liwzirtiwtoo. Tho Edwin" is puhliuhod every Monday burning. by Huey J. Sunu. .2 $1 75 per annum if paid striptly is Abuses—~32 ()0 per fannum if not paid in Iduncg. No inbficriptinn di<cnnfiuue¢ union lA. the option of the publisher, until u: anmwsgm .re imid. Abvu‘nsznvninwrtedntthe usual nten. Jon PIISTISG dune with neatness 3nd dispatch. ‘ , Orrxcn in South Baltimore eh-net. dii'octly oppo<ite Wumpgorw' Tinning E-‘tabliihme‘nt h—“Colrrum Finns“: 0"!!!" on the sign. Grain! Gram! HE suhacnber still conunm-s pun-basing T all kind: of PRODUCE, at his old stand on Phamlwrzhurp strut-l, \'i7. :—FLUUR, WHBAQT, BYE. COP-N. “ATS. SEEDS, £13., for which the highest, market prim-s will be gi’N‘n. ‘ ‘ fir! will alsogontinne my.GH()CERY and VARIETY STQRB, and will keep cunugmly fun hum} Groceries, SJ“, Oil, Fish, Cedar-ware” Dry Goods, (‘onfm-linns, Plug”, Guano, to:— The public- are invited to («11.85 [Mu determin ed to sail as cheap as the ch-npesc, 3 ‘ ‘ JOHN 800'”. Gettysburg, Aug. 6, 1860 , ‘ Merchant Tafldi‘ingl C EORGE ARNUDD has just returnrd from I the city with]! large stock of Plum. Ca:- nimefea, Cushmcretu. Drnp (12 He, Cashmere, ”Cloth, and Yeslings of all “flea; and having secured the services of - g - ' , " \V.T.’KIN,G,. ‘ u Foreman, we are prepared to put up Ibo Aliore gnods in my!“ cqunl to the xbest ciiy f minn‘fnfluriug Fslnhflahmemn. Having turned ‘ out hundreds of jabs within the last. six months, which hnw l“ pron-d snfisfm-lory, and a wry kon'fidernhh> inert-use in pur trudcdm to show. _‘ onchlsivoly, that. we do business in No. l manner. - Our fiturk.uf goods annual be sur passed inquulily and «Pylr. Give us a call.— We are confident we can y-lensr you. GEORGE ARNOLD. April 15,,1851. tr ' . Lancaster Book Bindery. E()RGI-2-_WL\NT. . - ' 1:001" BINDER, ~«I up in“ some' human-TI um. Plain and Urn/1171mm] Ihgang, of every da- I‘criptiun. ("(Pfllli‘d in xhe most subamutinl 9m] Ipproved styl'es. - . ' REPEHRVF‘EH E. W. Brown, Esq, ["urmeri Bunk or Lam-aster W. L.‘ Penn-r, Eiq . L:\nv~n.~(er (‘mlnty Baixk Samuel Shock. Esq , (fulnmhin Hank. _ Samuel Wagner, Paul . ank Bulk‘k. William Wagner, ”Hub. York {7O mty Bank. .11). Unison. Ear... Bnnk‘ of (.cltymurg. Pett-qurtiu, Esq ,l’roLh'} ollldml‘uslpr cum, Pa Gcg. (3. HuwtharnLl-isqq Register " “n. Gen. Whilsup, rzsgz,‘l:ccun;ér e ' H u spm 15, 1361? ‘. z ‘ ‘ 7”“ New SprihEG‘oßhE“! H'KINU ""5 0n lulu} a now lot ofSpring ‘ UVERI'UATS ML \le prirrs. ' ‘4 UVEIH‘UA'K‘S annr prim-s, SPRING DRESS (MATS, > ' ' ‘ DRESS CHATS, V . SPRING l’.\.\'T.\Loo.\'s, I'ANTHJHMS n! puniv prices, . . SI’IUSC VESTH. .-. \' Efi'l‘h'. VEST-q. VFSTS, UnderShirk,DrnweraS-mvkiwgfiefiuckxulnws. Aim. Mnmrul l:l=lrnnnrnl:, A‘andt'flnfl, Flute". Fires. Nahum. kw, km. Kn. l-eing flnln‘l wry ch'hp.‘ Call in nud hmk and yuu can't help buying. - [.\lays, 1301‘ The Great, Discovery VJHB AGH.—lnflnnlnmmrv and ('hrrmic .’ltlaeumntism run he 4‘“de lny n-linz II I}. MILLER}! (‘ELEBRA'I'ED l'HlElJ\l.-\'l‘lf;V mx- TI'HH. .\lzmy l-rumim-nt rilizens of this, find the mljnimng volumes. have tcfitifimr tn its gnu! utility. 114 success in lilu-ummiu nth-c !mu-A. luLs hot-n llillu-fm unparalleled ln' any Fprviflc, inlrmluu'll m the huhllc. l'ricv 50 cents per bulge, Eur sull-(Ju‘ all Ilruguidanml Murckrcpers. I’m-pared only by 11. {gallLLl-111, AYhnlesnlc mul 111-Lnglrugglsl. Ens! Hvrlin, A-lnnn~ counjy‘, l':|.. 111-n or in llruga.l‘lwmicuk, llils, \':|l'lli>ll,vh'pll-HH. I'.|inla'r,]l.\l-rsultf<, luul llml‘ Unli, FISH-mes :utl Tiurturfi, \lilnluw Glam. l’crl'unu‘r} . l'ntt-nt \lrnlh-inl‘s, 5:12, kc. WA. I). ‘thohlur "I“ Llu- .\m'nt in‘GMlAvs- Juli-1 lur '- 11. L. Miller’s ('oll-[u‘utvd lllwum tic Mixture." .“ [J4me 3, 15“. {f ‘ A. Ready Market. ’lOO 0(3‘) IH'SWELS (”LUV “'1 NT . BIL—We lune taken the lmmo hurly ucrnp m] h" Klind'c-ller, liullingrr & (‘u.. will. u llctormiunliun (I) pay the llighrgl mxlrLcL prices fur :11l Injyl‘ula of “rain. You “ill find us supplip-i witlLtl'llAS'l‘Hli, CE.\.\'O 01 Ml kin‘th, (:Iqu‘i-Zk'ms. “'hnlo,~ule and Retail , LLI'MHEIL "1).”; nnd H‘rry ullwruxlif'lv in our line (if husim-ss. «uld M the lowed pocsihln mtcsfor Cash‘. ('nll um! «minim- our stun-h and prices befurc [lern'husing‘ the“ lwrt‘. ' , . mmw. mummmuw 5; CO. 33’er 21, 1861. t" A r ‘ ‘ Townsley Ahead. . THE uudfireiguml respectlnlly infaims the pllhln' Hun he routinm-‘I {he (‘AHRIACE l AKIXG :\.\D REPAIRING hnsinns in all its (lifl'erenL-annw, chmper Hun nny cl’mp in Ihe manly. All work \mrmuml lo giw smisfnv tion tocmlouvrs. f'unutry pf—mluco mkeu in exchange fonwork nl market pricrs.‘ Q 1 A: .\L TOWNSLEY. , Gettysburg, June 24, 186]. . ‘ -1 ‘7 ' . .7 , —— New Goods .8: Lumber. PETERWJTZ M Armldlsxille, has just [star from (Pu-wily with n lame and salad. stock of Dry Goods. (iroccriva, (Eileen!- .wore, Hnrdwn're; Bonn, Shoes, Hats. Cups Tgunks, ti'e, kn” ('llenper llinn ever. He also has o‘l hrgnd a lot oI'—POSTS, RAILS, Ind SHIXGLES,\OI' excellent quality, which hf: will dispose of A{ the lowest living profits.— Give him a call. vlle wiu always try lopleuse 3H3! 13,1861. 3m . . Jury List—August Term. . ‘ GRAND Jcm’. Cnmh 1 '—J ‘ .‘Herfispd ncob Lou, Joseph Balley, John “hwy—Joseph Riddlemoser, Christin}: Over- holtzer. )lountplensnmv—Snmncl Geiselmnn, Peier K Smith. ‘ ' _ = . "‘ Dflord—Pete: Diem. . . Hlmiltonbnn—Daniel Snyder, George Trenkle Litimore—Amos Myers. 1 1 V ‘ Euler—Noah Miner. L i ‘l’noneTGep. .\lnckley. i ‘ Hantinthn—Joseph Tfimmef. ‘ Cenowngo—Samuel Schwnru. ‘ Funklin—Wm. Geyer. ' Hamilton—Daniel Ehrohnn, Geoign-Bnt}. Nountjoy—Sims .\L Hornet. Berwick'bor.——Andrew Baker. Ber-wick p.——Samuel Brown Union—Daniel Wehlcr. Strnbm—JeSse‘Shriver. Rending‘—Nichuel Alwine GENERAL JURY Huntington—Wm. Smyers, law How. 30“! ' Wolf, Carson 0. Home. ' Butler—Mama Thomas, Jesse Pull, Jacob lb!- fensperger. [ i ‘ Eunihonbnn—Chrislinn Fry; Samuel". Biker, Adam C. Musselman. “ NonntlaleuanL—Peter Stallsmith', Samuel 1".- heré r. ' ' Cnubbthild—John Weigh. » Wan—fiery Sickle, of Jopeph. “yang—Wm. J. Martin, Wm. Ghtilzmsn, Juob Shanda. , Stump-Geo. B. Mnnfort, wgm I}. Hofl‘mn. Oxford—Joseph J. Smith. Hamiltoua—lohn Myers, of knob. - Franklin—John Bictinger, Samuel Hart. Tyrone—Devi Rnfiensycrger. Manuela—Thoma. Blocher, Hqury B: Weigle. Gem‘ny—chob Schwartz, Simon Bishop. _ Freedom—James Bighun, Samuel S. McNmr. Union—Michael Kiumiller, Hoses Schnru. Eamwtgo—Thomn Adnms. ‘ ' ~ Hallway—Peter Orndorfl'. - ‘ Binding—Jacob Wolf, ofJ. . , Berw‘ufls hon—George Doris. ,7 4- ' July zz, rB6l. ' .. Mel’s Cherry PectOral. 43c1. "Year_ Cht Riot. . , R MOLMEIII 9 I4 ll'itAll. Upon - e hill he turned , To to . the, last fond in Of the valley and the villa 4 e chu ell, • And the cottage by the rook; - He listened to the smiiida So familiar to hia•ear, I I 1 And the aoldier leant upo his slword And wiped away a tear. - I Beside the cottage porch 1 1 A girl was on her knees* i Sloe held aloft a showy se rf, I Whach fluttered in the b eezei, She breathed a prayer fur lIP 1 - A prayer he could not h at— I But he paused to bless her, 2 abe knelt, Aunt wiped•away a tear. He turned and left the spo Oh, do net deem him w k, 1 For dauntless was the soh icr's hart, Though,tenr4 were on h A cheek. Go watch the form - Mist rai k !' In dancer's; lark career Be sure the hand must dar ng tlire Him wiped away alear. LXNFASTHH,PA Correspondence of the ancaster In' telligencer. W ASITINGTOV, Wednes ay Evening. , It is strange what a ehang has come over the spirit of the speculators 4 dreams. But one week ago if. an honest ei izen Who dear ly loves the Union. the flag nd tilt' , Consti- Lotion, and respected, bon red and cheii ighed the• bray , troops that 1 ft their homes and firesides. ed rushed. i 1 obedience to the President's - call, to defer d the capital— if even he but dared to say that t lose ne, ble troops were neglected. n badly treated and fed, he was called a Tra tor, an I arrest ed for Treason ; hut RT.IIT w ill CI 'PreCII7IO M iyht, as Truth is always n Way nd Will i prevail. I know how earnestly y / . 11 1 a•;e4Pported the noble , • o'diers in theit to 4 try ng posi tions. and advoc itol their o it and ',mines' comfort : and because you ell 16 ew, as is admitted by all, that the ajorit •of the i soldiers are Democrats, an prow their Democratic principles by n arching in de fenee.of our glorious Union and th ey (God bless them!) have proved t : err brivery orr the bloodiest battle field n our country-a while the ranting Republi .an piliticians and speculators were enjoy' ng thdir home comforts. and boldly bawlin_, "01110 Rich mond! On to Richmond!" But tle good nhl va-an Sonttheedml no their ! awlingi. His intention wga to wait, ntil htl had at least twohuntired thnumn fiiit‘hf‘izih (maps. with good omen-s, in the fi« (1. Hum march forward and onward. surrmnd d} :quneze in (If rebel army, take the Ila-“primneh‘; trv tge ringlemlbmflw cnu't mnrfial. gml (lir‘tjte and sN'uth‘ apcm'e withmtlt) hldod shr-d. But that, did not 5 it thé olitical Barm‘Q and Army (Ynntrar-(n '.l‘onito Rich< mon-l ! ' was thrl rry, 9rd 3 andt'plé ofbravo man were hurried nfi' tn met nn‘prmy of «hairy and 111$ka b'atyteri and tp charge with bn‘yrunoti upon an arm Qf t'nrtsuporinr fin-cmjvhnhmlpiles of riflelimnnqn. The rvpulun of onnrfoqulmon orrihleian‘? the (had and Wounded left on uh? field! is uvful to contemplate. But now the. qufatinn is huhlly mooted. who is to h) mn forl this 7—- The hrnvu soldiers donnnnk‘e tlne‘lnfiicgr=, the ofiivr‘ts (11-vhu-e the innit. to; ho the ('mnmnnrler-in-Chief's and! tin" gr‘pnt Mil itary 'l‘ar‘tiviun, merni S ti. boldly con snrns Cnngrnaelxlyn n'nd poi ticiu’ns-‘g—whilst. the srwoculzzfprq' Ticcupnt on_ gone. the Congrpsemnn-‘nnw tnko th . respomihility, and hurl their Hhame upon . he Oflidch. 'i‘o-«lny a Bill originated in the. fiennte— “To give the President power and authority to at once dismias tho inoffiéiont offiders. and appoint hotter oflicora'.” Nnniermjs scath imz' speeches were made. hoard [Senator “'ilson. of Massachusetts, nd he ins per fectly.furinm"in hisdenunc ions. ifflesus mined the Bill, be said, to saive ahe honor and prnvmlt' further out'r gas froth being oommitted nu Llle‘v'ftl‘u‘nt rs: t'h-qzhrnyest of lhe brave. He said he ad visiii‘d their camps some wot-ks {l5lO, am his butt naked and Pym fined With wars seq tho'se brave men. who'hnd left. all th t. was gear and (wary comfort at home. 511 ering or want of (flat—hing and food. Ne. w Shem march ed thro’ the streets, and le m starjd it} the broiling sun. \yearied and weak for food, wlnlfit the officers were at he neighboring hotels revelling in substant ul delicacies and champagne. and whilst the men were drop ping in the mks andm wling do shade trees for relief. He could )e kilend no lon ger. They muat be imm iately dismis<ed —they must not. even have the berth: of a. court martial, for they in been t e fault of the inglorious route..nn they had out n their men, disgraced t a country, and he as a Senator, was force ‘bo admit. that he felt overwhelmed with heme. - I- could see thatj‘the Se ators’ speeches ltmgthened the facés of th ‘Borers and Con“ tractors who filled the gall ‘ries, and I must 'ndxnit my own astonishmeein to hear grave Sen'nlors advocatingu hill to clothe the Pre— sident with such tremendo+s flowers, when everybody knows that (how unteers elect their own officers and the Governor issues the commissions. What know avails our EleftiOHS. our Governors, our Commissiom, our States, our Constitution? if we are not drifting to}; centralization of power, we are 19 emu-chi. May God save our glorious U mon. It is now time that the honest. citizens of _every city, every county, in every State of our beloved Union, arouse and act, and send honest representatives to meet in sol emn convention to stop the awful fate that awaits us. and crush all political gamblers and Disunionists with the thundering voice of an injured people, and save our bleeding country. . If the Press of the East. the West, the Northland the South would but sneak out the hongst sentiments of the yneomonry of our land. they would echo the real voice of the people, the voice of God. If the Press is no longer-the vehicle of truth, the Union is lost and lost forever. ' If the clergy; professing to predch peace and good will toall mankind, “Christ and him crucified,” are now proclaiming that infamous and blashemous: language that “Providence is With thetgre‘atest number of cannon,” then is this Christain land a. bar ren waste without one spot of green, of feel ing, or of love. The Chrisfiian era is at an end. “Father forgiv'e them”; they know not, what they do.’-’ . ‘1 Domestic Tmt.—May youtcofl'ee and the dander: against you b 9 eyerj alike—{without grounds, V r . , . . . . • ' . . . , . . , , * ' .t- 0• / * . I • t.. , L . .... , ~. c' i •••• . .' //--- , i , . t.= , . . ~. • . . . , L , ' ••i Br 11. .I‘. STAIILE niaeltau A . oriiimo,'GßATl© -- Aiii) FAPJAEL, ‘joi3l4[OL: GEi-NSBURG, PA"; MONDAY, Aug}, 12, 1861- ‘ True Patriotism. For lite l’rabylm'aa. g There are two classes of persons amongst ‘ us ntpreaent who claim to He true patriots? and warmly attached,to thb Constitution and the Union. but they sh w their regard for the con itry in very diffegent ways. i The f‘irnqF class are influenced by reason nnql religion ; they havedeljberately made ' up their mindi that our Government is a: good one, and that it is our iolemn duty to do all in o (r power to perpetuate and trans-f mit it unimpaired to coming generations. i ’ Our own voluntary engagements, the wel— 2 firm ol' Haje people, the pr perity of the ,' country. I interests of civfiand religious I liberty thrduglmnt the worlil. an'd‘ all com-3 inz time. :1 id the glory of (ind, all require; thia. Thi4lelmu of peraom pre cool. delib—i ernte. and ‘firm. but kind: they do not 1 make many violent and denuncintoryl R'K‘éche“. npr write mnn'y i finmmntnry ar-' ticles for_t.l e press. But th y are either in . the arm] ithemselves, or £3Bk sons nre' there, uni] heir property, t, e, and influ-l ehee are at ithe disposal of tlte Government. I They are gwntlygriered at the present state i of nfl'm'r‘z, hm] ‘ hear theifiountry. their vrlioh country. on their hen _ to the mercy-‘ seatldnily aim] hourly. The burden of their.l prayer: is. lint God would rpetunte our: glorious Uriinn, and grant ‘9 speedy nnrl ; honor-Adel me. These are §e truefrionrls 5 of thflicouijtry; they are t, so on whom ‘ she relies ith the mmt imp icit confidence in thiuith‘e incur of her peri . 'l‘heiieeoqid class are ver zealous. noisy, , bln<tering.l'md tumultuou On all occn-' sions they fire ready to mak bitter and de—i nuncintnrv i ‘lth‘Chefl, write yil'iliammntnry 5 articleq for {the press, or pro .h warlike ser-‘I: mnns. They denounce the President. the , Cabinet. and all who do at agree with ‘ them. as tnrclv in their mov ments, veeilat-f ing and tiniitl in their'polic ; they seek to 1‘ ectuhlieh tl ir, own patrioti m by denying thelnynltv It} others. Prett much all they i (in for their country is ne with the . tongue, or twith the pen. hey are not to " 1M" fountl in' the army them lves. nor any " of those Whi' are nearly alli to them; and ‘ so far from devotingtheir ti 9 and proper ty to the <-'rvice of the Gd'rnnlent. they] are eagerly vatehing every . portunity for , promoting •heir own aggra , lizement, and ,' i filling their' pockets-by pin ering the na• !, tion., Inst noes of this kin : of patriotism might easil be mentioned, ut this is.not i necessary. I recently beard a minis : say, after he'' had preached a flaming ser . non the state of the qounl ry, when speaki gof theS'outh, 1, say, "Kill tho devils! kill be devils !" This, it. semped to me, was :ry unlike the Spirit of Christ and his -A sties, and the Writ ire gospdl.--- These perso are governed i by a bitter, i denunciatory, ildly fanatical and malignnnt spirit, rail r than an en-;' lightened, qhristian patriot m. But they 1, are very farlfrom being the best friends to '' the country; on whom she c rely with the greatest confidence in this, tie tinte of her dancer. ' This she very w understands, and appreciztca them accor ingly. - -- -••••••••-- -- • A the Oolifessi AL Tho Tribtine, having com eneed to bum- 1 ble itself in-view of its awfial responsibili ties for urging our brave men into the jaws of death, seems inclined to 'make full. Icon fession bef re the pnbliC. lln Saturday's- I , sue, the e( itor, who we arelhappy to learn i is lOW Mr, reeley, uses the following lan- j guage:- • I: '" We ha , confessed ou own terrible mistake in the premises, n are trying to, amend it. ten. Scott !, has hen Kim - illy in genuous are - candid. 'lt w s a miscalcula tion of fords,' he says-of th recent disas ter. That ik the real trutl .- None of bad any idea of the inarrins numbers and trenendouslenginery.,of war that the rebels had silently rxwllecteakarotin their position at .14ratssasi Junction. W .oeVer ordered or planned the attack on th t position was utterly nnawpre of their stre • tit. Nothing, on earth could have induce. Gen. Scott to order or even give a formal assent to that movement, bad not he too systemati ,cally and etterly deceiv• - • . ' Very few i dreamed •that that position was to he at tackedlin frent, but suppos:, it would be turned,' and the rebels corn died to retire from it by ihtereepting the' communica tions. But there is no time now for these discussions. Put all the bl: 4e on us that can be laid I,there for the efit of the cause, but all bickering —well-meant, doubtless, bet most untirne —and let us try to save the country." It is very well for the Triune toconfeks its own lack lof information nd jedgment, but we do not believe it is authorized to speak for Geri. Scott. Why is it, we respectfully It, that "none , of us that isl the ultra, fanat cal war party] had any idealof the immense numbers and treifiendous Fenginery of war" which our army was to meet at Manalrati? . Bimply, as ' we believe, because there was neither wish nor purpose to seek for the information,— The war advocates were too intAit upon their partisan objects, to stop for a day to procure the information. It was just this difficulty which has rush ed the nation on in the mad career which is now so suddenly arrested. They had no idea of the character of the undertaking, al though a thousand times told all about it by this and other journals which had an idea on the sub Act. There are none so blind as they that will not see, but we think some of these fanatics have not only had their eyes opened, but we trust have also had a few ideas beaten into their understandings, by the scenes already enacted on the battle field. If they could only get an idea of averting the terrible bloodshed which is in store, it would be a happy thing for the country.—Journal of Commeme. The Negro in the Schwinn—The Chicago papers are discussing with warmth, editori aHy and by 'corfespondents, the action of the board of Veducation in admitting a col! on_ed person to the normal department of the high school. A Large Billed Gum—A liifled éannon, weighing ten :housand pounds, capable of carrying a sixty—four pound ball four miles and a half, h$ just been constjructed for the government. 1 . ' ”A seaman who had es‘oaped one of the recent shipwrecks, was asked by a Indyd how he felt when the waves dadwd over him. He replied : "Wet, madam. qéxim wet. ‘ fi-Lucy Stone declares thgt she “would prefer Egyptian bondage to the slavery en~ dured bumottmarried womehl" We pity he swam whauqdeytsku to #513“ Lucy, “nu-m 13 noun AND Inn. Puma.” Puriots Ind Traitors. In good old times, when we were it happy and united people, that man was regarded as a'Patriot who loveill 'his whole country, revered the donstitution, obeyed the laws and faithfully performed all his obligations as a citizen. He might Support the AdMin istration in power, •or •opposO , it, without. having his loyalty to thsi Govenment or his patriotism quesiioned. Men" equally good and true were to be found on,both sides. But in these troublous times a isomewhat different test of patriotism is isonght to be applied. Loyalty and ~disloyalty. patriot -ism and treason. are 'not whatithey were in the palmy days of the Itnpub)ic..; We live under a new dispen4tion, and words have acqUired an entirely novel sigaifbance. If, for instance, - a cithien wtio Used to ex ercise the largest libeAy in' abusing the PreSitlent of the United States, 'ridiculing the Supreme Court, encouraging l itiolations or of the Fugitive Slave Law, ads sting -the " irrepressible conflict, ';and hin ing that, in cart* contingencieS, the Un on Might slide, is....liew a fast **d of the Admir.is tra4on, in favor of gagging or han zing every person who ventures Ito Iwhisper a word of dissent to its policy,:h is a Pa:riot. He may, not ho remarkabl4 for roil victual or '' oflidial honesty—he mair even be tnnected ', witll fraudulent scheme‘ tomke oney-cuit‘i of tho 'l‘reMury—in plain wordi. 9 may be} rmiriug rich by the spoils of war yet. he is; 'fipntriot. He may c'nciPurage vi Intiom of; the iCmiatiluiion, infringements Ipon pri~i ‘vutel ri-ghta', tnrhulnn‘ce ‘nnd mob violence, eml'still heiq a Putl'iotfiil He mutt have all .keeri scent for travail ”hnd Trait/in. 'll'e'i ‘muit, discovc that his ihonmt jeighbonfl" who do not. [Enrticipnte‘ln his vio cnce. erg} “ seéewinnifitw” and mildly suggL-st hnngflj inc. lt‘ tho-to nciuliboi-s shoulili ihtimntei i‘ that the Plicsident of Hie United States i.' , [not exactly a second ‘Jtlbksonh o r Patric; i‘will 'man =lii as a m picious liamctcr; h and Eif’ by any chance he *should'go so far as! ‘ lito express iii: obsolctq opinion? thixt thel "Cn'nititutinn is the suprrTle lmro tlnelnnd.‘ } “suspicion will deepen in oabsolu convic— 1 tion: and omit Patriot n'oflohger d uhts mi 1 :jncccissity of establishing the guillotine t j iritl the country ofpestilé-nt Traitors. j i 3‘ 01} the other hand, ifh man deqlxlores that 1 :‘exericiw of‘uncnnstitxit‘ioitml power, The is ‘a’ I,l‘mijor. If he doulits that wnr‘willhccomi l‘pllidk the rettnratinn of the I'iiioh,’ he is a’ ITraitor. He may erfnrtix all hiw‘fluties Mi ‘an upright and loyal citizen :.he- "T 137 neverl havqh‘een guilty of a (‘ishnnesti mean or: Idisciic-ditable action; 1101 may hate fought: ”the lbattle»: of the country. and have com: trihdtod liberally-"of his: menus tosustairt" gthe Government and proivide for tilie fnniir iliei of those who have gene forth lto fight,l jnevc‘rthclma he is a Twitter. ‘Ourg modern JPatriot, with his pmgkotln puffed but. with ‘ .‘pluntlcr, sayu gm, and whb «hall gatiniay hik‘ iwm-d‘t Let the good citiiien ”be a Ucmocrq‘ti, i inml v’enture to declare that if his attvice hag! l ibecnit'nllnwnd theue thitiga would Enot nmv l ibc. mind if the mlou- Patriot doestnot lmve ; Jhim itrnng up for utteridg treasohtxblu hm; ifgunze it will nntbe his fiiult. Iv 1 4. Now. at the risk of being dendiinced as I traitors; we venturexto‘jaflirm that every citizen of this Free chiiblic (wei are. not, ! yet prepared to admit that. this a misnomer) 1 has tihe right to examin‘e and criticise all: i'tlie acts of his rulers—public servaints they i used to be styled—and to expreixs eitherj lapprovul or dissent. If the Executive :hgs i pxceécled the powers coy fided to: him by‘ the Comtitiition. he has r right toisay so— I ‘nnd if the public money it squandered it i'p his right and his duty Etc protest. 'Thé I:pluntlerert; may protestalmt thatiis tab? expectéd. They may ptescribe‘ hanging; but what ofit? While hiw governs there is i not much danger. It i true Within these ! :tlmes'. uheu the [urban carpu: is a 'prectical j nullity, the citizen is not. entirely secure ‘ against illegal incarcemtibn—but this pow ‘er-has been exercised in do few cases thatit has hardly caused a perceptible flutter.— Men still dare to regard ghemselvels as frée citizens of n free and enlighteneii 'country', and sb long as the, res‘ ct the l‘nws and 'perfo’rm all their’obligufifis. they Will 90n ‘tinueg to form and exjureds their own opin— ions, Pnawedby power snfl unrestrpined by the threats of violencd from pseudo rah-iota. ~Patriot ‘9 Union. -- ‘ , Compronthie. To the Editor qftlu Cincinnati Inquirer: 3 Can you inform me whether it is true Hint Jefferson Davis and Robert Toombs were ever willing to compromise our national dif; ficulties after Mr. Lincoln's election. upon the 'basis of Mr. Crittenden'a proposition, .and whether they expressed such‘an opinion in Congreis? I have heard it repeatedly Assorted. but have seen no _evidence in sup— ‘port ofitJ, V szw. To which the Editor responds: _ In reply to our correspondent, we refer him to the following extract from a speech made by Senator Douglas in the United States Senate on the 2nd of March last, .v. hiclJ speech was duly published in the Congress ional Globe. Mr. Douglas said: “I can confirm the Senator’s declaration, that Senator Davis, of Mississippi, himself, when on the Committee of Thirteen, was ready at all times to compromise on the Critwnden Proposition. I will go further, and say that Mr. Toomba was also.” No Senator present expressed any doubt of the accuracy of Mr. Douglas’s statement. @The vessels captured by the Confed emta, in port and by privateers, since the war commenced. in set down at forty-one in number, of which two have been released and one burned. l fiMrZachu-u‘h Grant. of Mpizfigomety county, Tenn, ling thirteen lona Illnd twin gmfidsogs in one compmy. 7 Mr. 601’: Reablutiofis 5' . The following remluions were ofi‘eroa by Mr. Car, of_ Ohio, if: the Henge of Repre fientativeq. on Mgmdny week; ' Mr. Cox, nf Ohio, asked leavé to intro~ duce the followimz: I ' j Wlwrru, Itis thél part ofmtionnlbningéto stermihatetheir differences by mtlon‘hl meth ods, and innsmuch‘ns‘the' difl’enehces be .tweén the United Statesanthoritidn and the leleven seceding States have rgsulkd inin Estate of war, characterized by bitter luastil2 ities and. extreme atrocity. and although the punv in the seceding States are guilty .of breaking the Nmional'unity md resist.- ling the; lnwful aunhoyily. yet be it . : Rmhml, That while we make increased ,zexertiom by our-nny and navy to main tain the integrity and stability nfjhis Gov- Ernmeht; the romrmnn laws of war, those 1 quim‘s of humunitv. mmlemtinn and lum or. which are a pnitof .the mdn intorqulinn nl. ought to be observed by both parties. and fora stranger roman than oxists fqr such obnervunr‘e between two nnl’ions innfi muoh as the two inchwed .rum'tim have a common ancestry. history. prosperity.gldry. government. and Union, and me now un lmppily engages! inlacer'atinqthelr common countrv. ' 1 S'e‘wmli That reunitingfrom these premiqes. while there onghtto belet't open, as hetwe’en two nationathe mine menns for preventing the, war being carried to putrageous-extrem itiek. there oughtflals '. in the interest lot civilization, to he left. n~some means for the reqtomtion of peace and Union. \ L l Tlu'rd, That to this lend. the restoration of pence and Union. on the basis of the fun. damental principles of the Constitution, there he ‘nppninted'a committee ofonc them her from mob State who slinll report to this Home at thr-,néxt Semion finch amendments to the Confititution of the United Stateslin shnll Muunge all grievances unzl‘hring about, a reconstruction of the national unity. an'd that for the preparation of méh satisfneteiry Mljuztmcnt. 'nntl the conference re uisite for that entlm ro'mmix‘fiion of seven cgizens of the United State: be-appOinted. consieit in: of Edward Eferett. of Mat-Nachunettg ; Millard‘ Fillmore {of New York [Refit-fly Johnson, of Maryland: Martin Van ‘l’turen of Now‘ York : Thomas Ewing, ol‘ Ohio; Franklin Pierce. of New Ilninpuhit‘e: and James Guthrie, of Kentuckynivlm shall r‘re quest froth the slit-called Confederate State's the appointment of A similar odmmissioir. and who shall meet and confer on the sub jeot. inthe city of Louisville, on the fi t Momlav of Septentlmr next. and that til-{e committee appeintied from this House shall notify said commis‘sionerq of their appoint ment mid functions, and mlvise and confer with them. and report their action to this next session as on pmendment of the’ Con stitution Gt‘the United State“. to he propn - ed hy Congrou to the States for their mitig rntion, according to thefitth article of said Comtitutmn. I “ l Mr. \Vnsh'bnrnm [m..] obJected to thl'b introduction of the resolutinn. f lifr. qu moved {1 suapenuion of the rul, . The question WM determined in the neg? tive—y‘eas'4‘lgnnwvBs. Adionrnml.‘_ ‘ . 'Theu following is lhe’vote on Mr. Cd'x's rei olution; ’ . . x ‘ ‘ Yrm.—‘—\lessra..'Allnn, Anc'nnn. 11.-vilt‘Vx(Y".vg.),l Burnett. Culvert. f‘nx Cravenui Prisfiflol, (Til: tenden. Dunlap, Grider. “night. Harding. "91-? mnn, JacksonV Jobnsnn‘ ,an,‘ l2any. Logan, MM, Mallor‘v. Menzies. “D:l’i‘l._ Kohlofifnrlunh‘ fitment, Pendloton. Perry. erd. Ric-hardkon, : Rnhinson,§milh, Stu-1r (X. J.),\'ull:lmli2vhnmi W'oorheos. Wadsworth. Webster, While (Ohio), ‘ Wirklifl‘e, Wond,'Wnnd|'-ufl'. ‘ xif 7 l Kayla—Moss": Aldi-lvh, Alley, Arnold, As‘h.‘ ‘ Jov. Babbitt: Bnkon llaxlcflt. Bmman,,lfinghnm. Bluir {.\10.). Blnir(Pail.llln}:e.Rnflinztou.Camp.l bell, (‘lmmherlaim (‘ln'r-k. Cnlfnx. F. A. Cdnb. ling. Roscoe (‘onkllng. Conway. Cornde, Cam‘l’ “lav, Davis. l'mwes, Deln‘nouDivcn, Duell, Egerq: ion, Edwards, Elliott. Fessenden, FMnéhot,:. Frglk. Ggoch. Goodwin, Gringer, Unle, llar- ; rison, llnflnu, Hmrlains. Julian,‘Kelly.kellogg¢ (.\lichJ. Kellogg (UL). Lfinsing. Loomil, Love-f jojv, )[nKL-nn, McKnight. Mcthrson, Mdorhead," Nqn'lll (Maine). )Xorrill ("9.) Olin. l’ikl‘. Puma», rm. Porter. Potter. Rice (Mahm‘nnicq (Mnine,){ Riddle. Rollin (x. rt); Sedgwilkn Shanks, '1 Sheffield. Shellnberger, Sherman, Spnulding,., Stevens. Thomfi‘s (Mint). Train. Trm‘hridgarl Upton. Vandevcr} Van Wyck,‘Wnll. Vullnce,’ Walton {\[e.3,Wnllon (Vt), WashburneM'hile' (Ind), Winslow, Worqesler, Wright. The Spoils of Kansans. ‘.lt is now ascertained, says the Richmond Examiner. that stores and, mhnitinns to the vhlue of fully one million of dollars were rfiptured by our troops from the enemy in t a recent battle. ,Sizly-sn‘cn picrm of grtv'L (lg/flew tnken,among them one long riflecl 3‘ - under, which, by the way, has already " moved in a direction whero'it will ren er good service.\ The rest of themiqcea are light field artillery, 6 and 12-poi3nders. more than half rifled and superbly fighted, among them several Parrot gum, argd sew: ml made on James’ celebrated pdtent.- The fortune of war put into our ‘hand', along with these. cartridges and nrhmm-Z— -tion» sumcient to serve them for it day’s steady firing. ’ It is impossible to state anything with ac curncyas to the quantity of muskets and small arms of 211] sorts left onOthc field.— The number could not. have been leer. how ever, than fifteen to twenty thou<nnd. From fifteen to twenty thousand blankets were undoubtedly left on the field and strewn by the wayside. This is ptohably too moderate an estimate. About one-half of these will come into the passe-«ion of the government. Ilaversackn, cartridge boxes, knapsacks.'canteens, and overconts in im mense quantities‘ were also thrown nti‘ by theflyinz enemy, and new lay in immense pile: before the quarter-master’s office at Mnnnssas. About one hundred and fifty wagons laden With stores and ammunition, together with twenty patent ambulances, the like of which, for comfort and conven ience. are not in the Confederate States, also form no inconsiderabje portion of the spa/ta opima 0f the recent victory. Among the munitions captured are prob ably quite two millions of cartridges, man ufactured with great pains and coat. and including a full assortment of all calibres and kinds. . Senator Wilson at Bull Rum—lt is said that while Senator Wilso'n was making his mas terly retreat in Virginia. on being repulsed by t teamster, whose wagon he sought to occufiy, ha protested, in plaintive accents, that ewuHem-yWilgonmf Massachusetts. The response of the teamster was to the Eoinf, “Henry Wilson be d—d. I have icked him of thg wagon six times al ready." < < ‘ ———~—¢-o-———-——:-——- fi‘A girl‘recently discarded her bemx hectuse he inadvertently mwd thathe bad 21am. with Clear Conscience the night he -0:9, . ‘ TWO DOLLARS A:YEAR ' ' iWashington‘ Items. } Wesmxcroy. Aug. 4.l—Mes:m. German, ‘Appiég‘h‘te and Sterling iieft Washington on ‘Thurgdizy with a. flag of truce. bearing 3 : communication from, the Secretary of ‘War. having for its‘object the recovery of the ibody of his .b‘mth‘er. Cali. Cameron. They g yesterday returned without success. owing. Slit appears, to the con: uniontion having {been addressed. “’Eq 31mm it may con icern,” andnot to somepai'ticnlar proniinent iofficer in the‘ Confedera army. This' 05- ijection removed, there ' no doubt‘that the body‘can be recovered, the place of inter ment is marked,'end év ry facility promin ed to'» accomplish thetip rposo.‘ ‘ f The gentlemen enrryi g the flag npeekr in high terms‘of the courtj us and kind man: nor in whieh they} weiJe treated by Col. Stew‘art, commanding the First Virginie Regiment, and othjer‘ either,” within the field of his operatiio’ns They; [hem-yer, were not permitted ton prone}; directly to Fairfax Court House. i g'hntever they may 1 have seen of'i'nteresi, in ihe neighborhood, ‘ they have vthe prudenl‘e E) conceal, having gone thither on an e' Ld of mercy, end not, for reconnoiterinéLp rposee. ’ '7 ‘ . Members of Congress? his“ been paid their‘ inst‘month‘s salary,~rec‘Tiving $5O--in‘gold and S2so,in two year-9% 6 per cent.‘tréasury notes; The employees, oh‘ the other'depart menis of the govefmhe i. ere hereafter to be paid in the same ‘désc ipiion of paper. One nfthe communic ions recently sent hithfi under a flag of tin e from Gen. John son, ’Qfit is understood, in rela'tiouto a repoi-t yrhich had reeche the Confederates that‘gome of their prifin 11 had been him}; by order of our militn . thorities. -As no such executions have tip ‘on place, it may certainly be inferred th‘t Gen. McDchll replied in accordance hill this fact. ‘ ‘ fiThe Senate has - ‘fivrm'ed numerous army appointments, 0. vong them Mnj. Gens. McClellan, Frienént, Dix, Banks,| and Brigadier-Gem. . ker, Curtis, Mc-', Call, Sherman, Lnndg'ElFKellypKem-neyfl Pope. Heintwlmnn,‘¥'o§l3ter, Stone. Ray-E nnlds, Hunter. Fran kliy. Rdsencrnuz, Bugll, J Mansfield, McDowellmjn Meiga. . teli - The Washinglcirj 4orresporulence of the ,PhiladelPhia Ledg r lhas the following : items : -' • , A letter from Londo , hewriter of which has been very careful I a 'd reliable in his statements, asserts hint shopld the first: pitched battle result in be success of the , i COnfederates ' the reed ition' of the Con- federacy would be afi e fact, and that as goes England, so goes ' e and the con'- tinent. ".• The latest tulvices of e Confederate liass at. the Bull Ron battl , puts its down' at 1300 killed and wound d. including 300 '; killed. This is On the Su hority of thehead suritegn of the Southertr rmy. i ThesCrovernment is f ly awake to the , sclenres on •f -ot for the bolting of Mary- , land out of the linion,l d stirring times may be looked for sill ,the Legislature ; of that State give the b cession ordinance its sanction. 1 , _-_. ____—....• • ••• 1 Beecher on the 13 nin Battle. Rev. Henry Ward her has just taken his vacation till Septem, r, and his congre gation may do.the best, I can for spiritual food during the intervak taking leave he preached a sermon on th killed in the re cent battle. The folloviig is an extract: "More than one-half in the human race il die in the cradle. More t an one-half of the other-half die before old e. Sudden death • is not most to be dreaded. The most painful and the slowest iroad to *I aven is by disease. , Looking at it in its juslew, commend me to sudden death by the li htning stroke, by the whistling ball. To bq sure, with sudden death there is a violenf shock •, but as a translation, to ass throegh the goldendoors of Iletiven, violent deaths are to be desired. For nig, let God's will be done ; let me die when and where He pleases; but with my I will, not with the long varssition furnished by l sickness and disease, my bodyparched with fever, my blood drying :tip,, my brain stag nant to -go crawling and creeping out of life, but rather in full trianhoo and life, full of. vigor." It is very evident that the reverend glad iator mistook his profession, and that he ought to be leading a brigade. Instead of a minister of peace, he ought to be a mare of war. He thinks the best way men can die pis, not by disease, but bushy a sudden death from "whistling ball." li was no doubt for this reason that in the Kansas troubles he re commended. Sharpe's rifleaslietter medicine for soul and body than the/Bible. Yet it Is remarkable that, like Gen. Greely, he takes care to keep out of the way of. the whistling bullets, which they think ex cellent music for other men's ears. Why did he not accompany the grand army to battle, even as chaplain, if in nopther way? If ,Mr. Beecher's doctrine be sound, then the prayer in the Liturgy of Me Episcopal church which deprecates "sudden death" must be all wrong, and men ought to corn- snit suicide if they can not find death in any other form. "Violent deaths," he says, "are to be desired " The worst of this plan would be that it would soon brine the hu man specica to an end. Thus do the fanati ' cal clergy, cutting adrift from common sense, run war and all other things into the' ground.—X.. Y.- Herald. Anotlmf Jrji Davia.—Jt seems that the North have 3 Jeff. Davis. A diupmch to the Cincinnati Gazette, from New Albany, Ind., is signed Jeff. C. Davis. _ This gentle man is the adjutant general of Indiana.and amember of Gov. Morton’s staff. Hesbould be careful" lest he should be confounded with the southern Jeff. Davis. @An gloquent negro,omtor thus con cludes an account of the death of a. colored brother: “De last word dat be was heard to say, de last word he was known to utter, de last syllable he ebber beabed. de last idea. he ejaculated; yes, my bredder’in, de berry last word he eber wasknowu to breave forth, sound or articulate, was ‘Glory 2’ ” Such amphfied peromtions are somehmea to be heard from orator-a of renown. fin is reporwd in Paris that yenng Mr. Panes-son Bonnparte'is about to marry a. daughter of Prince Murat. lane Dalmatia-fits“ copycat“: The Bingor (Ma) Dun/mm! contains a Pall. uignod by thr State Committee. for a Democratic bum» Convention, 10 be held xAugust. 15th, from which we extract as fol ownr ‘ While party organization should be re -1 Ended 31: till times, M having no other end a view than to secure sjnst and economi -1 col administration of government in striet E uniformitgoto the spirit and letter of our * written . nstitntion both National end I Siam, yet especially should that be the case | in this hour of our country’s peril, when ”I fearful civil war is raging within out her f derg‘ when many of the rmtrniuts and lim ..itotions of the Fedeml compact are ahea ‘ garded and trampled underfoot by the con stituted authorities, and when civnl liberty 1 itself is in danger of final extinction. Therefore, believing it to be the unani mous sentiment and heartfelt desire of the political orgiinization which we represent, we cordially invite to pnrtici'fimt in our pninnry elections all men. by 'iv ntsoever 1 party mime heretofore known, who are op l posed to this unholy civil war. and in favor 1 of immediate restoration of emu: by nego— l tiation and compromise. ' . Who hold that, while itis the constitu l tional duty of the Federal Government to protect each of the States of this Union 1 against invasion and domestic violence of l application of the Legislature, or of the Ex ecutive, when the Legismture cannot be convened, yet~any invasion of u. Stat. by the Federid troops withoutsuch application, and. in face of the solemn protests of both Legislature and Executive, is a mostdmgeb 'ous violation of the Constitution, and can but end in the utter subverson of the State Governmenhs which the great author of the Declaration of Independence charged the eople-to defend as the surest bulwark: of their liberties; No_ 48_ Who hold. that the arbitmment of the sword should never be resorted to until all meansof conciliation and all the am of di plomacy have been exhaused; _ That. A Union, formed through the agen cy of, mutual interest and brotherly love» when once broken, can never be rectal-eel by force of arms; ‘Thut “history does not'record on ex~ ample where any human government, has been ‘flrong enough to crush 10,000,000’01' people into subjectiorx when they believed their rights and libenjies were imperilled, without. firpt converting 'the Government iheu‘ into a despotism. and destroying the lust vestiges of freedomf’ l' "l‘hnt the mfety-éf our republican liberty rests on {he etnct observance of all the re strain”! and prohibitions’ imposed by the Constitution on each of the branches 0? the i.“ . ieral GOVerr'imént; T _ That no circumstances or exigencies can 'jfistify the President in raising large stand 'n ‘ru-mies without the authorityot' law ; : fi‘hat the suspension of the privilege of habcas mam by the\Chiet‘ Executive otfleer ' of the land is an act ol' usurpation and ty frnnny which mnnot be safely tolerated by is neople {who are, nndvhope to remain, free; i ,I‘hpt the repeated violation by the Presi- I_dent of “The Rights of the People to be “secure in their persons, houses, pagers, and «:efl‘ects, against unrensdnoble sear hes and iseizures,” without warrant, and unsupport» ged by affirmation, calls for immediate lb .buke‘ and con‘deninntion ; " .3 , Thtt s large‘stnnding army end an over .whelming notional‘débt‘ are the immediate forerunners of a. military despotism. and utterly incompatible with the geneul dlfl'u ion of prnfmrty. and of the freedom hith lverto enjoyed by the people of the States; ' That the celebrated Virginia and Ken ;tucky Resolutions of ’9B and ’9‘), drewn’by i‘Thoume Jefferson and J nmel Madison, no ”he true exposition of the nature of the, igFedcrai Government, and of the extent of We power: ' ' t And, finnfly,’we invite’to join with mull "those in whose breasts these sacred princi ples of, the Fathers find I ready echo—- ."principles which should ever be “ the mod of our political faith, the text of civto in- I'stmction, the touchstone by which to try the servigea of those we turn; Equal 21nd exact justice to all men, 9! ,whntever state or persuasion. religious or ' political ; ' 1 , I The support of the State Government: in ,;all their rights, as the surest bulwuke agninst‘anti-chubliwn tendencies; y, ’A mild 3nd safe corrective of _nbnpe: ifwhich are' lapped by the sword of revolution, gwhere peaceful remedies are unpmvided; [3' A'geuero’ue spirit of wnceelion and com- Qpromise, the vital principle of republics; Without which there must be an appeal to {force the vital principle and immedlato pl :{rent of despotism; * ,The su remecy o! the civil over the mil ijitary autllority; 1 _ i' Economy in the gublie expense. that ilabor may be lightly urtfled; ' “ Freedom of religion, fre om of the pull, and freedom of the person, under thyro .tection of the habru corpua, and tr' by ljuries im artiully selgeted. P If any llave wan‘dered from there princi lples in moments of error or of Alarm. let 3 them hasten while the form. of our beloved Re )üblic yet remain, to retrace their ltepi. aml to regain the road which alone lead; to jipeace, liberty, and safety. ' fi’l’he N. Y. Tribune contains the folio.- ‘in direct fire at the Admlnistration. Elgar 'oflgce-seekers will please take notice : . “An applicant {or office under the Federal Administration. notyet having received the appointment he desires, now propoaw to go . Washington 31d .oiatgblishmlgmf as a. correspondent o u e , Beauregard and Jeff. Davis. fiy this means he thinks he can shorten the "dela in making out his commission, or perlympc get (:much better place'lhan be his flaked 'l'or.’ ‘ ‘ ‘ Anolfier Nutfor our Foreign Populalion.—The Boston Transcript of Wednesday, says that pn ’l‘uesdny last more than fifty men. mo c'lmnics and inborers, were discharged from the Charleston Navy Yzmi, because they were foreigners! and their places filled by natives. Among thosqmmoved were lever al who had taken out their first naturaliza tion papers. The dischargedmen, howev 'er, have one privilege, to Wit, they may en te'r the army, and no questions wxfl be uk- Od. ' ‘. ' B’Gen. Pillow‘s famous Chain Bridge which was stretched across the Mississippi upon buoys m blockede the river aging} in invading force, has been born 3303‘; by the logs and drifted woodfand $3O, . in. vested in this splendid military engine mun lost to the State of Tennessee. ‘Pillow’d military exploits are very original, but do. not seem to work well in practice. as?“ Puppy, can’t I go to the zoological rooms to scu'the camomile fight, the thiam 6rous cow?" A , “Surtin, my son—but don't. get your trousers tom. Strange, my dear. lhnfl A taste that boy has got for namml history. isn’t it? No longer than yesterday he laid eiglxt'pnir of tom cats hanging by their tails from the clothes line.” Q'A rough individual. whom hauling? ofclassical langua ewes not quite comp! has been sick, 3:15 on recovery was told I) his doctor that he might have 3 little mi mnl food. "No, sir. I took your Many enough, but hang me if I can go your hay and oats.” :8- An old maid who has her eye; 1“,”. sideways on matrimong, my: “the cut-soot. war is, that it will ma e so many mdafl. who will be 58:06 to 354 martial, Ind. know how to do n, that model“ old maids will stand no chines at. all." fiAmwmißu say that 3 man every seven years." “Therefore," an inimitable Jones. “my tailor swamp mind-me of the ‘little bill' 1 can in 1854—1 nint the man." “ amchmprdgcfimdnd and airy miles, by railroad, from Washington.-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers