.4i I , r? Q‘Jmupiltr. i When. upon the declion of Abraham Lincoln to the Presidency, “specks of mm” were leell in the non futuraby the who and good men of the cou'ntry, thepolilia'au of the Republican party sought to calm the fear: 9! the people by Insurances that "the South would not fighl." Abraham Lincoln himuelf declared that “there wumolhin'g 'golng wrong."- The Crittende: Compro mile In defeated by those politician. And war. with all its horrors, bunt upon the -,-,3- ms"; 9!”! 531231” _ I country. ' GETTYSBUB G, PA. lOIDAY MORNING. AUG. 2'l, 136% “ UNION AND PEACE :99 Mun Doug-u mmluo “a Cod-1y V lisp “ I meeting of the DcmocraticCommit “l of Mun! county. hekl Idaho Puplic Hana of Sauna! Wolf. Eeq . in Gatlysbnrg. oilfitunhy, August 13th, 1364,1130 follow- In; Inflation was unnyiefl'ously adapted 3W That-rhel)u>mncrutic vngers of AMI mfitybe-und they are hereby re quests] to meet at lh’cir ueunl plat-M of holdi g Delegate Electinnn. on SATUR ‘ DAY, the 27th day of AUGUST inst. for tho plum of choosing DPlogalPs lo repre- Igm them in n Couuw Convention to be held (I: Gettysbu m. m MONDAY following. (Augmt 29th) at 10 o'clock. A. 3L. to nomi mu 3 County Ticket. appoint Crrnéresgionnl Confers“. and transact, such other business all?! be deemed necessary. The Dele- F“ ectlom to open at 3 and close an 5; . n.. in Ilh‘h‘: districts except. Gettys burg—in than: .r tho: election to be held human 7 And 9, P. M." ~ nip friends or the good old cause of De finer-y, upon the aqgceu of which in Oc tober ”1&7 November tha wumrntiou .bf Unim Ind Peace depend, are urged lb par licipnh In these meetings. ' 4 JACOB BRINKEEHQFF, Chair'n. ‘ hot. 0. ”nu, Sco’y August 15, 1864. ”The Democratic National Convention VHI meet at Chicago on Mouduy next. for the lomimtinn of candidates for President and Vic's President. It is thought. that. this will be the largest. Convention of the kind ever uoemblod in the United States, “it will be the most important. The future o'f artifice united and happy, but. now tom and bleeding. country. mny depend upon its action‘ That its counsels may be guided by wildom, in the prayer of every patriot—and we believe they will be. With a platform declaring for an armistice, and 5 true and pure mm upon it. the Democracy—the PEOPLE—wiII not, fail to 'gwt-ep infamous Ind ruinous Abolitiouinn from the land. The editor of thin pgpor, having hem np pointed one of the Delegates to wpzeumt Pennsylvania in the Cnnvr‘ntinn, expects to leavefor the West in a few days—4o he ah unfilu! than two weeks. helmpon. In the muntime the reader’s indulgence is Mkcd for any shaft-comings in these columns. ’.The Printing Office of the l'ulleg/Sjnirir It Chambers-burg was entirely destroyed by the fire-which lniwl waste that toivn on the 5199. ult.. under thé vindictive _ordors nf the Bébel Gefieml McCauslnnd. The publish ers have lost all except their weariang appap ml, and are compelled lo appeal to their friends It home and abroad for n-sistnnce in re-establiahing their bgsineas. The Val ley Shin? was a staunch and able Democrat in piper, and the party cannot} aflord to do without. its «(vices in the présent crisis. 4 We hope the Democracy of ‘Frauklin mun ly Ind of the State In. large will contribute liberally toward making up ling heavy logs the publishers have rustained, so that this publication of the piper may lie resumed at the when: {Sensible dny. We shall be imp: py to net as the agent (brim-warding to our nnfortunnte odilprial hréthren any done. tions which our Democratic friend: in this I ooimty maths inclined toxmnke'fo‘r their relief. ~ ‘ l ”The Democratic Delegate Elections will be held on Saturday next, and the Con vention to nominate xi County Ticket. on Monday. These elections should be well \ Attended—then let the Convention give us I good ticket, as it dofibtless will, and the PEOPLE, who are tired ofdrafts, taxes and blemished, will elect. it. by a sweepitfg ma jority. mks Democratic Conven tiom ofCum borlsnd nhd Perry counties hue unani moully instructed for Adam kGlassbgennel', £041., 10‘- Congrens. York will instruct. for him. of course. The nomination in one eminently " fit. to be made.” And will be garland by the people of the district. by n truncations majority. bellman-3 from Abolitioninm cc De mocracy are iha order of the‘day. We hen? of them {Spain 31) quarters—in other sates, In other counties of this State, and in 81- moat Avery township of this county. On Wednudng a gandemanyho has heretofore been an active member of the Republicm potty mibscribed for the Compiler. stating that he had changed his political vie'u, and the then yore twenty in his neighborhood who bod or were about doing likewise. He said that his eyes were now open to Who true object of the war-nth freedom of the negro—and that he could not sanction a}; shedding of Ihiie blood for any such pin-L pose. HiB wiew is a true one, and to com rnond it to every Republics}: who is riot an office-holder (and thus 'making money om of “in an) under this Administration. ‘A correspondent, of the Ne)! York WW“. writing from Columbus, Uhio, suyl an immense changes are taking plmiu flu West. Even the ra'dical Repubficans “becoming disgusted with the Adminis swim and in imbecile conduca ”'_'—--O—v_ 'A bill has been introduced into t‘heiwu a grave mis‘mke—tbat it. has. nearly foaminm's Legislature Ibrorgapiliug six- rained his chances for a ra-election-Athnt an ugimenu of militia for Stale mm.§ while he hop'ed by n to menu; the dim". h do. “wot-'it“ the Governor to seinel‘sions among Republicans, he has alienated rounds, box-Ba and all other property ' them by hundreds of tho.usandn,~and his {or thopubfic unige. ' ’ {intensified the hostility of those who have -—-~---‘"-'-_.,—' . always misled his prostitution of the not ' 15'4““ for an ”mm“ "e “"38 ‘ for the Union into an Abolition crusade. “In“ by thousands "9°" ‘m‘h m To‘retrieve his fortunes. In armistice is 1"" York- - I now talked of. The plun is corisidered de ‘ oil-able only an opolubal dodge. 'l‘ne laden know that Mr. Lincoln cannot make pesos .411» he will not give up his Abolition no" ‘.ltiohul Burke. Esq., of Haitinbnrgy so may killed by I passing engine whim cumin; the tuck in a buggy. _ I no" POI! 'l'll! COUNTRY Tackle In line Abdul.- \V!"--.-l.lu. col- luck 111-k1... ;_ This unnstunl carnage has continued more than three yesra. has resulted in the loss of hundreds of thousand: of lives, has laid unite large districts of country. inn produceJ suffering unparalleled. hu op pressed the people with most burdensome taxes, and now threatens the nutionyith crushing debt. Every pledge medo by the Republican: leader! has been falsified— every prodi‘btinn has failed. A war started for the ostensible purpose of restoring the Union, has been changed by the Adminis tration into '9. war for the liberation of the negro—for t‘the übendomnont of sluvery." These things the people Ire at last he -Iginning to look at in their true light, and despairing of any change for the better under this miserable Abolition rule, are floclcifig to the DemScracy in all sections cf the Union. Sp decided and general are these changes in the popular mind—.not only. among the people at home, but also thrqughout the entire army—M to cause their}! alarm-Ammong the Administration leaders, including Abrnham Lincolh hiri salt. The “shaking among the dry bones" has set in, end if the gdod work does not receive sorne unforeseen check—3lnd we do not believe that any act of tyranny can now stay the popular wave—Abraham Lincoln will be one of the most badly beu lilul'l'l th‘nt ever ran for the Presidency. Let us see hdw things stand in t - lilion wi wnm; A Baltimore letter New Ydfk Evening Post says: " ' I learn frown A source entitled to'credenc‘ that a pipefiwrilten bv Henry Winter Davis. calling a national Union convention nt Bufl'alo som’e time in September. for the nomination of candidates for Presidentnud Vice President, is circulatipg for‘siiznnlures in the several States. and is receiving the support of the leading men of the party everywhere. It in sqid'to be a powerful ur mignment of . the administration for its shortcomings in the conduct. of the Ivar. nml to call upon the nhtion to let it nsixle and elect a President who can and will save the country from anarchy and rebellion.— 'l‘he Wade and Davin manifesto, I learn. is the avunt-courirr of this new movement. to be followed by similar demonstrations in the course of this month and next. on the part. of other members of the -party equally influential with Messrs. Wade and Davis. . 1 The Patriot (9 Union. of Tuesday, remarks 2 ' The new Presidential movement oftlmse eminent RFpllilllCßn leaders, Messrs. Wade and Davis. if. prams-suing rapidly. A can v9ntion will most likely meet in 15:1?qu in September, for the put-pom of l/lncing in nnmination a candidate in apno‘l~ubllcan on the track. The action oft the Chicago Convention ‘ may be such as to make this course a conditionofflepuhlicnn success. But all'this, at the present time, is more speculation. We recognize the Baltimore nominations as the regular Ite publican ticket, and proposii to support them with what ability we possess, unless they are regularly suspended.” . ' What support the Monitor renders to the Baltimore nominations is evidently of little consequence under the‘ tn'rcmnstances de veloped. But perhaps more important than either of those is the formal repudiation of the “policy""of the Administration by the Ann Arbor (Mich) Jaurn'aLa republican pa per representing the Whigs ofthat section who were beguiled into'supportiug Lincoln. Upon the commenCement ota new volum , the editor, who is reckoned the ablest Re} publican conductor of a paper in'the St , . addresses his readers under his own nxe‘ and, after givinghis reasons in full in opvq sitionto the emancipation theories of thei Administration, being precisely to the same I tenor as those uniformly urged by this pa per. he proceeds: ~ . ‘ “ Being a national, not a sectional Repub-f lioan-a conservative, not a radical’—-an old 1 line Whig, not an Abolitionistnl am an unconditional Union man. in favor of a Federal. notaconsolidated Union—'in favor ofa Union of all the States, from the At lantic and the Gulf of Mexico to the great northern lakes, under any and all circum stances, with or without slavery. . I; the ‘ " Believing that the Constitution of the United States is the Oily bond of Union for this whole country which can ever be torm ed, that'we must eventually sink into one or more consolidated military, despotisms. mnnngell‘by military chieflaina, or selfish and corrupt partisan politicians, unle we become united again in one Federal Uiiaion. founded upon the abSolute sovereignty of the States in all internal and domestic meta tern, as the only practical basis of Union. I am in favor of the ‘restorltion ‘of the Fede ral Union as it was, as near as practicable, under the Constitution as it is—suhject to such modifiations as may be agreed upon in future by a constitutional majority of three-fourths of the States. I lee no ground to hope for peace and the restoration ofHle Union upon any other basis. . “ Believing that the war is now prosecut ed for an hnpractioable yurpose—thnt the Union can never be restored and n permm nent pence established between the free and the slave Statesso‘ longs: the emnncipatiou and restoration policies of President Lin coln are persiéted in, I am in flvor of a change of policy, and ofmaking on etfort to restore the Union on the old bnis. _ “E. C. Ssnnx.”_ ah the spring of 1861, when the Crit tenden Combromise was petitioned for by millions of the people, I» few of the Aboli tion leaders in this place, (who, though the war which resulted was one of theilj own’ seeking, hue flayed a home.) got up n pe tition against that measure of settlement, and induced about one hundred men end boys to sign it. Its introduction in Con gress at the-time was noticed with quite a. flourish. The time is coming when the leaders in the mavement will wish it “had nevér been mentioned,” The demngbguea who sought. war to guild up their petty power. even though it should involve the ruin oflhecoumr‘y, cannot Expect. to escape the wrath of e debt-burdened and indi‘g nnnt people, They must "stand from air ‘ der." {or their day of account is drawing nigh. ' . . 3 ski-The Scbluwig-Holuein wu- il over. The treaty of peace has been signed 530-. "teen Dédmtrk on the one side md Pros iii and Amuin upon the other. AIIGIIB'I‘ COI'IB‘I‘. In consequence of the recent threatened: invasion of the Border counties hy the we i my. ell the civil cases which had been put 1 down for trial at the August term, gel-e; continued with the cement. ol the pertiee. ‘ The county officers, otter the burning of. Chombersburg. had prudently removed the i county Recordl for security. They were, returned et the close of lut week, end Court opened on Mondey, with the usual‘, current and priminnlhueinees. Of the let-‘ ter there we: on nnulml number of in-l dictmentl lent before the Grand J urxi some involving trifling maulte, enretiee of! the pence. the, 5 number of which the£ Grand Jury ignored. .The followingoeseei in Quarter Session: were diapered of. viz: t Com. vs. James Thompson. Aseaultk.‘ Battery. Indictment ignored by Grand! Jury. and prosecutor, John Stall, Jr., or dered to pay coats of prosecution. Com. vez.Fr-ederick Herr. Annutt and Battery. ignored. and Lucy A. Stall, pro secutrix, to pay costeoi‘ prosecution. . ‘ ‘Com. ve. Frederick Noel end Franklin Noel. “A‘snult and Battery. Ignored, and . Henry Noel. prosecu tor, to pay costs. Com. vs. John Stall. Sn, and John Stall. Jr. Assault and Battery. Ignored, an James Thompson. prosecutor, to pay cost . Com. ve. Henry Noel. Assault and Bat tery. Ignored. and Frederick Noel, prone ,cutor, to pay costs. Com. vs. Nancy Matthews. Assauitnnd Battery. Ignored, and Alexander Woods, 1 prosecutor. to pay costs. . Com. vs. Abrahnm Trestle. Assault and Battery, on'inform'ution of Conrad Nein stedt. Verdict— guilty. Sentenced‘ to pa‘y a fine otSl, pay costs, and be impiison- i ‘ed in County Jail 30 days. . , Com. vs. Jeremiah Wolf. Surety of the peace, on information of Eliza Ann Walt—ti Ordered to pay cash. and give security in the sum of s2oo’to keep the peace, kc. Com. Iva. Abnerf'l‘ownsiey and John Helmholdt. Lumeny of goods of John Deardorfi'. ‘lndlctment ignored as to Hem holdt. Towmiey went to trial. and on Tuesday evening the Jury rendered a ver« diet of guilty. The detendentxvvu called for sentence on ,Wednesday morning. but not nppeariug his recognizance was for feited. - Com. vs. Corneiim Amann. Assault and Battery. on information of.’l‘ endore Bloch er. Verdict—not guilty. [“57“, pay costs of prosecution. Com. vs. Lucy Ann Stall.’ As-ault- and Battery, on information of Mary June Thompson. Verdict—guilty. Sentenced topay a. tine'of $1 and costs. ' Com. vs. Joseph Thomas and Snmuei Reed. Assnult and Battery, with intent to' commit rope, on information of Margaret Selix and Maria Selix. Verdict—guilty. and defendants sentenced to pay the‘costls and go to jail three months. - No Pence till Elan-r: II Abolish-J. Let it be borne in mind that when two of J the most prominent men in the South re- I cently attempted to open a correspondence Iwith President Lincoln, on the suhjcct of peace, that functionary responded to their 1 overtures by announcing that any terms in lvolving the integrity of the Union and the aéaridoninenlo/ slavery. would be taken iutq consideration by the’ federal authorities:— This is Mr.~Lincoln’s ultimatum. lie in sists not merely upon the integrity. ‘of the lrUnion, but also upon the uhandonmont of islovery. It tliie programme is to lw curried lent, the war will he y'rotruc'tccl indefinitely“ i If we are not to have pence till slavery be [abolished, the present generation Will :0 I to theirgiaves amid the boomingnl' cannon land the carnage of fratricidzil strife. W ho gwill, who can, endorse such suicidal doc ltrine. Uh ! people, w.ll you, Can 311qu 50‘ blind to your own‘hest and dezu est intereahe, ms to consent to this insane nml fatallN'\ll('.v"!‘*i Letparty feeling and political prejudice be. cast. mideJust for once, and let up” look the solemn‘issue put before the country by: the President, squarely in the feet—l3a! ford Gazelle. ‘ The R'nugn ‘of .Vct‘lellah': Rripm'al from line Army Q/r’z'cially Dcdurcd. --At the great meet ingtin New York on? Wednesday _ei‘euiug’ .week Hon. Eli P. Norton mid :' é‘ 'l‘lna Administration would not have de nounced him ”he had merely Been a sol dier, but George B. McCiellun had his own ideas as an American citizen. He (Lthot. believe in abolition. confiscation and a war against the pcpulatiomo’t‘tho South. With in two weeks be, Mr. Norton. knew that Gen. McClellan had been offered the high est command in the army, if he would give in his ndhonion to the polmy oftho Admin iatratiim. He refused. Gov. Dennison. of Ohio, who- presided at the Bullimnre Con vention which nominated Abraham Lin coln, imd déclnred. of his personal knowl edge, that McClellan was remove-d, not from nny doubt of his military ability, but becausa the Administration believed the Democratic party Woulfi {nuke him their next cnndidate for President. Gov. Dennison made this remark in his (.\lr. Norton‘s) presence. , ' -..“- “ow—w-u‘ ’ 1 ne-The National Intelligent” orsiuurdii' .week gives an exhaustive nah»: of Gen. Grant’s recent Virginia pampaign. 'l‘h‘a conclusion it arrives at seems to be':‘ lat. That the plan of the campaig was a mistake; Gen. Gram having eithegover estimated his own power of aggressibn or under estimated Lee’s power of defense. 2d. That. every movement of the gang,- pligu was unsuccessful. the only exception b‘eing’the capture of n rebel division on the o. 3d. That very little tactical skill was dis played in‘ any of the engagements. which consisted‘simply oi pushing mum: of men against. strong works, before which they were usalmly slaughtered. ‘ 4th. Thu. after lasing immense numbers of valuable lives, as well. as trained ofiicen. no advantage ha been gained. nnd the cam paign ngdinst Richmond is 3 failure. , fiThe President. bids fair to bgdeserted ‘ in his “abandonment of slavery" |des, by near‘ly all of hisqmrty press, excepting the mestfanaticsl Afbolition organs. The New York Timu has had sevenl strong editorials in which dissEnt from Mr. Lincoln's ultima tum is plsinly expressed. Even the N. Y. Tn'bgqs, with it; intense anti-slavery con victions, does not endorse the President’s plan. In an editorial in Friday’s issue, it states distinctly: “ We are unwillin’g to say thnt the Union shall be reconstructed in one way or not et all.” The truth is, that thelwhole nountry has grown lieu-lily sick of the war, _snd if the simple question In put to the people. '9 Shall the Union be re constructed ss it was, and peace be restor ed; or shall the fighting continue, with nu determination to hue the Union on no other basis than the ‘ sbandonlnenfof 313-: any?“ the former proposition would be sdopted by s two-thirds vote. v—«-—m—f————-—— yap-" 1!; York Guam wen um um Lin cofn’s “reign of (en-or ” is over, Ind tbs: men m using their tongues Ind pens with out akin; leave of him. This country promises to be once more free for white men. ’ ' ~ H‘Tho Doylestown' paper-I have Again ruined their prion—s3 50-yea- in advance, or 33 if not mpnid. ‘lhe Mar Hans. > [Prom the Age of Wednesday.) Gezenl Grant. has begun ,n singular ma. nasu 9. Above Bermuda Hundred is e; narrow neck of land Around which the Jimes River firms. The length elf the riv er mund the neck. the end of which is known as Dutch Gap, is seven miles. Across the neckrthe distance in ,hut one hundred] and fifty yards. The Contedernte obstruc- I tions are sunk in the James 1! Dutch an.i mesh-ant conceived the idea that a canal ' on dbe dug across the neck. deep enough to pass his gunbonts through, and by thisl means I. new movement :upon Richmond; could be begun. Ac rdingl’y. two corps,l under'lleucocf and film”, were sent to" 53,3! fifep'cfnfil"fumflrurmhfif :23; . DESTRUCTIVI plan—We top“ to n. day! his "00:35 lnbored without being flis- ‘v nounce that our friend Peter chhi, Esq., of} covered. On Sunday. however, as was 311- l New Oxford, in this county, met with a. very: nounced yesterday. the Confederates dis- l horny rosaby fire in: Saturday rut. Hg had“ covered “‘Aem' “"d ‘“’ once "i 9“ ‘0 drive an uteri-ire Tannery in the neighhofliood all them away. From batteries on shore, and l ' i ‘ il' ‘ldi l l i irOn-cleds in the James, shell? were thrown‘ !mt '0“ n. '3 bur ”'th "e '“’ r: o" y .5!“ and the labor mu: seriously impeded. The': “'““‘“ 9 ‘““] '9 ‘""‘ “”“' {mm the???“ canal is only begun nml may never be com-l Which 0PM“?! hi! Tannery, h." V“ cont pletcd. The enemy have great powers of municatedtothehmamnt-housee and Tannery“ annoyance for "‘9 II‘bOVUS- 1‘ ll} PM"I which were all destroyed. Ahont’GOD cordso‘ ”‘“‘ the ”i 939 of -I’etershurg 3’ oloaing.t ‘lka were nl-o burned—not on} n less in it~ Grant ' has lost another of his géneruls.] " ‘ ,y. - . ‘ General Ledlie, fl divisit‘m commander ofi self, hut rendering the hide: innate liable in ”‘9' Ninth Corps, has given up his cotn-' loss for wnntthcrcot. His dwelling vrassaved. mend. - . _i We have heard his lon estimated at probably The troops which moved froni Grnnt’s Slomoo. .Whnt insurance he had,“ any, we camp up the James River to Dutch 'Gup‘ hue no: lenrned.-——Stnlind. were ll ancoc-k's and Btrncy'n Corps. They;a . ..‘ ._ .I“ ..., -- were emberked'nt City Point on Saturdnyl WML George Filcelb of Cumberland: and went. down the Jnmes to deceivedhc township, met with quite.» sézbremrcident 9K Confegerntes. h 0; Saéulrdayl' dnlgh; in“?! l-‘riJuy week. lls‘had just finished cutting it‘ :nirtahwlo‘i-‘llf 3t“ J 11; nonr’lh hit'h‘liofl‘l‘ie £3358. . .pit-cc of grass with his running mitt-lune, nnd. Thev “nuked the Confoderriles in‘fronti wns In lhe nct ol cleaning the guards, when of Foster and captured their e‘nrtliworksitlhe MT“? K 9793 "(NWJ‘QN’ 511 d.“ “‘d‘ and a number at prisoners and cannonddenly, the two irouL fingers of his right hand lrhelucdmtmtii V“? a; “:1 b°l_h- From on'oi were cut off. Though lheaccideut might have $393911;an grid l'xrrdrtiefouhirizoiisgsczhongfi. I been more serious, 1: was still a very painful Nothing is known of what occurred nflerl ‘"”‘ Sunday. and no change seems to hnve ta ken place after the conteetpf that day.— At nightfall} the Federal lMe was one mile nearer Richmond than Foster’s earthwork, ten miles from the town and seven miles southeast of prt Darling. .The Confeder ates opposed the further advance of the Federal line. and Hnncock and Birney did not appearvable to do much. The siege of Peternl-urg will have to be given up it thqsel lwo corps remain on the north bank of the James. There are now no Federal troops‘ anywhere near, Peteraburg. Warren nml Wilcox have their .corps at Port Wnlthuil,‘ and the Confederates on the Weldon R:iil-; road have advanced their lines some riisv‘ tance towards City Point. There are no re ports ofloases in nny of these contests. _ l ' The reports that General Sheri/nun hns‘ extended his western fimk. so as no mover l the village. of East Point. on the illiiconl Railroad. South-west. of Atlanta, are ngninl renewed: There ii nothing to warrant them. Sherman’s army. at last accounts.‘ extended from a point. on the D.ilton kril road.’ four milps northwest of Atlanta, to ill point six miles west of Atlanta, nnd thence; nm-th of East Point. lle wn: not. within? two miles of the llacon Railronti, and every 1 «hint to reach it hrul been repulsed. 'l‘hei Confederates announce that the various, railroads running out of Atlnnb‘t, which-l were dcstrnyed lry Shetmnn’s cnt'uliy. have} been ropnirgd. They are all now in Opera tion. General Rndliy, who cnptured Stone man and bin (-nrnqmnnd, lift" gone with a large cnvulryvmnl‘in nntry forceJ'rnm ll"ml's~ caningoperqte’on the railroads in Sher man’s .r. ’"' _ ‘ The ithorities at “'zisliir-glnn (in not seem VG; confident of Fnrrngut’s ultimate successgit Mobile. it. is again announced that «i‘b dons lint 'in-tend to captm’u the town, hut only made his “(Lick in (mix to capture the buy entrances arid rimke he blockade more ell‘ective. Nothing has been «lore at Mobile since the surrender of Furl. Gaines. A report from General ('unhy fitntes that Farragut. cnptnred in Forts l’uwr-ll nnll Gltlllf‘s ei:ht hundred and sov cnty-three men and forty-lunr guns: The (lonfedoruws in [he Shi‘nandnub VnL 'hy are still myth of 'Strnsburg'. 'She-ridun does not soom l 0 intc‘ml to atzmk lhnm. —- A Confederate roinlorc'emcnt. of twenty vlhousand m~n and (Wt-My cunnnn is nn~ nounced. Nothing: beyond nnhnury skir~ miahim; will probably occur in the Shenan ‘Ldonh \‘nlh-y for a row dnys. ‘ The fin: of truce exchnnge nf prihnnm‘s on the Jnmes RWPr lms ng I." hogun. 'l'le Imin: nf meeting is M DulL-h‘an. Maj-1r Mulford is tho Federal agent. The GuntetL erntes report thirly thousand prisoners at Andersnnwlh-, South Camlma, besides ma~ ny thnusanfi a! other plucec. . The Indian war has commencml. The Indxa'ns have ntlackml 11w rmixlpnts along the Overland Mail mute, in \\‘esh-rn Kan sas. The sqlllers are Leaving. The mail slngos are stgpped. . ‘ The Tnllahussee has vnptured and burned another ”>5Bl. The Tallahassee is now re ported to Im of? the cmsl. of New Scam.— Secn‘etury Welles ‘hns gent thirteen of his gunboats after her, but none of'them can chlch her. . ‘l‘, ' ' ‘ Gen. Burnside is at Providenco. Rhoda wand. Gvuoral Averill has: received a Ma jor~GeneraPs conlmiSsiom 'BSS‘TheI-a has been very little change in the Federal position} on (he north bank of the James river. The Cnn’fetlemtes liave entrenched themselves to resist any further advance of Grant’s forces (in tlmtdine.- Grant’s loss in the affair of Sunday is now reported/at 1000 killed and wounded. b“No ofinngg is reported u Atlanta. or Mo e. , ‘ The Age of Friday anyl: The Confeder— ates are‘again advancing northweat through the Shenandoah Valley. Sheridan "on Monday retreated from Middleburg to Winchester. The Cenfederates closely fol lowed him. There was severe skirmiihing _all the gay. Sheridan has three small corps—. Wright’s, the Eighth and the Nine teenth. mth Crook's cavalry., Sn sudden was the Confederate advance that on Mon day they captured a Federal Signal Station near Middleburg and five hundred Federal troopa which {ere-'aflerv‘lardi sent to help the Signal Corps bah not been heard from. There: in great. fright in the, valley and a new stampede from Martinsburg has beélm. It is announced that Sheridan will forlily himself in Winchester. . x firSkeduddlen report the rebels at Martinaburg. ‘ The Bryn—The new call for' five hun dred Ibouund men has a very depressing efl'ect. upon the ooquy. It. will with the excess 0! one hundred per cent. taken lnrge {proportion of all the able bodied men left' In the c mry. “ Voting for Curtin to ovoid theglnft." bu not [wiped the coun try.~ We will have drifts and ruin. untfl difl'erent men are placed at the head of M'- kirk—‘Sfibury Democrat. “Paul tho Apo‘tle speaks of Luke nu the “below! physician," and few endomr‘ themselves to us mot-8 than those who like; "ministering singels,” bring us the healing‘ -lm in sickness. So it is with medicines tbu cure; though we never see the maker, 2 yet we get a feeling of regard for him? through Mm. How many have reason (0‘ bleu Dr. Aim- for biz inuluable remedies, mhup and ya: so effectual! What pub- ‘ lio benefactors better deaerve esteemwhan those Who rescue the bndy from disease and ’ pro-Mum decay 2—Purtamoutlt (N. H.) Guam. “‘Tbe rebel officers who convened with our men at Petersburg under the ting of truce, said in the moatponfident manner that if Lincoln is defeated in the next elec tion. there will be no troublo about secur ing s satisfactory peace. ‘ ~ “'0!“ exchange: u" give the same ro- { port of the action of the Abolition leagues durin the late invuion. They drummed ' and fiad and rallied, snd nllltayed at home. lohm & Goszg. A HORSE THlEF.——Yeslerdx\y morning week, Richard Wheeler, hniling lrom Berkeley conmy, Vt, cum: to {his place with two ul uahie Horus, whh whisk he was skedaddling, he said, from {he Rebeh, who weroi'n pnrluit. Several mspicmns circumstance! led to his Ir resv. by Mr. Router. Show] sfleir Hr. Abru ham ’l‘roxel, of Fruit-rick coun‘y, 31:1,, arrived in pursuit of the hunt-thief, Ind ”entitle“ me harsel as hip, Ind hlvingiecn stolen from him ogSnlurdny night. The [bid in' now in prison, awaiting the requisition o! the Govern no; of Mnrgluld. ‘ WDnzingn light. zh'under storm an Salute (In): “'MB’ at. New Oxmnl, we leuln 11mg 010 telegraph battery “'9l? Inhially melxcd hy 'the electric ,fluid, ,and. rendrred ~useless. Tbeée elchis lmppeu but rarely. yet. a tclegrnphic opt-rntor is in rather a precarious position in u. heavy thunder and lightning alarm, ' WT!” Ereéulurs of Geo: Trosllo,'dcccns ed, on Slunrluy laft, sold 20 shares offilock in! [be Géttyshurg Ruilroudut 90 cents per Shani -D._ Wills, Esq. purchaser. Also, {shares off stock in Hie Gettysbu.g nml Pexcrsbnrg Turm‘ 'pike. at. $7 50 pgr than—John Troelle, pur chaser. ’ _ fi'flm citizens of Hanover nrc emlom'orin" , to telir're flumsehqs frum zhr near! draft, Hy furnishing men and money. The Town Confi cil. I‘M a meeting h. N lust week, npproprinhjd the sum of $l5O for ench mnn- enl‘sxiug for one or more para hud ueditirg himself tol that place. ’ ~ ~ WWO understand that Dr. S. U: Lune. Surgeon of the Bonn] oHiurollmr-m oflhg i 011: DistnélJms been appointed Assismnt Snr'gvon Genet-n 10! the Sale. Dr Birlmrdswf (Shani bt-rahurg. we nm‘xe'rémml, will ye his Buccvssor in the Bond oflhis District. ‘ _ 11:3?1'119 Fir- .011” 1'11... SPEAKS! The Lancaster Ifilellfgmccr séys that Thad deus SteVens bu ‘9“er taken occasion to declare, without. disguise, that. “(ill/1‘: Rel publicn party desire to netted, they must get Lincoln nfl' the truck, and ant a um um.” Cold comfort for Old Abel . @OOl. William McCandless, lute of thé Peqnsylvanit Reserveg. in a letter to tha Adjuunt General, decline: the proffered honor of s Genenlship, tna an my. “the poyt of honor, as the In: is now cgndqcted. is in remaining I. privafe citizen." He in President of the Key-toxic Democtatic Club oryhnaaelphia. I ~- ~———-ao~»-—-—-—- WI: inriepovud in Wighington that Gen. Halleck We Author of sh‘e edimrinl in the Nztiouflnlcliigfnqfi, which attempts (a demo‘hstrnw the min failure of Gen. Gram}: 3am_gaign. ‘ WThe Pittsburg and Fort Wnyne Rn"- road Company hive reduced the fare to 1:3” price for fine trip to the Chicago count: “on and‘ back. ‘ ' ‘ Rule Demands,“ Phil-delphisflily hnva nominated Hon. 8. J. Randall, W. M. Rainy, Ch”. Buckwulter my Géorge Nortbmp, Esqsq for.Congresl. Jeremiah McKibben liu been nominated for Sheriff fi‘The man who does not. see that I gram. reaction is going on in the minds of me people igninu the firesent Administra‘ lion, in ehber blinded 1? pnrtiuni-m or is an indifferent obseyver 0 what is going on shout him. . i with a pert and frequent” um] ex pressionrhy tht- opposition, says the Clinton ‘"' ‘Denpoml, that the Dumncmts oppose “)6 Ad. ministration because they wunt the gmeéa. That argument, if it may be called sucli. in daily dilpoxed ofby pointingonlthnt Dem ocnts can now obtniu oflices more readily ruin: the Abolitionists' themsélves. They need only yo over. An officé is than a sure thing. from Vice Prosident down, if they have itw,givc. That so very few do go over, shown that it is not the desire fm' office that prompt: (in Democracy in its cppoution Ito the most corrupt. dupoliq Ind in'competcnt Administration the coun. try cyan-aw. 0n the reverse, tens of thou sands line and no now daily coming back who left (he Deniocmtic party through how out but mistaken impulses. J Nno York, Aupmt 10.-—'l‘ha PM contain! n demiled “Moment ahowibg how Bollon hns been «hinged in importing men flout . urnpo, to go an lubntrilulos nn volunteer: in the army. Three ship lends, it 439"» have been brought (wen:l mostly I‘m "Gel' many. ', Sl’ECl.l L NOTICES EDITOR OF THE COMPILER Dun Sm :--With your permissiotyl ’wlsh (a any to the rth'rs of your pnpehihnt luill send, bymnmnil, to all \\le wish u (freq, n Recipe, with full directions for imaging and using a simple Vegetable Bglnr. that yill ef fccmnHylrx-movcfin tgn dnys, Pimpleyklotchés, ij, Freckles, and all Impurizics of (In Skin. lt‘ing‘the same so“, ’clenr, smooth and bean :‘x I. I will ulso mnil free to (lune~ having Bum Head's, or 3MO anes. simplg directions nml infurmntioy tlmt “fig! enable'wom to start a full gréwfl: of Luxur'uuu, lluig, Whiskers, or a )lounnch'c‘hjn lessyhun thirty days! fill-applications answered by return mail without charge. llespeclmlly yuufl,‘ /‘, 'ruos. FkClIAPMAN,Chemist. A 951, XBO4. 3m A :CARD TO THE SUFFERING "FwnHo two onhrte hnngds nf‘fllucfin," '.‘Tonic "let's," "Sarsafmriliu," “Nerve“: An~ t'uluu s." kc , km, km. und nllor yun nh- unlis~ fwd will! Hlt' roliuh, lhcu xr'v mu: box of (HA) DUU’IOR BLZEHAN'S ENFIMSH SPECIFIC PILLS—nml hc- n-slorul to health and fig" in~l§u=3lhnrflhirty «My-I. Tlu-y uru pmely Hf;- uuhlc, ph'asn'unt to hike. ”rump; nnfl Blluuuy in 3lxeir L-fiecls on the hrukvn-dou‘ll and plum tétcd'ccnslitution. 0M and young r‘n take them with udmnmgo. Impuried amigo“ in llxiE‘UniudStutes only by “ JAS. S. BUTLER, XI). 427 Broadway, Ncu‘ Turk. flAgcm Inr \he l'nih-ul Slam. I’. 3—l lldx of the l'ill:, securely packed, will be mailed to ny lId‘IICSS on receipt uf price, which is ONE DULLAR, pou {mid money refunded by (he .\grpi il' entire "fit: Indian is nol given. _ [Aug 1, ’54. 3M : ~DO YOU “1;? ‘0 BF. (TRIED) ‘ DR. BI’L‘HAN'S EV :IJSII SPECIFIC PILLS cure, in lc-‘s than BU 11:95, the worst cnleuf XEIiVUI'SNRSS, lmpolexlcy. l'rcmuluxc Dem}, .\‘cinixm‘n Weakness, Incmm), am] all Urinary, Suunl :Iml.\'er\uns .\fr‘:-cliuh=,un manilrlmnr “mm cum;- prdlnrv 11. l'rn-r. Ur: Dollar per l»u‘\. Sum, pust-puiul. li\" umil, on ren-ipl hf nu uh'cr. Um liux \\i.l [infra the um: in most canes. .\Cx‘rlrws ' 1 , ' v'.x.\\n~:.< s. hum-:2, j G‘oncrnl .\w-m,‘4.'7 Isrundwuy; New York t Allfiifl, IHH. .‘m ‘ LEARILIED. i At Nr‘r,o\fm‘d, .\‘l |an ('.Hmfr. hr Ref. W. F.‘ I’. [knit' Hr. JOHN W. l’ll'l'l'UHFl’ 0f ‘ .Üietl, (‘arhbn mums, l':I.. nun» WAT” A. J()H.\'S. of [‘l lrr-luvm. .‘nhlms (mini). ' l. ("I “h‘wlfi’ List, 'l)‘ 1:. V. .“r linlh Mr. A"- (it'STl S FIUHHHIYNHM’L H. 154 .\XASTASL‘L danghu‘q of)”. John Cole, all of chnauun Vn‘lcyu ' i m : ' Un Hu- 14th inn ,hy Rev. A. Enid: \lr. ('HM’J lib H. H-ILIX to .\l’m; .\Hln' JAXI'I | T‘mgl LE. ‘ll-”) of Ax'nms rouuly. - [1 Mn the IH}: insl., ul Illc‘rrnflrhro of ”.0 brim-‘s‘ fulbt-r, luv II: V. J .\l. .\hrllaly. Sir. ' liU\\::\M) S. JONES, uf/an liuilnn, )lnnti- Mn county. 3‘ ,1' , lat; a! the sth 111-gt. U. S. , (‘avnhgx In Him LIZZIH A. hH'..\"|‘-Z|il}3'fifl, uour ('ashlownl. .\dnms county. PM» 1 On (In- lll}\«s|yst., h) Rev. .\1 Bushman. .\lr. I(‘HMS'UAN li\ HHS w Miss SIA'K‘II.UA “C.“— | ME“, all of'lb‘s cuhnl)’. ' _ ‘ IRE wanna“, moth-u .'; crni: pbr line Tor-lull Q'vcr-four lines—rash fu ntrgmpnny uuncc. I (limbs sis: um, Jo':.\' csmmzn, mi}: Bernie): township, 3'lde about (.3 yer-rs, -: I held :I: the- iimc’of his drulh Ihc pntil'mu \ f IC-vnnty Auduor. “.15 dealhis Luueuxcdbynli who knew him. . 0n the 2.5111 of July last, ,“r. DANIEL S. LYNCH, of Mountplmanl townlhip, aged 39 .\wrs 3 months mm 8 days. , Un the 81h at July, at the residence of her ~ son, .\lr Gtorpc Spnnglcri in Frcmlbm [own ‘ ship; Mrs. Ln: cum‘mxn fmqusn, :ugrd 81 years 10 n 125 and 11 an”. I (\n‘lhe TALWML of upheld Qty, In .Libmle township, .\lrs.l SUSAN, wife 0 Mr. :Jdfizcs O'Brien. ngcd 4S )curs. . i .\tfibbonsm‘m, on the lmh inst., LHJAf ‘DAI.E. yoixngest. daughm o: the 1m 12". H. t H. Hofl’hcjns, of the (in. REF. ('hurch, aged 8 years 5 mpnlh! and; duya. "‘Tbe maid in nu. dead but qhqiflh.” ' ' ‘ On the 17th of July. 1834, nt Ci‘y Puint, in the Hospital, ANDREW ROSS McKiNNEY. of Co. B, 21;: Pl. (311., aged 16 years 3 mos. ad 23 days. ‘ 5 At. her sister's. in Mitfllnlown, Innis“. county, l’n‘g on the 8111 imt.r ELIZABETH IL, Jnughler ofCllrininn and Sofpltin Rimllnub, of Strnbhn tow'nship, Adv-ma vounly, aged 51 yearn 3 months and 2t dayh. 0n the 12m in“, E 8311; LEAR ELIZA BETH R‘AHRNEY, daughter 01/ 'Hr. Dunn-l Fahrney, qf Stnbin townshipfiged I month Inc] 1.0 (In) a. / -’ \ ‘ ALNur Oxfori on Ihe 9th of July, GEO. GILES, infaht so of Funkliq Ind Elin A. Hersh, nged.6 molihs and 13 days. . . ‘ A! Abbotutown, on the 315: ML, HERMAN EUGENE, so of John N. Am! Eliulwlh ‘_’glf, aged 7 muyffio; lid 29 days. ‘ . = A! thy/films pllcemn the 11th inn, ApGI‘S TUS, ion of Jay!) and Harriet Gcipelmin, aged 1 month and la dnys. ' M Enst‘Bex-lin. on the Inme 11!”, CHARLES HENRY, lon.ofA. h'. and Comm“ Swner, aged 5 years 11 months‘;nnd 9 days. - Jn]l‘nmdiae lownshifi,‘ York countyvon the '11: inst", HARRY ELLSWQR‘X‘H. ban of Wm. owerlhaged 9 months and 2! days. Notice of Inquest. OTICE is hereby given to all the heirs N and legal representatives 9! JOHN BECKER, late of Franklin township. Ada}!!! county, deceased. viz: Susan Bncher, his vud. ow, and the {gnawing brothers nml noun and daughter ofdecensed brother: Ehzabethhin term-tried with Samuel Mummcn; Nancy, lg. ‘ termanied with Josevh 30*" :- Sushinurmeh 3 ried with David Camp; David Bucher; Lens. 3 inurmmried with Dnniet llickley; and Mnrin, {'ouly surviving daughter of llenry Backer, a lbrothtr, decensed, 'mtcrmnrried with Adam [mom—mum INQUHS'I‘ will be held on rm- DAY, the 16th day of SEPTEMBER nut, I‘ 1.119 late residence 0! szud deceased on the Real Estate of said decedent, viz: A ’in“ or Lnnd, situate in Franklin township, Adlms county, Pm, ndjuiding lands of Peter Nickley, Dnniel Heigea, Hamilton Selix,Daniel Knonse. end others, containing 40 Acres, more or less, on whirl: Ire erected a two-nary Log Home, Blacksmith Shop. llnrn and other ont-bulidmgl ——to mnko PARTITION ol the premises More; . nid to and umougu the repreeenuuroi'o! “111* decedent, ln melt mum" and in web NONE: lion! u by the In" at thin Connonwcallh directed, ifauclt partition um be nude willie; prejudice to or swam“; the whole; but“ may partition cannot 2 made unbecoming to rd and npprllu the saline ‘ k ADM! REDERT. Slurwfi, _ Sheriff! Office. flelvfuhmg, Aug. 2'l, ’64. 3t” 831 DrQaduuy, New York: i=kX