The compiler. (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1857-1866, September 12, 1859, Image 2

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a. I. if Aspue, Lingva PLOYIitETO2.
GETTIMICRG, PA i
XOSTI4Y MORNING, SEPT. 12. 197,9
Cm:antic itait
For A rtdtinr General,
XICRARDSON L. wItiGHT, of ieilaitaelphia
Fur Scimprr Grimm!,
PHIS ROWE, of Frauklin covmy
Prarratir Coa Zithrt.
Sate Sa l.:tor
J. W, DOEULAiI, 4 f Franklin county
A Julia y,
IAIEIII.. of Franklin.
AYES J . ARSHALL. of liamiltonban
hirerkor rftl,e
JOSEPH J. KUHN, of Leading
Arab:at,
A 403 LEFEVER, of 1.74i0rl
Ctainty Trecieyrrr,
V AYeiRIGHT ZIEG LER ; kir Celt, sti tin;
District A ticrrney,
J. C. NEELY, of Gett)iburg
Surviymr,
ofOlDi G. BRIN . KEOIO/1", cf :itrltts.n
news. etc.
'Be sore to read the pulitical articles on the
dirst page.
It is stated that. thethe city messenger of New
Bedford is it colored man, regularly elected
by the citizens, and kivis llnydep, the once
.noted fugitive, bolds an office in the State
house in Boston, to a hich lie was re*ilarl,}
.elected over a white competitor, with a salary
of eight hundred dollars a year.
The Pittsburg Journal says "the Demo
.cratie tack fa IBGO will be knee deep in
,dirt." Typurna/ man evidently thinks the
Democracy e going to ride over his party
rough•shod !
Cu!. Kinney, the great Central America
colonist and filibuster, having returned to
'Texas, has jest been elected to the Lagl/4-
Aare of that State, from Muecte county.
A movement is op foot in Tem:twee, look
ing to the erection of an equestrian statue of
Gen. Jackson in the western portion of the
state: A gentleman of Memphis offers togive
$l,OOO toward it,
The St. Igtois Erect ng News states that the
St. Louis court,hopse, when fkisbed, will
bare cost the county one awl a voirter mil
lion of dollars,
The N. 1. Express, an American taper,
does not think there is any danger of the
Democratic Convention at Charleston break
ing up. It;ljtays, very sensibly Demo
cratic Conventions seldom or never burst up.
on negrcee, Satabo, a reality in Republi
canism, is only a myth in Democracy,
La Mountain, who ascended in a balloon
from Saratoga, on the Ist inst., landed safely,
after traveling nearly 100 miles in I/ hours.
A young lawyer in Chicago was recently
sent to the penitentiary in that city fur ten
days for the crime of stealing ten cents,
Wm. L. Morgan, of Pottsville, Warren
county, Indiana, says that aced from the butt
end of an ter of corn will ripen its product all
at them.' time, and some three weeks ear,
Tier tliMea-. from the little end of the same
ear. lie recommends farmers always to break
their seed corn ears in two in the middle, and
use the butt end only fur aced,
A Yankee schoolmaster, rounedComstock.
turned a drove of cattle into the cornfield of*
-farmer, in Dubuque, lowa, and dnriag- the
convulsion which this act created in the final
ly, ran away with the farmer's daughter and
married her.
• The Ueda Blade tells the story of a chap
en their road, who apprehended a collision of
the cars, pat his life preserver on, blew it np,
and leaning his back against the aide of the
car, resigned himself to his fate.
The beet way to strengthen good resolu
tions is to act them out yourself. If you re.
salvos,* repair an old fence, it strengthens the
resolution and the the feuce too, to commence
at once.
Porter's Spiril of lite Times says that the
purses put up in the trots between Flora
Temple and Princess are all a sham_
A young man from Coklgue, Europe, resin-' ,
ing in this city, has, it is stated, recently had
two magular presentiments—that a brother
and wither had each died on certain days.—
Intelligence received from there corroborates
the presentiments, his relatives having died
at the thee supposed.—Neseark Adv. 1
On Friday two young ladies, Miss Worth-
ingtou and Miss Nall, started from the Ohio
side of the river to attend a camp-meeting at
Castleman's Run; when near Wellnburg they
hailed a man to take them across the river to I
the ru g eth. aide. Mr. Chamber/an, the gen
tlemen whom they requested to take them
Ole?, started with a skiff. The young ladies
ettepped in, and when near the centre of the
river the skiff. being a worn out affair, filled
with Wier and sunk, consigning the three to
-a watery grave.—Wheeling Times.
A Weer front Cassel in the Journal de
`_Frankfort - swallows the sodden death of M.
Habitobt, a Protestant minister of that town,
hose the bite of a fly. The wound was in
tided near the corner of his eye. A tumor
forined, which was followed by erysipelas,
and speedily caused death. It is presumed
that the By had been feeding on some dead
carcass in a state of decomposition, and bad
imbibed a poisonous virus, which had enter
-ed the wound..
The eighth volume of Bancroft's History of
:the United States will be published in a few
'weeks. Itincludes the period from the battle
(XENIA& Hill to the signing of the Declara
tion of Independence. The first volume was
published twenty-five years ego.
A Yankee in Brook.kyn has invented a ma
•chise which changes moray. it is used by
Railroad canductOrs who receive and give
ethane for fare without once handling the
*hemp.
In the superior Court, sitAirtg, in New San
dhog, Ct., on Wednoaka,jury rendered
411 Barad for ffie -a slander snit,
imp hi Mr. George linkman, of audton,
Itte.44y last
t= flout teel, T and althoug h
Vilephoutoomiwere ca ll ed is, the ` le
and the lad diet the
,
s parr says lb at many of the
groat is that Sao grow al: feet high. they
mous beisoceaussoaly welt cultivated.
-
•
Got gib , ' 1"*BD 91VIII Dodgy lane.. DODGE th•Swo hesTriest fires. Box
ea!—.The Star Nikon , • I
they usenet escape tho very shot which the
We promised the Star mingiitent. )ylrernl :Vat fell aimed at Cw4.aLU WIR.L. The RE
• srocks since, that iu due time we wilt* g:r ia COIL ienow,upon thetet,nml they ntusl"come l ,
them such FACTS. from the Iheeltr-Jacivst,,, 1.4 , to die nu*, fodder or nu liptider !" faTheift
a. they, or Mr. DratioaAhr, went' halt.' little I have stirred up .1 Loreto—let them " reap tlo I
stomach fur. On 3lumi.ty they receire4 the
first igetalment, and the disastrous effect 0:1 the 14.11 of Msrch, SAMUEL DURBOP.-
it has had upon their ner. - ouv !poems Aw DODOEIKIIE VOTE en tbe A ppropsi
readers little, if any. to ire neeo,sary. They at" " 'ltill, all , wing the members A S.ILA RY
tiv:st and squirm like snails with salt upon OF SEVEN fIUNIMED DOLLARS::: On'
their backs; and the effort+ they make to rid the llth of April, t+.A.AII'EL DLRLOILAW
thei r & em it. ezn a n i alo o f two odium VOTED FOR the Contereiice leport on that
Bill, STILL ALLOWING VIE SEVEN ;
he has justly lueurre..l, hy violating, his
pledges host winter. would lye amusing if HUNDRED DOLLAR sA LARY : !
Tnetie two poi lit 4 we amide., uniting the oth
they were riot insulting th the intelligence uf
the community.ers, in our 1.1.5 t, and certniiily they are the
In our Jest Monday's article, girls:
oil heaviest against Mr. Durl,eravr. The Slur,
however, does not !enieh them--does clot al- I
Mr. Durboritw's votes on the •i• Extra Pay ''
question, we made snceifie ! Inde to them in the most remote partimilar.:
sores, loin?, even the does. vow. how are 11 by th;s sjhniti%-ant silence? They eon:.
cx,iLiio them away, And they rime not
t'mese cßselosuros met? By a resort to the
j
common practice of the" cornered " vilifier—
u.tify then,. The Journal PROVES them to
by dem anciation 1.1 everybody else as "I N I.I
he true, ansl in a manner so plain and simple
that } - 1.3 trickery or subterfuge can weaken
liars." They 1) y to go one step further,
but there is hattiv and billpiey to La seep in their force or wipe them out..
We ask the %eters of the empty to consider
let us take up the Star': article in reg,ular
order, as we doAire only that TUE recru shall
he known—THE WHOLE TRUI'II. The
ground is taken that 4r. Durhora•s re.leem.s.l
i his $5OO pledge, by vutinz in favor of a
I toil de In caofiler !lay " vie—
! tiou ! Irompimb v oak and ridiculous tactics
may heaven fot ever deliver us! 1S hp does
not know that the mo,t int eterate enemies of
bills often vote to fix certain t!Ays fur their
consideration, in order that those measures
may rats DE La.FEATED ! .tnd it is not mi
-1 fair to presume that Mr. purlx , r;tv noted in
!the affirmative with this view, because, when
! the questioen came up 41CTION; we
find him invariahly opposing low pay, r —we
find him poporyq the vote on !' final pas
t
sage,"—and we find him VOTING FOR the
Conference report, which CONTINUED THE
SEVEN HUNDRED DOLLAR SALARY !!!
Notwithstanding the assertion in the Slav's
article that we "boldly falsified" Mr. Dar
borate's votes, his keepers are forced to the
humiliating acknowledgment that he did
NOT vote fur the Ilantersly amendment, fix
ing the pay of embers at $1,50 per day and
espenses going and reterning, Aye, they ,
dory eel deuy it : but what do they do? They
endeavor to lighten the burden by declaring
that the movement was " absurd!" Whether
"absurd" or not, FORTY-NINE gentlemen
voted for it, to forty-one against it—.Vr, Dur
ham", being among Me latter! His election
was advocated last fall on the ground that he I
was the 's low pay " candidate, and it made /
him many votes. Baton the very first oppor- ;
presented him to advocate "low pay,"
be turns his beck, and votes ag tinst it!
The Star is forced to acknowledge another ,
of the votes so charge hint with-...that in favor
of the Illeelere amendment, making the pay
$5 PER DAY and mileage; but they also en,;
deuvor to dodge this shot by the assertion ;
that " the session continued just 100 days,"
and that future sessions "will be more likely I
to he under than above 100 days." The last
session continued one hur.dred and feu days.
and had the pay been a per dim instead of a
safari per session, it would bare lasted a
hundded and thirty er forty days. Mtelurel
has always been favorable to the highest eel
arias, and this was only another of his tricks
to get as nmeh money as possible from the
l'ublic Treasury. If Mr. Durbdraw was so
Llind as not to see it, be was not fit to occu
py the place he did; but we era inclined to
the belief that be was thoroughly posted as to
McClure's design, and " voted knowingly."'
After the cote on the $5 a day propositon
.--whicb, by the way, was lost, 36 yeas 459
nays, }fr, Darboraw being among the YEAS
—a number of the members gave the reasons
for their rotes, and among them the follow
ing :
Mr. namersly desired to explain his rote.
The proposition WAR - calculated to increase the
pay of members, and therefore he had Toted
against it. •
Mr. Neall thought that the amendment to
the amendment was making the salary ap•
proximate nearer to $lOOO. Re had therefore
voted fur it.
Mr. Stevens Raid, my reason for voting
against this amendment, is because I think it
will have a tendency to increase our salaries
by protracted sessions.instead ofditninishing
them.. lam in favor of a fixed salary of $5OO
and mileage.
Mr. Kinney grave the following reasons for
his vote on the above question : My reason
fur voting against the amendment of the gen
tleman from Franklin, (Mr. McClure,) to fix
the pay of members at *5 per day, are. that
the per diem system is an exploded system in
Pennsylvania, and would tend to prolong the
sessions : and, On the whole, increase the ex
penses of the government.
Mr. -Fleming gave his reasons for voting
no" on the amendment of the gentleman
from Franklin, because he sincerely believed
it would result in increasing the compensation
of members to more than $5OO, tho sum
which he thought sufficient compensation.—
It being evident that every day over one hun
dred would result in sonic sgtX) per day ex
penses, and hold out inducements fur prolon
ged sessions.
Mr. Pinkerton said he was opposed to the
amendment offered by the gentleman from
Franklin, (Mr. McClure.) He believed if the
amendment carried, that the expenses of the
government would be increased rather than
diminished. The expenses each day, apart
from the pay of members, are not less than ,
3500 per diem, in this Ilona aad Senate ; and
he felt satisfied if this amendment prevailed, ,
that hereafter, instead of thi(seetteris lasting,
as they should, but about eighty days, they
would be prolonged to atstlesstn oat hun
dred and twenty-five days. ''This, at 500 per
diem, would amount for pay of members, in
House and Senate, to $63,1'..5; to which add
forty-five days extra fur officers' pay, light,
le., at $3OO per day, making in the allele
$103,625 ; whilst the present session of about
i ninety days, at $7OO per day fur members,
will cost Colt $93,100: saving to the Common
wealth $12,525. For these reasons he should
vote against the amendment, and hoped that
it would not prernii.
Mr. Boyer, (Schuylkill,) said he voted
against the amendment of the gentleman from
' Franklin, t'r similar reasons as those given
by his oolleagoe, (Mr. Pinkerton.) and believ
ing fully that should the amendment carry,
it would greatly increase the expenses of this
, Commonwealth. _
Mr. Bertolet said-4 Trate against the in- 1 ,
crease of pay of the trembers of this H twee, 1
on the ground, that 1 think Are hundred dol
lars is sufficient for any menrber who cornea I
here, for the short time that hie services are
requited. A mechanic or laborer, who labors
a whole year, eearcely earns more than one- I
half what otimiliers ot the Legislature receive.
Others a/so gave their reasons, bat these j
will sullit*--cipecialkwill they sauce when it 1
is borne in mind that Mr. Durlooraw went VI
the Legislature as the special atbsonsta of ,
•• low pay :^
1.11%1ug proceeded thus Au, the Star"dim! Stir - The Reform meeting in Baltimore on
misses the tailtioetla They hart been cal. Thursday last. Ai perfect enema. Ten
OM* ;Aiding ultaug on story thin end - Shaky 1113°111mnd peopie were present, We speeches
‘O 4 l tho A we if gangs gaming wane and were dead*, sod resolutions 60 NOM lints eon
worse, hors come to a sadden stop. 'they I dilates against those of that:Mos, wessiadept-
DARE NOT venture a step further. and ed by acclamation.
d 7 y [ a
the course of Mr. Durburaw un this question.
Dues it nut KRA as though he rap throughout
the session really desirous that the $7OO pay
should Le . confinued, in rder that he might
ra apart au 47cetioneering fund of $2OO, In
axle his re-election sure!—to offer to the vo
ters of the county about FOUR CENTS A
fl Fl.l Dfor their rote),
If there are those who d*bt our statement
of Mr. Dtirburuw's votes, they can have their
doubts removed by calling at oar office, where a
copy of the Auroal of the 1! se,—the regular
ratoordof thed-ling*Pfthosession—eau be seen.
Wed° not deaireo misrepresent Mr. Durboraw.
ll , :ren if such a coarse ever did any good, it
would not be required in this case, whore rule
Tat:Tit is heavy enough to bring down upon
the violator of solemn, written pledgee', the
s'indignant rebuke" of honest and intelligent
Potent.
At Their Old Tricks !
The Opposition lenders in this county are
at one of their old tricks. Confident of the
weakness of their unseen, ticket and the
enpopuleeity of their cause, their only hope
lien in the efforts they are making and expect
to make before the eketion, designed to im
pose tirm and deceive Democrats, With
this view, we understand they are reporting
in the lower and of the county that certain
Democrats in the upper end are not support
ing the Democratic ticket, whilst in the up
per end the seine thing is reported of certain
Democrats in the lower caul. The whole
scheme bears falsehood on its face, and has
becoMo too stale to deceive any one. We
only mention it to show how desperate the
Know Nothing managers have become in
their desire for office, either fur themselves
or their favorites.
So far as the Democratic ticket is concern
ed, we are enabled to say that the Democrats
of the county are proud of it, as they should
be, and W I LL, as they CAN, elect it by a ma
jority of hundreds. We never knew a ticket
to be more favorably received by the Demo
cratic party,—fair men in the Oppositit n can
not but speak well of it,—and nobing is re
quired but an earnest, active effort, to make
it triumphantly successful.
Desperately Bold !
Mr. Dcasoasw, we understanieas the
olfrontery to solicit votes at the h of For
eigners and Catholics I This is the very
quintessence of boldness. It is marvellous
that he can have the "cheek" to make the ap
proach, when the oath he took in the Mount
joy Know Nothing Council to' PROSCRIBE
AND OPPRESS THEM is considered. His
friends praise him up as an intelligent man,
of good judgment. If this hese, it is fairly
presumable that ho took the impious oblige.
tions of dark lanternism with Isis eyes open—
that he joined that proscriptive Order know
ing fully what he was about, and with his
mind made up to take the consequences.—
How bad the grace, then, with which he can
approach those whom he boort to rut DOWN !
how ineffably cool! Surely he deserves noth
ing but acorn at their bands, no matter bow
clever be may now seem—non that he knows
that "Saw-ism" alone cannot get him into
office.
ce .
Vivian 1
The approach of the general election. and
the earnest efforts of the Opposition So secure
the success of a portion of their ticket, ad
monishes us of the necessity for active and
untiring efforts upon the part of the Demoe
racy. Let every Democrat go to work with a
determination to do something. Stir up the
lukewarm, and impress upon them the im
portance of this contest—and upon the day of
the election see that all the Democratic voters
are out. It is only by vigilance that we may
safely rest assured of our triumph, and
We only need this to render it certain and
easy.
Dar Last Monday's Sentinel throws out
the idea that many of its party friends " re
mained at home" at last fall's election, and
that a " full turn-out is all that is necessary
to secure success." The Star beats the Sen
tinel in disgusting blackguardism, but itt cool,
straight-faced falsification, we are not sure
that the Sentinel is far behind it. It is a no
torious fact—almost every man, woman and
child in the county knows it—that the great
falling off in the vote n♦ that election was in
the Democratic districts ; and that whilst not
two hundred of the Opposition in the county
stayed away from the polls on that day, Le
tween five and sit hundred Democrats, under
the supposition that there would be enough
without them, failed to vote. They will not
be caught napping this time, however, and
will take much pleasure iu demonstrating to
the Sentinel that " a full turn out is" a Duo-
CRAM Victory, by a majority of hundreds.
Hark that!
serWilat does the Stir mean by harping
so loudly upon Mr. Durboraw's " honesty ?"
Itv4" managers " expect thereby to white
him out of the difficulty which his vio
lated pledge has breuett him into, all we have
to say is that forty dummied certifiesses of
honesty would nut help hip:v.—would not wipe
out anyone of the /east important of his kg
islatire woke. And as to Mr. Durboraw's
character—if be leaves it mach hanger in the
hands of the unprincipled clique who control
the Sloe and Know Nothing affairs in the
oounty generally, he will soon find it as far
gout as his.popularity.
0 1 ; k,4
serA Ch aste° to Make ONE
117NDOD DOLLAREI!-4
Theis:arms; of the lkttase t Representri
tires -proses that Samuel Durboraw voted
against a propo4ition t maku the d 4 iily pay
of 31embvrs ;1,50, with expenses guiug to
arid re;uroing from Harrishiirg,
The s•tme Journal proses that Samuel Dun.
boraw voted for e prt.rinition to istake the
pay of Niewberilss per day and mileage.
The /14144 Journal proves that Samuel
Durboraw dudycd the rote on the Snell pas
sage of the Appropriation Bill, which allowed
tile salary of Members to continue at S7IA)
per session.
The same Journal proves that Stunuel
Durboraw voted
,Ao. the Conference Report,
which continued the $7OO salary to NlemLers.
Those facts were etatetlin our last, and we
to-state them now f the purpose of ogeriug
(J HUNDRED DOLLARS to the iiiar
managers, or others, ;rEo will price theta to
!so untrue—the Journal of the House. of
course, being taken for the testimony. What
say you, Memoir!. Superipr Councillors—
guilty, pr not guilty ?
An Impudent Demand I
The Star managers act upon the principle
that " a lie well stuck to is as good as the
trus.h." Unable to utter a solitary word
against the qunlifications, and the unspotted,
high-toned character of FREDRIUCK
And confi lent that they cannot successfully
defend sir. hcanossit their extremity
they pertinaciously harp upon the misetnb'e
" intimation" that. the I:Tomei-alio enntlitlato
for Assembly did not rote for Messrs, Cos Itt.E%
Wl4 and JACOE KIXIM at the last Outobot
election.
. •
Who la it, let ns ask, that bring up this
apology for an objection /—tbat thus ut:empt
to catechise a life-long Democrat, a man of
principle and honor; in regard to the eorrect
nesi of his political course? Yes. woo/
Why. those reckless and heartless abusers of
Democrats and Dentooracy, the pullers of all
dark lantern wires and the tnstingers of a
darkly t .rn concerns, inchading the and
Retail ell Um it, some to such u palm that a
Democrat of the standing of Capt. D'ehl has
to box down at the feet of there tricksters—
who would nut believe him in anything be
cause would not suit !heir purposes—and
abjectly say to them, " Hera nun I, and here
Is my certificate that I voted tho Democratic
ticket !" It would be humiliating. Ile would
not so unman himself..-so beggar his porition
a. s Democrat of the glorious little county of
Adorn..
If the call came from Pomocrota—nnd they
alone would have tl.e'right to make it—tho
case would be different. They, however, un
derstand the purpose of the Star and
in this matter, and aro nut gudgeons enough
to bite at is bait ~hieh so illy conceals the
hook. They are satisfied with Capt. Dicill's
political, as well as Ida personal record.-.-
They know that in him the fluor qualities'are
" That nature might stscel np,
And say to all the a °rid, THIS lAA )1•X
They know, too, that the "intimation"
against his Democracy by Durboraw's mouth
organs has been flatly and repeatedly contra
dicted,--dinclictl by the voluntary certificate
of honest, truthful FRANC WILL, a brotbeeof
CIIARLIC3 Witt. himself, against whoseveraci
ty no man dare utter a breath of suspicion:
Besides this, the very fact of his aspiratiuns
for the nomination fur the Legislature in
1858, and the strong probabilities in his
favor fur '59, are conclusive arguments to
them of the falsity of the infamous allegation
that he voted fur Durburuw. Su much for
the present.
Sir Th e infamous course 4.r the Star and
the Sentinel towards Capt. Daum is having
the effect of arousing Democrats who berew.
fore kit no nu,re than an ordinary interest in
his success to enter the haraess Wall ♦ WILL
fur him. So much made!
riir•The editor' of the Compiler eeenplea
halt column of his paper in showing how op
posed be is to Negro Barrage, Negro Equali
ty. and Negro Everything rinerally. It will
require mure than words to oonvinue the peo
ple of Adams ooenty that he is so viulentiv
battik to the "Niggers." There is too much
resemblance between them. He had better
get up an affidavit on the subjef.—.Ter.
lier-The Star occasionally *ekes preten
tious to decency, and the individuals who do
up its pciliticaleditarials would.bare the com
munity look upon them as high-tuned and
honorable gentlemen. One paragraph like
the above, however, show. the real material
which the writer of it is composed of, and at
the sense time reflects the true character of the
thing who admits it into his columns. And
yet individuals of this stamp claim to be the
leaden of the Opposition in this county,
make itv nominations and shape its course!
It is related of an ancient philosopher, that
he had ascertained that the moment a person
was born, some intelligent being had died,
and the spirit of the dead entered the living.
It is therefore reasonable to infer that the
moment the writer of the Star's paragraph
was born. some low, filthyond thieving meal
departed.
York Cow - O.—The Democratic Convention
of York county nominated the following tick
et on Tuesday last. Assembly, George W.
Welsh, John Manifold ; District Attorney, W.
CChapman ; Treasurer, George W. Stair ;
Commissioner, Adam County Survey
or, Benj. Leese; Director, Jas. Ross ; Auditor,
Joseph W. Landis; Delegates to the State
Convention, Dr. John AM, Senatorial: Jere
miah Carl., Zacha.riah K. Ilciudel, ltepreaen
tative.
A Hertel Burnt at Hoboien—Four Lean
Lost.—_ , Vesc fork, Sept. 9.—The Ilarmetkie
Hotel, at Hoboken, was burned to-day. Mr.
liaege, one of the proprietors, and his three
daughters, perished in the flames, Mrs.
Baese was also seriously injured by leaping
from a 'window. The eldest daughter also
leaped from a window and was caught in the
arms of Mr. Barring, who had ascended a
ladder wheelies her to escape.
iirkteaara• JA NES Borten and JNO. SIIKADIS
bays been appointed Police fur toe Ilorottgla,
at $2O a month each.
iiirSands, Nathan' & Co's. Circus ow
fell houses at Petersburg on Wednesday, in
this , place on Thursday, and at Hanover on
Friday. The performances were good, and
gave general satisfaction.
Sir Mrs. Fastects Teresa rent us on Bat..
ordsy last, a basket anklet delicious grapes,
for which she has our thanks. They ware
net hard to take.
larJ Bo o 22 g 820. invite the ettratlott of
the public to a largo .to of fall and winter
pods. Which they hare just received.
. Waynesboro' Reciont - ogiimbio-do
extenslou of derClegysbers kolllll
place.
"
L,ocal .A.l°falrs_
Wroth of J. K. atithroun, E,mb,
Died, on Friday night last, of typhoid Gym,
at the residence of 'hi; father, in Strahan
viirtiship, J. K. Meit.naNsy, , County
gut , erintendent of Cciattnort Sehn,l., and re
cently admitted to the Practice ~1 Law, aged
about 29 year.. He was a very pro,nising
young tom, said hfs early death im deeply re
grattod.
The remains were interred at ilonter.t own
yesterday morning, attended to the grave by
• Tory letgeouacouraoof yes .L 1.4 fri ends,
including the members of the bench and
Lar, the officers of the Courts, and the Tem
perance Temple of this place.
Trig Opted JlLori*eigi.
An Thursday morning last, as our nest
doer neighbor. Dr. A. W. DORSKY, ens driv
ing up tine Chambersburg Turnpike, to visit
a patient, when immediately across the Wit
longhby run bridge, one of tho shaft irons
broke, and - the shaft dropped on that side.
This instantly frightened his animal, and she
endeavored to get away; after running a very
short distance, at Mr.. Leeper's she jumped
from the side road to the turnpike, when the
Doctor was pitched from the buggy, and the
mare made a dash fur the paling fence en
. closing the garden, and undertook tokleap it,
The vehicle still being attached, she was un
able to accomplish the feat, and hung upon
. the fence, in which position one of the palings
penetrated her abdomen. This, with other
injuries, rendered the killing of her on the
spot a work of•mercy. It affords u■ pleasure
to state that the Doctor escaped without se
; Ilona hurts from this frightful casualty, but
we regret the loss of his valuable mare.
Comiterversa•SUl E*tref.e.,
Prof, M. L..Sroevan has kindly furnished
us with the following Programme of the Coo
meneeinent esercises of the Institutions pt
this place:
The Baccalaureate Discourse on Sabbath
(yesterday) marring, in the College Church,
by Dr. Baucitta. The Address before the
tiniinttry Alumni on to-morrow (Tuesday)
evening, by Rev. A. C. WEDEKI9D, of Leban
on. On Wednesday morning the Junior Ex
h:bition. Wednesday afternoon the Atid!-,e'ss
before the Pheenaimantian Society, by Prof.
Current, of Phila.; - and the Discourse before
the Lineman Association by Dr. Srn.t.c,•of
Philp, Wednesday night the Address be
fore the Colldge Alumni, by Rev. W. M.
BALM, of Winchester, Vs. Thursday morn
ing the exercises of the Commencement take
place.
A new feature will tide year be added to the
attractions of the Commencement season. A
movement is on foot to "getup=' a "C.,mmence
ment Promenade," on Thursday evening next,
in the "Blun's ;Hall." The name is descrip
tive of the nature of the entertainment. It
will afford an Opportunity fur a social re-un
ion of our citizens and many strangers who
will be in town. An efficient Committee have
the matter in' charge. The arrangements
have boon so far completed, as to leave no
doubt that it Will be ♦n entire succeed dud p
handsome and delightful affair.
Each gentleman must procure a ticket,
which will admit himself and courrany.—
Married gentlemen, who have been invited
with their wives, must also procure tickets.
'One ticket will admit a gentleman and as
many ladies as may accompany him. The
tickets must be exhibited at the entrance.—
Tickets can be procured at the Book Store of
Mr. A. D. Beretta, in Cbambersburg street.
This promises to be one of the most brilliant
entertainments that has ever come .off in
Gettysburg. The services of the celebrated
Blues' Band. of Baltimore, have been secured
fur the occasion.
Alumni Ilimper.
The Alumni of the two institutions, (the
Thatlogical Seminary and the College) will
bare a dinner tut Thursday afternoon peat, in
the " Blue's Hall," in the building of Messrs.
SIMMS BIIIIHUR & Kean. The occasion
will be one of great interest, and will be par
ticipated in by a large number of graduates
who will be present during the exercises of
Commencement.
A Crowd Expedrotai.
It is presumed that the Commencement ex
ercises during the present week will attract to
cur place an unusually large numbee
strangers—more than the hotels will be able
to accommodate. The hospitality ofour citizens
may consequently be tested to some extent,
and the call will no doube lee generously re
sponded to should occasion demand. Ihe
Committee having the matter in charge there
fore request such as may find it _con
venient to accommodate one or more visitqrs,
to leave their names at the Book Store of Mr.
A. D. Butelits, so that all comers may IA
comfortably quartered should the extensive
arrangements at the hotels not be sulicient.
/ 11 . 1 "1 UrPaired.
The United Presbyterian (Associated Re
furnand) Congregation of this place are hav
ing their Church Building repaired. Work
men have already commenced on the interior
of the building, and in a few month■ will
have it thoroughly remoddled. The Congre
gation will worship in the Presbyterian Church
until the work% completed.
Electioa.
On Monday last, the following gentlemen
were elected managers of the `• Adams Coun
ty Mutual Fire Insurance Company," for the
ensuing year. The managers will meet for
organisation, he., to-day, at the office of the
Company, at 10 o'clock, A. M.
Geo. Swope, D. A.,Boehler, B. McCurdy.
Jacob King, A. Ileiptzelman, D. McCreary,
T. A. Mariball, Dl. Eichelberger, S. It.
Jno. H. Ilersh, And. Polly, S. Felines
took W. B. Wilson, U. A. Picking, W. B.
McClellan, Jno. Wolford, R. G. Mcc'reary,
JJIO. Horner, Jno. Picking, Abel T. Wright,
A. F. Gitt..
The Losbewail' 'yaw".
The Wm Paxasrtvesil Snroo of the
Lutherav b Church will hold its next session in
Hanover. It will bouttnenoe on the MI ins..
ICarlWhig I Carved's' 3
We would invite the Attention of the heads
of &smile' and dealers in Carpeting, U., to
- advertisement of Jos. Victory. which ipe
pears in to-6"y'. paper. Mr. Victory has
recently enlarged and improved his Ware
rooms, 1.4.5 Latiageoi at., sad having supplied
himself with a large variety of patteres
of Carpeting, Oil Cloths, £c., feels prepared
to offer great inducements*, the tesda. (fall
and see him.
iMr. Wit. &rant, of liattover, was es
Saturday Jut chosen Coadacter on the Geo
Umbers Railroad. la place of Csis.
ruiviresigead. , •
Xo Woodilitsithig At NM abater
yesterday was wry largely winded.
I , Promotes mar,
Demooratio Senatorial Conferenoe.
The Sanatatial Conferees from the coon tiro
of Adams, Franklin and Fultuo,aoporing the
18th Senatorial District, met nt ti.e " Eagle
lintel," Charnber.burg. on Friday, tht. 2nd
inst. The following gentlemen appeared and
wok their meats in the Conference, to wit :
ADAMS—lspne Rohin.on, E•q., Joseph Lil
le: and Hon. Mo , C4 M , `Cit`4ll.
FR kSkI.IN-4. M. Sharp, Esq., Dr. Wm. 11.
Boyle and Pharez Duffield.
FrI.TON—S. M. Woodcock, Esq., Jacob Mc-
Donnell nod J. B. Sanvom.
lion. Moses McClean was ehoilh President,
and J, B. Sansom Secri.tary.
The following nomination s for Senator were
then made:-..J. W. Douglas, of Franklin :
J. Myers, of Adnini, and Jas. J. Kirkof
The Conferees then proceeded to balloting,
which. after the third ballot, resulted iu the
unanimous choice of J. Douglas, Esq., of
Franklin.
On motion, the President appointed 3fessra.
Sharp, Woodcock and Lilly, a committee to
wait upon Mr. Douglas and inform him of his
nomination. Haring performed this duty, the
committee introduced the cominee to the con
ference, who returned thanks in u suitable
manner for the honor conferred.
On motion, J. B. Sarismn was unanimously
appointed the Senatorial Delegate to the next
Democratic State Convention.
- .
Mr, Sharp offered the annexed resolution,
which was unanitnougly adopted :
Resolved That the Lonference pledge their
respective Counties to u4e all fair and honor menus to elect J. W. Dunglag, E%. , the
candidate this day nutninateil, fur tsenator
from this Die uiet.
McClure's Sham Bat/le.
The redoubtable champion „a Legislative
corruption is still fighting hia great sham bat
tle by attempting to make people believe that
he was exceedingly anxious to try his dis,
grateful libel suit. Ilia guilt or innocence he
•to consider a/very small matter, or
e sen s imagines thatthe people do, and if be
eau succeed in humbugging them into the be
lief that he was ready for trial it is as far as
ha deems prudent to go. Why not publish
his bogus leteers and show ; the suspicions
against hi are unfbunded,t Is there any.
thing top7event that trial from taking place
or are the letters not vrentl," to *lace the
lousier' Ile reminds one ot the plucky little
chap who buttoned up his
,jacket and squared
off—Lot seeing fight in. his antagonist's eye
suddenly recollected that be must hurry home
and get his mamma to blow his nose; The
bold Colonel wants time until after the elec•
tion to blow his nose, and his self-putting
trumpet with the same blast, What delight
ful music he discourses on both instrumento':
Could'nt lie dispense with the lianils.-.-(,`Aant
beraburg
N ow pu.bligatiorm.
lirThe enternrising publisher Centras G.
EVANA, No. 439 Chestnut street, Philadel
phia, has just added to his extensive liar, the
following hew Books:
The Life or OM. David Crockett.
yzcz,..er ; fur I can di n ed any fosit SUM, sal ST free froi u
, ono 11. thirty yea.
"Trine, / by Jh m aelj:—Compriiiing hi. early
awq aui ( q fur Use lad tut.
life, Hunting Adventures, Paring Deeds in ty year. lay l ' — ‘ 47 n.. ,,,j s Z t
Border and Indian Warfare, services under I 4lllB lusiw- ode mo to •end you tho
Yount, &e
h A e N nI N
. P be AT I. LIS N O w. N t , b.
General Jackson in the Creek war,Eleetioneer
ing Speedier, Career in Congress, Triumphal Ask for floollind's Germa n Ditto.... Titia• nothin g si
Ltd
I :lr ti pi . gos T hereur II 11. Jackso n on th e an t i.
m.
Tour in the Northern State., and Struggles , „„ and ,"'s,,
in the Texan War of Independence, together otoTikerpers ev h e 4 ;"to b w it r i rind ri are t rlagw"" l i e n b rn. t a i t4
with an Account of his tilonous Beath at the states, et Tau. Not ladies, and South America, at 75
re r n o U r Pe art r ir b tt e 4 . A D. Buehler, Agent, tiettY o lolll-444
Alamo, In one limo. volume. Ilaudsom
ly l'ouna. Pi ice $1,:10. dealers generally throughout the county. (Sept. a.
We copy tiln runming from the
NERVOUS DOR ASV. CONTROLLED AND comfeert.
Oda 4 Vortli Amc, 4 . 1.11118
ED.—Of all tlis various Ills that detract not, :be en joy.
Colonel Crockett was a character, His meat et tones; air.. woo a them may be traced La di!.
ordered cutalitl no( Uri no:vomit system The hammier
autobiogrephy biro been long out of pritit ;
his reputation for er.ectitricity has been pre- L l :.,, le r i o:p r resr . „,""" wi r rinn t o
sensed upon in the publication of all sorts of (store, we hr.. snood tar do sent/roe rerss o w sash
outrageous and obscene nonsense, in coarse rented ..MI 0 . 1 res. u..d..
n.d 1 1 , t. ; r Epileptic Pills, 10.
elmanmit, and other vehicles fur low humor. ' more otreet. P liTtitunne. e fool 41 rull'y o ws r l l ll 4 lo l l l4 tts
This volume is a republication of the genuine these lib, Mors roared wow st the must st,ahltor n cases art
work, with necessar r,nh sor etas , web as ere
y addition s ; and will h e rare 1 t 74:„ p „`",`,.. i p , 1 7„, 11 1,7 11 ';
new to the present generation of readers, It peoeire atit ant , thusei Pills e q ually eiticationa In euriii g
is RR marked and characteristic as the sub-1
ject wit! ; his portrait faithfully drawn. anal ii- Inted -
erficioesi7;.
„r Iste sfr e l io rt r e tZ e t. " .s t i l ie u4
none tips less so gist it, is witho u t effort, and CITA or la ligestlet4 the itaffersa g e Itlieumathim or
perfectly naive and sincere. We well re-I itr est. teetztsves, t
ta w ite . cituttl oi n wf gemmed spira...,
member the amiable original in lain northern Pin , OPA in we COO iltrY Clan "Wll7 l .l 4 ,o ll ifialtl P V l Ltn 2 ; 4 ,l"llii rL ii‘:t";
to I.IIOM by nail. The proses ar e .
tour, and recall many of the incidents to tho_ .aTtkOultioroacd4
which his book alludes. We never have "aryr,Zi,re1i. 1. :. 11 1 ; 4 4..1 5; e . 0177,,,.1"4."1.":134.,!r .coal maul LO
looked upon his like since; nod rejoice in this , sonsiestsaatcarthsit......-., l,afl u.curicre strut,
republication as an act of justiee; to retrieve "Nu* , M.ttie 4 .4. A. las
en honest man frt)111 vulgar misrepresonht- Tut OXYUKNA - lID titr7E349.-.Tbe
tion, medicine bare plotted it spun an Imperisirslate isualatioa.
A copy of the Book and a handti4ne prim to itebtriquis abirssii, im.itscing %smith It bag NO
eat will he sent by mail, post-paid, upon re- p e tiellel.
ceipt of $l,OO for the book. and 21-cents for' Per tee following' Cum / dilate them; %tiers silti Pre.•
postage, cilia, oh ,—Dyspepals, or lut q uisthia, lived thorn. mut.
ty, Coathreams, lows of Appetite, Umelache, cud Utaserel
A new Clarsi6ed Catalogue of Baoke and , h „ biuty .
Gifts, with inducements to Agents, will
Is many anthems Of OUT Onnntry Ude preparation le ex•
sent free, sin application. Address. G. G.: i t r i 7.7. 1 .... 1 ;YP % .",,e h r ir„tiptic •Io Pr'w
ne ".. m a c ud it a ""
. ppensatly he.
lEvatts, Publisher, 430 Chestnut street, l'hila- row the reach Di "hrstase.s
dolphin, Pa. ,
timiemet ereefee t:thehefr77•ll?ntett.ljetcfetr ll.wa.d,,l.g : ol.„A h .4.io
h ". "id ttnr.nated hitters In
toy / roiliest ores
decided surmise in &baits mud ponerlpnie l istioo, Sof ,
anal confidently retionmari it la ugueral Ueltility. and dito
eases of the W e stin, or g ans V. 11 WHIP K, ii . U.
Suborn. N Y., *apt O. 11511
tieetl.wua;-1* have beau in t h e Snag lawless. the lark
Mien yeasty, awl Imre sorter wait a uredielne who n lis4
glares such g reat sittisfactom in ca.es of I)yworpaii* as to.
Oxygenated Ditters, and la this dines. . I slants Namur.
metal IL U. U. Yult 1..). It.
Darlington, Vt.. Nor. 1:1.
Gentlemen t—t am pleased t.. st.itir. that 1 More trls 1
the Oxygenated Milani for I n li g rathan tool Debility, •itil
mend imintainit• relief from u.to g only a b eet of a toittle•
than the Erststeuld nod! team 111 Ito. I cure fur liraparpisia
and General lAthility, and reco...ioirl It with
gileatiumos. Yount, to . J A lltd 1.11; kV to, 11. U.
Yeepared VOA& ik Yowl* & Cu Eston. anti for male
bas A, U. Buehler, tiettyslair g ; Jaculi . lu a lsrul tLummss.
berg; 11. Staater.Nrw Ovford, D. E dui lin g er; Abbott*.
town; Wolf, East I.lerlits: Pettsr Eitlalot4. llesop•
too; Wan. Metcalf, I uric epriugi; Jamas A Cli.ler, Km.
nutiburg; and by• all cage rs in wirdiclues. 4er
Tine Per Coot. n Blomla, or tie Perils .f
Wait !Arias;
Wareing to Found Afcts.—By Cnsahra
tDETT. author of '• Second Mort htfte, "
"Elliott FAmily," Arkin Desmond." "Ice ver
too Late." etc., etc. Oue volume, 12m0., cloth.
Price ii.LOO.
This book deserves to be singled out end
noted as above the many novels which are
published, But iu structure and style his
entitled to the name of art. It is a Tale of
Domestic Life, rehearsing the interwoven his
tories of a round oI ivory day characters, and
its aim is to 6hOlir the fOlike of the too many,
so called. passions and pleasures of fashiona- ,
ble•lifa, touching in no pert upon ground that
properly belongs to the vast domain of ro
mance.
The Bachelor Millionaire Uncle George, is
a character reminding us of the Brothers
Chesryble. and although be teaches the
" sweet uses of Adversity" with severe dis
cipline. it brings .wt the true beauty of altar
acter, and shows how few there are who min
go through the trials of every-day life, and
in the end prove their constancy.
4
Copies of either of the above hooks with'a
handsome Gift worth from 50 cents to $lOO, ,
will be sent to any person in the United States
upon receipt of zfl,iro, and 21 cents to pay
postage, by addres ,, ing the Publisher.
A new and Classified Catalogue of Books
in every department of Literature, together
aid' a list of Gifts, and every information I
relative to the establishment of agencies in
the Gift Book business will be mailed free to
any one by GEORGE G. Eva vs. Publisher, and i
Onginstor of the Gift Book Business, No.
439 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia.
Charley Diekeest Works/.
The well-known firm of T. B. Peterson ix.
Brothers, 306 Chestnut street, Philadelphia,
have just, commenced publishing a remarka
bly cheap edition of these unapproaohable
works of fiction. It is called "l'elersos's
Ciseep Edilion for the Million of the entire
writings of Charles bicitem, Boz," and will
be issued complete in Twenty-eight weekly
volumes. One volume will Le published reg
ularly on each and every Saturday, until the
whole number of volumes—twenty-eight—is
completed. The low prices fixed by the pub
lishers for them are only 25 cents a volume,
or the whole twenty-eight volumes fur five
dollars, A complete set will be forwarded
free of
_postage, by Mail, to any part of the
United Stater, to any one, by the publishers,
on receiving a remittance of five dollars fur
the„twenty-eight volumes; or a remittance of
throe dollars will pay for the first fourteen
volumes; or a remittance of one dollar will
pa y for the first four volumes. The volumes
will be neatly printed, and each 'volume will
contain 160 large octavo pages, printed on
line white pt per, and neatly bound with pa
per cover. The revised uniform Edinburgh
edition, from which this is reprinted, o6m
prises twenty-eight 'dames, the cost of whibh
mostly-,fife dollars; and this edition will
contain every word of the Edinburih edition-
We commend the determination of this enter...,
Prising Philadelphia firm, to furnish the com
plate and entire works of Charles Dickens at
a juice so reasonable, that all persons whit
ey,' may possess a fall - set; and direct the
especial attention of our readers to the fact,
sod would advise them ill to make a remit
takes of Piro Dollars at moo, per first instl4
t o th e ou ta l bms, fur the entire set, etto.iirtit
seed &en: maples to say one, f'reesfyeln.
ajle, on receipt of that rums
sa c of (Ae Carlisle /rot Works Estate.+-•
On Thursday week, the Carlisin IronlVurka
Estate was sold at public out-cry. on the preen..
ises, by the assignees of Pyres F. F.og • f
355.000. Purchasers, Win. M. BCOlath, Cary/
W. Ala. of Carlisle, Win. D. Il was, of Adau2:4
county, and Willirun Young, of York county.
This is one of the best prop ortiea in Penney!.
vanis • containing 0,000 acres of land, betwee n
400 and 500 acres of which are under cultiva•
tion. The purchasers certainly secured a bar
gain.
GETTYSBURG
Superfine Flour
Rye Flour
Wheat
Corn,
Rye.
Oats
. ......
uct..1.% t: eat ...... . .•.. ..... .
uckwii,,tt Veal. .•.. .....
Clover Seed ............
Timotby, , Seed ............
Flax Set d
Barley' ...........
Pla3ter of Paris
I 'aster ground, per bag
BALTIMORS—FRnsy LAST,
Flour 5 oo to 5 12
Wheat ' 1 05 to 1 47
Rye 70 to 75
Corn ' ... 78 to 82
Oats
........ ..... ... •31 to 37
Clover Seed ... 5 25 to 5 IS
Timothy Seed. 2 00 to 2 25
Reef Cattle, per hand 6 00 fo B 50
Hogs, per b0nd....,.... 7 00 to 8 51
Hay
.. 14 . 401 \ t0 , 18 00
W hickey' 27 2+3
Guano, Peruvian, per ton 82 00
FIANOVRR—Tuottst
none, from wagons 5 22
Do. from stores 5 03
What
1 05 to 1 is
nye
Gore 7570
Oats
35
Clover Seed 4 73
Timothy Seed 1 75
.
Plaster -...-- 800
mum
Floor, fr,pm
Do. from stores r ,
Whogit
Rye..
Corn
Oats.
Mower Seed ...
Timothy Seed
Plaster
of. 0 , •• oblel,2e me .6;
Special I\Totioes.
AM OLD LADY MF.MOII4I TO COIMAMATIVII
TOUT II BY MOOPLANL'e latbi UITTEMP —1•1411.
dell In.. June b. IK.Ii -.lie C. M Jartruun. Dear-PM
1 a.n very old. mod for years have been very mural Ie
L.mit tinter, one or guy gramfiglato prrrnlpsi me with Nor
e dotee bottle* or your bitters. CDI Iteliti,j m e to try
them. 1 Mil so, and 1 non finst eie If I w.te thirty year.
From the Gazette
DR. 11 NPTON'S COM POC DDI ET IC PI LI", art
highly recolumekeleel by aminent l'hyoloddia, eta • safe,
gartawa, ageerly Mad idrortnent cure fur ti ravel. dbmoturoul
and all other di.,rx or der.4ll4etneet td tbit bladder sal
kidney+. t•rtce Iflfty caute per but --luta to any Airs
free on receipt of Puce, A va4 I) IL J. I% li•Jarraa as
Cu., h.. 406 egnicr• atreet. l'handelphl t.
Alan, Propnetors and Manufacturer.* of
Ilanapton's Anti- tibru matia )llitare,
ediaitt.-1 Coaegli afratip,
The Ural, Drableratutu ur a•Jr/4.ture7,
ling. tM, lrgrU. :tat
Yarm Lauda fur sale °Wee from PLll.4•lokib if
rood a• the State of Nei Jar...). boll &wow the WS
tor Agricultural purposes, banal a toad Loam moll, with
clay bottom Tbn Wad is a large tract, diebtaid Into aaaaf
farms, sod twodreda from all part. of the country are sow
settling and bu,idlog. The trope produced at• tarp and
can be seam groarsuK The climate is and secure
from frn.t.a. Terms friru atl4 to tr„W per rem, psys.W.
withal four year* by matalioaot.e, To elan the pt,sca--
Learn Via' street N hart, a 6 Ptillaklelphia, at 7,i A, le.,
by Railroad for ltammouton, or address a. J Byrnes, by
letter, Llammoniuu Yost Wilke, Atlantic county, hew
ahoy. tee full afrertiaezeot lu another Mama.
TUE HA HHONTON newspaper devote , "
to Literature and Arr'culture, alw setting forth full sc•
counts of the new settlement of Hammonton, f• Nov Jer.
say, can be salectibedfur at only 85 cents per annum,
Inclose postage stamps for the amount. Address to Ed.
itor of the farmer, tiamrnooton 0„ Atlantic 0001 d/,
New Jereey. Those wisusse cheap hand, of the best gnalo
ty, to one of the healthiest dad must delightful cHoesto to
the Union, and where crop are corer cut down by frosts,
the tereible ab.urge of Ilia genii, see eivertlrecneut of
Hammonton Lands.
ID — Persons wishing to change tbeir business to a r►pfd.
1r tocrenstol country, a new settlement where bun triode
are guing—wbore the climate to wild end delight:al—wee
&ed, of the Hammonton Settlement to anotiter Whist:to.
TILE GREAT ENGLISH REAIRDY!--3111, JAII/A
CLARILIre eilLsalsytDiftllttii LLs, prepared fro* a
prescription by J Clarke, 11. D. rnynclee
ear yto the tjueso This wen koowe toedkin• is no lin•
position, but a sure and safe remedy (or /main Difikoltiee
and Übstractioos from any came whetever, sod although
• powerful remedy, they contain nothieg hurtful to the
eoattitation. To ki AMU so Lames it is pocelhtrly suitolip
It rill, lea short time, bring oaths smoothly period with
laiit
he* Pillsl hare eeeee been known to fall where the
direct** . op 111 pap of pamphlet ere irm I ob.orTird.
for farther partfmlers get. e p a mphlet free of the ages*,
N. cal 6 postage stamps carload to Nay asibur
-1344 agent, will Wore a bottle, cootalaing over 40 pills by
rehire of nail.
T. W. Dyott &Han. WloloB3l* Aires* Pbaul•lP l4ll,
A scud:dor, Agent, tiottplsorg. Vane /3,19. ly
AN ANCIENT 3/ oNSTEII.,—The people orlloathHigogly
byr ...... t 0 ix/.m.4 (roma sari bed the elteielso elt as
anima, sh/e6 Mut have bees of the kangaroo specie* or
moos/roes also. Its Wad i p ara
apt h i m, b on , ems
town ; the main length of the eslsual, tan isNsdnl , at Neat
tweet, live bet. The bead sae seal/ sad its welt this ;
it. teeth &boat two feet low, asd r.staajed se to lens
the words, • Bey your clot/tug iiisSuh, opposite the
Bask, Gettylburg."
•
and rPanora viabiog I. saltabthis Ilfavaraellarloo Is a saw
ari ring Ace viten Waiver is gaga, my
meat of Ma lisasavades liottlovosat.
ZIDDLIR & WITH,
COWS or AND WINN,. PIIIII.I3PELPIITA
• Jdoituficuuropi of Mato Loud. Z 1 "V , irkraidie.:
&a. Witslash. *akin la D wuuß NtatyAL—
URI sod °root* )4orototo obo• 1 0. Parabtir m,
• solid AND sod at socoptobto orlon tor tw=o to
=llto tospott - oar soots. tear irlatt•
: 11 1 2 01broishoo, as bolt by itorr o 6
Wbolootio Jobbiog Down tiniogtostt •
•111 •
ut•dmost aslieflorkes. imp« ow IM imakorap.4l Soot ' , pat media dim.. • i
/kob• T. Mo. ly i
The Ma.r)rmens..
ii=l:2
.. -...
9
100 to 1 15 ,
...... 70
70
R 30
60
200
0 00
...... 1 75
..... ••• 1 20
............. 70
........7 oo
. ............ 95
INIZI
....... 5 75
1 05 to 1 13
70
74
50
5 00
1.75
6 51)
I=l
A 00
3 5*
aOO