces the arrival at Niagara Falls of a "way worn and extremely seedy man," who walked to the Clifton House and entered his initials, and his residence as "Dixie." Ex-Governor forehead, of Kentucky, came into the ofSce at the in stant, and the seedy tramper stepped right up to him and whispered in his ear. Electrified with astonishment, the Gover nor shook him warmly by the hand, and in turn whispered to a number of other secesh in the room. The stranger was surroun ded, and welcomed with the warmest dem onstration?. The "seedy" individual here rc-ferrcd to is the notorious George N. Sanders, who made his escape info Canada and sail ed thence to Europe as "Confederate En voy." It is rumored he takes on offer of the "C. S. A." to England aud Franco, of absolute free trade with the SouthVe" States if they will pay the Coti' (no war debt. If ibis bait dor.Y,; promise gudgeon, George is piTJ?fc'gradual, most gradual emancipation-'" piolably. i'"m - TTTs evening Cu the l.jtn, ' om- V - rarragut V.rthc mir.en hauled. down his and raised it ou the 'mainmast, which act announced to tho lleet that the hitherto flag officer l ad assumed the functions and dignity of rear admiral iu the United States navy. A salute was fired -jji the occaj-iou, and in the evening he was serenaded. C& Ma-yiand will be a loyal State if i .. - t 1,11 - . . . tt.e emigration oi nr r.eoe:s u,o v ir; niiii-i nn mi ?i (Vw wpc&a nt th r.rr.Konf i i-""- r 1 . . i v"" 1 rate. "Kxpo-urc to tha uralt is tha pvr.re Ci.Uj.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers