RIGHT OR WRONG. THIS EIOBT, TO BE KEPT HIBHT, WHICH WttOSQ, TO BE PUT RIGHT. EDEXSBURG: THURSDAY :::::::::::::::::::uTANUAll V 7 Present Condition or the Rebel lion. " We frequently hear the question asked, what has the Government done towards crushing out the rebellion ? If we should take the haughty airs and loud complaints and wai'.ing asseveration of those who most frequently make these inquiries as an answer, wo should be led to the conclusion that all the efforts of the administration in this direction were and would be unavail ing How stands the case, and what are the facts ? In the first place, all the slave States, with the exception of Delaware, Maryland and Kentucky, undertook to vote themselves out of the Union, thereby placing themselves in hostile attitude to the Government of the United States. Our Forts, Docks and Navy Yards, Arsenals, Magazines, arms and ammunition, within the reach of the rebels in these States, were seized and confiscated by tho sb-called Confederate Government. The old flag was everywhere by them trampled in the dust. The rebellion was inaugurated during the last year of the treasonable administration of James Buchanan, when every facility was extended to the rebels by 'the government itself, under the direc tion and control of traitors in his cabinet. The loyal men of the country were unprepared for the terrible shock. Every department of the government at Wash ington was full of traitors, and the army aud navy were full of treason. President Lincoln at his inauguration found the government itself virtually turned over to the treasonable rebellion of Jeff. Davis. "What has been done to subdue the rebels and restore the authority of the Government?" Let us ece. First, the old flag has been planted in every State, and now floats in triumph over the soil of every State, carrying with it the authority ' ji the United States Government. Is this nothing? Second, we have saved every free State entire from the, rebels, and notwithstanding the invasions attempted into Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, Kansas and other free S'ates, their hordes have been driven back, and the Goths and Vandals of slavery forcibly expelled from our borders and our national capital. Kentucky, Maryland and Delaware were saved from going out of the union by the urms and authority of the government? Missouri, Western Virginia, Tennessee, Louisiana, have all been conquered back. Texas will soou come back under the march of the armies of Banks. Arkansas is already nominally under our authority, and both of these States are cut loose from the Confederacy by the opening of the waters of the Missisippi. North Carolina is alyady ripe to come back, just as soon as loyal men can be protected by our armies. We hae by our naval power blockaded two thousand miles of sea coast iind taken an almost incredible number of blockade runners. We have forced England, France, and the other European powers, to acknowledge our authority, while they dare not recoguize the rebel confederacy, so that all danger of foreign intervention has now nearly passed away. We have the largest, best fed, beft clothed and best disciplined army in the world; an army wielding greater power than any army on the globe. Our naval strength is such as to defy the world, und U soon to be so strengthened by new vessels as to give us the position of masters of the sea. The gallant Gilmore will never raise hie seige until Charleston, the hot bed of secession, is ctnquered or laid in ashes. Then Savannah will fall, and with it every rebel city in that region. The indomitable Graut will push on his conquchU until his armies accupy Atlanta, and thtu 3 gain divide the so-called confederacy. The moat hopeful indication of an early termination of the war ia found in the fact that the currency bubble of the Confederate rotates has burst, aud their money, which has always been held at a tuincus discount, f.a? virtually become worthless, and the managers openly propose repudiation. This knocks out their last prp. Intimately connected with this is the universal distress which everywhere prevails in the confederacy, caused by the exhaustion of war. The coil wound around the rebellion is being drawn more tightly every day. Without another battle, the fate of the rebellion is decided. It is only a question of time. In view of these facts, where ia the loyal man that will not thank God and take courage. With the rebellion goes down forever tho atrocious institution of slavery. A higher and more gloiious destiny awaits us. Let us, then, fight on, labor on, and toil on, for "the day of our redemption drawcth nigh, and is even at our very doors." Jottings from Washington. Washington City, Pec. 31, 18C3. To the Editor of The Allcghanian : Simultaneously almost with the trans mission to the House of Iiepresentatives by the War Department of Gen. M'CIel lan's voluminous report of his campaigns while in command of the Army of the Potomac, we hear from Philadelphia that a drawing-room company of gentlemen, assembled in that aity, has nominated the General for the Presidency. The Phila delphia nomination will bo indorsed by the Democracy in a more formal manner ere many months have elapsed. That M'Clcllan will be the standard-bearer of the opponents of the Administration and the war ia au event which the signs of the times have long foreshadowed. Abraham Lincoln, Edwin M. Stanton, and other chiefs of the Government, it is to be presumed, have observed those signs. And yet, to show their faith in the intelligence of the people and ia the righteousness of the people's cause, they did not hesitate to give to the world General M'Clellan'b elaborate defense of his Ball's Bluff and Chickahominy strategy a defense which he and his friends rely upon to make him Honest Old Abe's successor. What an unusual spirit of magnanimity and. fair dealing is here manifested ! unusual, we say, because we cannot recall any similar act in the history of any preceding Ad ministration which was performed with as little hesitation as this. The head of the War Department, if he had been so dis posed, could have retained tho defense in question under lock and key for an indefi nite period. But he does nothing of the kind. He sends it to an "Abolition" Congress, and that Congress hands it over to the public printer, voluminous as it is, to be printed, paid for, and circulated by the Government it so unjustly abuses. This is "Abolition tyranny" with a ven geance ! This is the last specimen of the "persecution" to which General M'CIellan has been subjected ! Truly, he of all other men may well exclaim "Save me from my friends, and I will take care of my enemies." His enemies won't hurt him. On the contrary, they propose to furnish this Presidential beggar with the necessary old clothes in which to display his miser able mendicancy. The 6th Regiment of Vermont Volun teers arrived in the city this evening from the Army ot the Potomac, on its way home to recruit. Three-fourths of the regiment have r-j-cnlisted for another erm of three years, aDd, in addition to receiving a bounty of $400 per roan, they are entitled to a furlough of not less than thirty days. Several other regiments havo recently gone North upon the same terms. It is estimated that at least one-half of the Army of the Potomac will re-enlist. The boys are eager to obtain the big bounty and a mouth's rest among home scenes and home faces. They are also very much influenced to re-enlist by the current opinion that one more campaign like that of 1863 will end the Rebellion. The news from the West and South concerning re enlistments is equally cheering. It is now absolutely certain that, if the proper effort had been made to recruit our armies by volunteering under the last call of the President for 300,000 men, another draft would not have been necessary. This effort ha3 not been made, especially in the large States of New York and Pennsylva nia. If, then, the draft which is about to take place, and which, by indifference or peuuriousness, or worse, has become abso lutely necessary in some of the States, should bear heavily upon certain commu nities, let it be remembered that the people ot those communities have had ample time in which to make arrangements for preventing the draft ! eoicoming their wav. The President has piped unto them and they have not danced. Their country has mourned unto them and they have not wept. Christmas was really and truly a happy day for our soldiers in the hospitals of Washington and vicinity. In all of the hospital, so Jar as I can learn, an old fashioned Christmas dinner was served to the patients, and iu most of them speeches were made, songs were sung; and woman was present. There was a time when our sick and wounded heroc3 fared badly enough in our hospitals, but that time has gone by. Now they have every needed attention from willing hands and hearts that feel, and when a holiday cornea around they share its pleasures. Wm. H. Gardner, Esq., your readers, will be inteiested to learn, ha3 been promoted from a $1200 to a S1400 clerk ship in the Third Auditor's Office. Frank Lytle, late Register and Recorder of your county, is in the city. He leaves for home to-morrow. I must not forget tho weather. It. is raining pitchforks, and mud ia everywhere. No snow yet. J. M. S. Washington City, Christmas Eoe. To the Editor of Ihe Alleghanian : I have just been looking at life in Washington, as exhibited out doors this glorious "night before Christmas." We have no snow, no sleigh bells; but the moon's rays are very bright, the air is bracing, there is no mud, and everybody is on the qvivive. The principal thorough fares are crowded with pedestrians of both sexes and all ages men in overcoats, with large biown bundles under their urms; ladies in furs, with numerous small "parcels" peeping out of their muffs; boys hauling wagons, or slily dropping a fire cracker at the feet of some nervous passer by; and little girls affectionately hugging the inevitable gutta percha doll. An occasional pistol-shot or explosion of a Roman candle reminds you that the rowdy element is also about. Drawing rooms, brilliant with beauty and glaring with gaslight, are opened to the public through heir windows of plate glass ; the theatres and ober places of amusement are in full blast tLe shops are crowded; everybody seems happy, .nd all for the time feel rich. Surely this uT-tropolis ot the nation is merry to-night. It V 111 be merrier to morrow night, acd not neuvw 80 S0DCT The war blights nothing here, li dens but few hearts. Few here have lost it; most have made money out of it. Hence these unchecked festivities ; hence the "good time" everybody is wishing his neighbor, and busily intent on Coding for himself. Congress adjourned on Wednesday until Tuesday, the 5th of January. The unusual length of this adjournment is owing to two causes : first, the desire of Members to visit their families during the holidays the exorbitant prices charged here for boarding prohibiting many from bringing their wives with them ; and, secondly, the necessity of giving to some of the more important committees the necessary time in which to prepare business for the Session. Few persons at a distance from the Capital fully realize, the fact that the hardest work a Member of Congress per forms is done in his committee-room. Thus far, Congress has done but little. The only measure of any importance that has become a law is the bill appropriating twenty millions to pay the large bounties to volunteers offered some months ago by tho Secretary of War that is, $400 to veterans, and $300 to all others. These large bounties are to cease on the 5th of January. After that all volunteers will receive only the old bounty of $100. Those who intend to dodge the draft by volun teering should do so now. There will certainly be a very large sized draft within a month. The debates in Congress on the bounty bill and the several propositions to repeal the $300 clause of the conscription act, show a strong opposition to the repeal of the latter. The West, having more adventurous and unmarried spirits thau the East, generally has less difficulty in filling any required quota, and hence favors the repeal; the East is, in the main, in favor of retaining it. Senator Cowan, of your State, favors its retention, and we believe Mr. M'Allistcr docs. Our opinion still is that the clause will stand. The two classes of enrolled citizens, it seems very probable, will be consolidated. This I and other proposed changes in the law will most likely result iu postponing the draft until tho 20th of January. The weather has been intensely cold for a week, but we have had no snow. WLcn I last wrote, the rain was pouring down, and the mud was ankle deep. In a few davs we may have rain again. And this ii a Washington winter. J. M. S. Br, The commission of Hon. Daniel Agnew, an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, was read in open court in Philadelphia, on Wednesday, dated Nov. 6th, 1863. The oath of office was administered by Justice Read at Chambers. Bra. It is thought that Congress will extend the time for the payment of the bounty to veteran volunteers. flSy Judge Taney continues ill, but his physicians expect he will recover. 1SG4. If 1864 should do no more than repeat the victories of 1863, it will be enough, for we need but one more Vicksburg and one more Chattanooga to decide the issue. Another Gettysburg is improbable, for the invasion of the North has ceased to be eveo a dream in the South, and the rebellion will rest all winter at bay, beleaguered by our armies and blockaded by our fleets. W think that 1863 saw the climax of the war, and that 1864 will see its end. How gloomily ended 1 1862, how slowly tho war had progressed in that year of mistoriunes, ana now dangerous tho discontentrftents of the North ! Not only had we failed to win decisive victories, but it seemed that the people might lose their energy and trust. The cry for peace grew louder. It need ed all the firmness of the Government, all the fidelity of its friends, to keep the high policy of the country from failing. 1863, by the help of Providence and tho procla mation of emancipation, reversed the situation. Grant and Banks opened the Mississippi ; Rosecrans and Grant deliver ed Tennessee, and the one prepared, the other achieved the greatest triumph of the whole struggle ; Meade repulsed invasion at Gettysburg; and these were assurances of magnificent progress. But the victory did not all belong to the army and navy. In the elections of about twenty Slates, the Government received such a decisive support that the. enemies of the Government trembled "before the will of the people. Of ail dangers, dis affection in the loyal States seemed the greatest in 1862; but 1SG3 eods with the North practically a unit for the Un ion. Thus we enter the New Year, with the light of victory on our banners. The war is not ended, but doubt, and disagreement, and danger are over. The Government has not only half conquered its enemies in the South, but has half convinced its opponents in the North ; it has extorted respect from both. No one now takes the trouble to argue with the people that the first step in restoring the Union, must be to give a loyal support to the Government. That is a truth universally admitted. It will be the basis of popular action iul864. Thft attempt to organise a party with the avowed purpose of thwarting the present Administration, and substituting for its war-policy one of compromise, has been -uca a tremenaous lauure, mat we ueuu not i.V"ead its renewal. The policy of the Qovcrn-nut is enthroned in the intelli gence of tht; al people, and vindicated by its own success. canuot be broken down, for it is breaiiu do the rebell- ion. . . , Aud now, having eaid" that we need not dread the renewal of the attempt to destroy the policv of the Govjrnirfnt, having asserted that doubt and danger are over, we retraot our words. Yes, we are bold enough to be inconsistent. It i rue there is reason why loyal men shodd smile at the thought that all which Has been done might be undone. But so long aa there is a party in the loyal States led by men secretly opposed to the coercion of the South, denying the justice of the abolition of slavery, and sympathising far more with the rebellion than with the Government, the danger 13 not over. Indiffereuce or diviaiou in 1864 might not ruin the Union, but it would postpone, perhaps for years, the restoration of peace. No mau can ever overestimate the evil cf the failure of the Union party in the next Presidential election. Ve claim for the Union party, and the men who are at the head of it, nothing less than the glory of the whole struggle. Their principles are (Je only principles. If we have had victory it is due to ttiom only ; it we nav had defeat it is not their blame. All the misfortunes of the war, excepting those inseparable lrom all wws, we unhesita tingly charge upon a factious and unscru pulous opposition to the Government. Even in defeat that party haa been effective; it has slandered our best statesman, decried our ablest generals, interfered with the draft, discouraged enlistments, asserted that the war was not waged for the Union, predicted ruin, and denied success. It has never helped to make one man patriotic, save as tha drunken Helot taught the Spartan youth the nobility of temperance. History will denounce it more earnestly than we do. It will be recorded as the worst of all parties, and branded with the shame of its sympathy with traitors. If it succeeds, farewell to the fruits of victory, a long farewell to the glory of triumphant war, to the hopes of prosperous peace. It is a party that has ever had the encouragement of all our foes, and has thrice earned the distrust and enmity of every man who cares a particle more for the honor of hia country than the miserable triumph of a politician. How can this party succeed ? Only by effecting a division iu the Union ranks, aud thus again carrying the Presidential election against the will of a majority. Already haa it begun laboring to create dissension. Loyal men must meet it by maintaining their organizations, by sacri ficing their jealousies, by never giving up a principle for the love or hatred of a man, and by translating tho true old maxim "The price of liberty is eternal vigilauce," into the daily thoughts and actions of their lives. 53. Orders have been issued by the War DepArtment postponing the draft until tho 15th of February. t& Archbishop Hughes died in New York on Sunday. Bgfc. Our State Legislature convened at II arrisburg on Tuesday. Rebellion Staggering. "The traitors of the South acknowledge that unles3 they can accomplish a loan and a conscription by April, their cause is lost." Exchange When the amount of the loan and the size of the conscription required by rebel exigencies are considered, this confession of the south is an acknowledgment of defeat, because the demand, which is to this extent imperative, cannot, in the na ture of things, be complied with. In his recent elaborate report, Mr. Memminger, the rebel Secretary of the Treasury, called for nine hundred millions of dollars. The Secretary of War asked for the conscrip tion of all males between fifteen and fifty five. ' The finances of the confederacy have reached such a position that it is not probable the ninth part of the sum called fjr could be obtained by the most rigid exactions ; gold ia not to be f jund anywhere ; foreign exchange is only a memory. United States money is repre sented by the trifling sums which have been stolen, and the paper of the confed eracy has depreciated to the last point preceding collapse." If the people were inclined to pay, they are without the ability in many places the disposition ia as scant as the ability. The conscription is as weak a staff as the loan ; although, being dependent upon it, a failure of tho latter is equivalent to complete failure. The levies of men have already included lads of fourteen and adults of sixty. The" last reinforcements were obtained only by the exercise of brute force, and consequently provided- no men' with feelings like those which won Manassa.1 and lost Chattanooga. The decimated regimetts cannot be refilled new ones cannot be recruited. These statements comprise the unanimous testi mony of the past six months. Therefore, the confession which we have quoted concedes everything. Even it it did not, thfc result is the same. Out armies have been recruited, and continue to be; our currency ia sufficient; the spirit of the nation, is cordially with the Adusiuistration, and th.e Admin istration i determine! to leave the coun try with its olden boundaries everywhere restored, and the flag of the free waring supreme. The "endless war," "eternal separation," "national bankruptcy" and "foreign intervention" croakings must die away as the star of the nation rises- p more and more proudly more and 'mere certainly to mid heaven. Exchange of Prisoners. Theoft-mooted question of exchange of prisoners h again on the tapi. , Intelli gence from Fortress Monroe states that the flag of-truce boat had arrived from City Point, bringing five hundred Union prisoners in exchange for those sent up by General Butler. The rebel Govern ment do one or two queer things, in keeping, however, with their 'general character. They refuse any further exchau 3 unless all the questions about wh$cb our overnmenr have been exer cised are giretf P, and unless their laws in regard to otfers and soldiers of the nero reieentJ recognized. The rebel Government iL'cevtise keepsits back ia constant okvat5oa in regar to the "Beast Butler." Thev rvfu" to receive a flag of truce from General litler; they refuse to negotiate with im pn i""ie sub jeet of exchanges, and they refer to Ir. Davis proclamation ot outlawry 2l4-" him aa the filial reason. Iot eleC these rebels are at whipping the devil round the stump I They were ready to t3 j J to t3 physicked by iiutler, but the prescription which recommends an exchange of prison ers provides too bitter a pill for them to swallow. They will have to swallow bitterer pills than this, however, for all their wry faces. The rebel South has got her glasses on awry, acd sees everything obliquely. Peevish, morose, despairing, cursed by the leal of the land, tho rebel South stands up a God-forsaken creature, and tries to bear herself brazen-faced through th? Etorm of obloquy. The trick will not answer. In every one of her re lations she betrays a miserable incapacity. Numerous as her mistakes and ignorances have been, she has seldom seemed so la mentably ridiculous as in her action with respect to the exchange of prisoners. Impudence and ignorance, we are told, gc hand in hand. They are Siamese twins in the domains of the South, and are, moreover, ubiquitous throughout that territory. All the questions of onr Gov ernment on the subject must be cut dead ; all of their Government must be recog nized ! If this were not on a par with other demands of the Confederacy, equal ly stupid and audacious, we might discov er a latent sarcasm in this one. As it is, we keep cdoI, look on serenely, and pray most emphatically that the rebel South may be brought to abetter frame of mind. Dr. Tobias' Venetian Horse Lini ment has given universal satisfaction during the fourteen years it has been introduced into the United States. After being tried by millions, it has been proclaimed the pain destroyer of the world., Paiu cannot be where this liniment is applied. If use! as directed, it cannot and never has failed in a Fingle instance. For coughs, colds, and in fluenza, it can't be beat. One 25 cent bottle will euro all the above, besides being useful in every family for sudden accidents, such as burns, cuts, scalds, insect stings, &c. It is perfectly innocent to take internally, and can, be given to the oldest person or youngest child. Price 25 and 50 cents a bottle. Otlice, 56 Cortlandt street, New York. Sold by all Druggists. " declO . B. Peterson's Magazine, Continental Monthly, and Knickerbocker, for January, have been received. These publications all ably sustain their high reputation for gener al excellence. COMMISSIONERS' SALE Vy The Commissioners of Cambria r will offer for sale at the Court IJ0a. Ebensburg, on Friday, Jan. 15, a.D 'J'.' the following tracts of unseated 4'. land3, which tracts were legally pnrcbaj!! the Commissioners., at different Treas ' eales,.and have been held the time reo"' by lajr, and have not been redeemed by r4 mer owners within such legal limitation Acres F: Warrantee's name. To,'' 397 Jacob Burnj, 401? 142 Jacob Harris, 400 407 200 40G 500 840 1050 260 440 300 4412 437 17 113 400 1 lot 393 186 400 400 26 50 53 400 220 Jas. Ross, mark. Wm. Jonej lln ' it i u l tt ii it J. Jones, J. Hayn6i Diffaer, 14 ii it Adauis, Duck. Donahoe, u 4 23 Richard John, Abraham Andrews, Ilicbard Smith, John G. Brown, Michael M'Laughlin, 9'J Rowland Evans, William Smith, Andrew Black, 80 Merdinand Gordon, George Kring, Jesse Lay ton, Clinton Wisinger, William Smith, William Clark, Coneaaugi Master BuniBsrliiu 324 150 Peter Sbocnberger, 440 Jeremiah Jackson, 441 438 220 100 387 122 50 372 &0 400s 200 40 4 15 Koben Irwin, Charles Smith, John Simpson, Henry Olden, William Mulhollen, Joseph Piatt's est. George Feith, 32 Nicholas West, W&jihicf.c) H 4 Samuel Leech, Frederick liinton. Christian Lingafelter, George Ross, James Russell, u 4"05' TOO Jame9 Ruth, ltJO 12 Joseph Cowperth-waiTe. 175 423 Henry Page, u Zacheus Collins. uiven unaer our usrocjs ax me comm:ssia& crs' Office, Ebe-nsbwrgv Dec. 14, A. L. 1&EJ. V. J. LITTLE, 1 JOH.S CAMPBELL, I K. GLASS, I Coam'n, Attest.' Wm. If. SjccTn.TR. Clerk. Ebenabcrgr Dc. 17, 18C3. ' XL S. 5-20'S. THE SECRETARY of THETREAS. UTiY has not jet given notice of kj rnention to withdraw this popular Loanfroa fhile-atPar, and until ten days notice i3jrfrta, tte- undersigned, as liGeneral SLr?riy Agent" will continue to sopplj itxr fatix. The wlwle amount of tb Lca authorize is Fire Hundred Million ef Dollars. Nearly Feur Hundred Million bare been already sui scrnbed for ad pid- into the Treasury, mos.ly within the 5at seren moDths. The hrgj demand from abroad, and the rapidly incrto ing home demaixV for use aa the basis for circulation by National Linking Aissciatiom now organizing in afS yxrXs She country, will, ina very short perioi, abswb the balaact. Sales baTe- lately ragged tit's ten. to fifteen millions weekly, frequently eiceediag three millions daily, and it is ell ksovrn tLwltU Secretary of the Treasnry ha3 ample be unfailing resources in tha Duties on lucpora aud Internal Revenues, and in the issue oi the Interest bearing Legal Teader Treasury Notes, it is almost ft certainty that lie will not find it necessary, for a long time to coat, to seek a market for anv other Icng or per manent Loans, THE INTEREST AND PEI.N CIPALOF WHICH ARE PAYABLE IX GOLD. Prudence and self interest must force t! minds of those contemplating the ft-rmition of National Banking Associations, as well u tho uiinds of all who have idle money 01 their hand3, to the prompt conclusion that they should lose no time iu subscribirj tr thid moat nnnuhir Lnan. It will soon b , ,ejonti thcir reaoh, and advance to a hand- J SCZj?c premium, as was the result with tb I "Sevti Thirty" Loan, when it was all ,! .uM no lonser be subscribed for at pr. Ii is a Per ent Loan, the JnUrett aiJ Principal puile in Coin, thus yilJig cf Xineper C- Ptr annu, at thf resent raiifc premium oa cola. , . The Governu-'n requires all duties on im ports to be paid rx Coin ; these duties L for a long limo pajt amounted to over Quarter of a Million o.' Dollars daily, a ,aa nearly three times greater than tbat require! in the pavment of the intent on all tbea 20's and other pcrmauent Loi- 'n is hoped thit the surplus Coin u' the Treas ury, at no distant day. will enable Jbe tni States to resume specie payment ooa J liabilities. The loan is called 5-20 from the fict tflaj whilst the Bonds may run for 20 years J' the Government has a right to pay thtw in Gold at par, at any thae after 5 years. The interest is paid Ualf-yearly, viz r 0 the first days of November and May. , Subscribers can have Coapon Bonds, wbic are pavable to bearer, and are $50, $10" $300, and $1,000; or Registered Bondi w same denominations, and in addition, nd $10,000. For Banking purpose ani J investments of Trust-monies the RegbtercJ Bonds are preferable. These 5-20's cannot be taxed by St" cities, towns, or counties, and the Governa tax on them is only one and a half per e1 on the amount of income, when the iat of the holder exceeds Six Hundred aoiiw per annum; all other investments, sue" income from Mortgages, Railroad SiocK n Bonds, etc., must pay from three to tvepw cent tax on the income. Banks and Bankers throughout tDCC0 will continue to dispose of the Bonds ; mo orders by mail or otherwise promptly ed to. , j.it t The inconvenience of a few davs a . the delivery ot the Bonds is "R.v0ldft7C' demand being so great ; but as interest c mences from the day of subscription, no is occasioned, and every effort is hem? 10 diminish the delay. Jay Cook. SUBSCRIPTION 114 S. THIRD ST PHIL iPELrUIA Philadelphia, December 10, 1863. FOR SALE. . ;fi A Faber ENGINE, S inch inch stroke, nearly new, in 'P,e.IC watfr, 2 pumps, one cistern holding -L6ir . U boiler 26 inches, 20 feet long, tire " htT complete. Price $GoO. V ill Lum at cash prices in PJmer,t of J"DwiCK. C.;nn P. KK.. 24 nn iles cast Pittsburg. Dec. 3, lto.
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