Democrat and sentinel. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1853-1866, November 11, 1863, Image 1

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KEW SERIES.
rkMOCRA T ife SEXT1XEL" j
U ii published every Wednesday j
num, payable in advance ; Onk Dol
uiaxd Skventt Fivk Cknth, if not paid
.ithia six months ; and Two Dollar if
. paid until the termination of the year.
No lubscriptiou will be received for a
iWter period than sit months, and no
atariber will be at liberty to discontinue
!1 taper until all arrearages are paid, ex-
.... t i
rptai tne opuuu ui dm."..
Any per
months wil le char
pi Osf Dollab, unless the money
u raid in advance.
Advertising Rates.
One inserVn. Two do. Three do
lMuare, ri2 lines J J 50 $ 75 $1,00
jM'iroi 24 lineal 1 00 1 00 2 00
J,:res.r36 lines 1 50 2 00 3 0C
8 months
ilineiorlesn, $1 SO
6 do.
$3 00
4 50
7 00
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22 00
12 do
$5 00
9 00
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20 00
35 00
1 Kjuare,
Squares,
f Muarec,
12 lines 12 60
'21 lines 4 00
36 lines J 6 00
lia'f a column,
One column.
10 00
15 00
Which Party 1 In Uague
Willi
Traitors.
The Abolition party have been preach
ing 44 Union" find telling the people that
the Democrats were in league with the
South, and that if Vallandigham and
Woodward were elected, that they would
take the States of Pennsylvania and,Ohio
owr to the Southern Confederacy that
the rVls wanted to see the Democratic
4rty in the North victorious, &c To
wchas believed this sort of stuff, we
publish for their enlightenmcnt,,a couple of
ttinrlt from Southern papers, which
bow which is the real Union party of
t North.
( From the Mobile Register.
We tb.tnk God from the depth of our
henni that the authorities at Washington
rcubbod Vice President Stephens in his
U attempt to confer with them on inter
national affairs without form or ceremony.
It belong been known here that this
pitlman thought, if he could get us to
whimper into the ears of some men about
Washington, the result might be terras of
uce on some sort of uman or reconstruc
tion He seemed to forget that Douglas,
ith whom he used to serve, is dead ; and
notwithstanding his mantle has fallen, by
dividing it into four pieces, upon Kiehard
n and Voorhees, Vallandigham and
I'ujh. still wTHB DEMOCRATIC
PARTY IS NOT IN POWER NOW,
AND WE MAY THANK GOD FOR
IT. J The prospect looked gloomy to
the Vice President, whose infirmity of
My no doubt cants a shadow over Ins
irtt?, and he said that one of two things
must be done either pome terms must be
made or the whole militia of the confed
eracy must be called out and an imme
diate alliance proposed with foreign
towers. lWulent Davis gave him full
tn trmt nn. howtnwie term, anu
w . . I
HxcuA him off to the kingdom of Abra
ham. But Father Abraham tokl rum
there waa an impassable gulf between
them, and the Vice President and to steam
bak to Richmond a little top-fallen.
We hope this will put a stop forever to
ins croakers about here who intimate
that there are people enough friendly to
b South in the North to restore the Union
it iu. And we also hope that the
government at Richmond will not humili
ate itself any more, but from this time
11 look only to the one end of fual and
JMint,l independence. The North is not
of final sepeiation
than we are. THE REPUBLICAN
PARTY ARE NOT FIGHTING TO
RESTORE THIS UNION ANY' MORE
THAN THE OLD ROMANS
1'OUGHT TO ESTABLISH THE IN
DEPENDENCE OF THE COUN
TRIES THEY INVADED.-O The
publicans are fighting for conquest and
bunion, we for liberty and iiidependcnce.
There is only one party in the North
who want this Union restored, but they
have no .more power legislative, execu
tive, or judicial than the paper we write
"d- It is true they make a show of union
ud etrength, but they have no voice of
authority. We know that the Vallan
digham school wants the Union restored,
fr he told its so when he uxis here in exile,
retaking f such hospitality as was ex
tended to a real enemy to our struggle for
paration, banished to our coil by an other
"v,ni who is practically more our friencM
Q ha. And if v allandigham should,
by accident or other cause, become Gov
smorof Ohio, yWE HOPE LINCOLN
'ILL KEEP HIS NERVES TO THE
PROPER TENSION, AND NOT AL
LOW HIM TO ENTER THE CON
FINES OF THE STATE..O His ad
ministration would do more to' restore the
li t nton than any other power in Ohio
THE BLESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE
EBENSBURG, PA. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER
could do, and therefore ice jway fie may be
defeated.
Should a strong Union party spring up
in Ohio, the third State in the North in
political importance, it might Jiiid a faint
response in some of tlte Southern States ami
give, us U-ouble. ' BUT AS LONG AS
THE REPUBLICANS HOLD POWER
THEY WILLTHINK OF CONQUEST
AND DOMINION ONLY', and wc, on
the other hand, will come up in solemn
column for freedom and independence,
which we will be certain to. achieve, with
such assistance as we may now (after the
refusal of the Washington Cabinet to con
fer) confidently expect, before the Demo
crats of vie North get in jtotcer again, and
come whispering in our ears. " Union, re
construj:tion, Constitution, concession, and
guaranties."
Away with all such stuff ! We want
srjxiration. Give us rather men like
Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner.
They curse the old Unum and ilesjiise it, and
so do ire. And we now promise these
gentlemen that, as they hate the LTnion
and the " accursed Constitution," let them
keep down Vallandigham and his party in
the North ; then they shall never be
troubled by us with such whining about
the Constitution and Union as they are
sending up.
From the Richmond Enquirer. J
To be plain, we fear and distrust more
these apparently friendly advances from the i
Democrats than the open atrocity of phi
lanthropists of Massachusetts. That Dem- '.
ocratic party always was our worst enemy;
and but for its jxtisonout embrace these States
tcotdd have been free and clear of the un
natural Union ttcenty years ago. It was
not the Sewards and the Sumners, the
Black liepublicuns and Abolitionists, who
have hurt U9. They were rigid all along,
there was an irrepressible conflict between
two different civilizations, two opposite
social organizations , they were no more
able to live peacefutly together in : one
Government than two hands can wear
one clove. If we did not discover so
soon as the Abolitionists this great truth,
it was because the Democratic party,
neutral as it was in principle", false to both
sid" and wholly indifferent to the morals
of either of the opposing communities,
placed itself between, raised the banner
of spoils " and we all know the rest.
The idea of that odious party coming to
life again, and holding out its arms to us,
makes us shiver, Its foul breath is malaria ;
its touch is death.
Give us the open foeman let him be
as ferocious and greedy as you will. Let
our enemy appear as an exterminating
Yankee host, we pray, and not an a l)em
cratic Convention. Let him take any sliape
but that ! Already wc have visions of
the men of feeble knee, teiuler feet, and un
dulating tpinrs, loosing their sense and man
Jiood tyt the contact, as they did, . alas I so
often before.
Important Decision Relative to
the Draft.
Washington, Nov. 1..
To Col. Robert Nugent, A. A. lrovost
Afarstal General A'. 1. " : '
The representations made by Dean
Richmond and Peter Cagger, in a printed
circular dated Oct. 27th, 1863, in respect
to the action of the Provost Marshal Gen
eral, are untrue. It is not true "that" the
State of New York is charged with a de
ficiency for every citizen who has paid the
three hundred dollars commutation money
receiving no credit therefor. On the con
trary, the State receives the same credit
for a man who has paid the commutation,
as if the drafted citizen, had gone in per
son or furnished a substitute, and in like
manner towns : which have raised the
money to pay their quotas receive the
same credit as if actual substitutes had
been- furnished ; and the President has
ordered that every citizen who has paid
the three hundred dollars commutation
shall receive the same credit therefor as if
he had furnished a substitute and was ex
onerated from the military service for the
time for which he was drafted, to wit :
for three years. As the misrepresenta
tions of Dean Richmond and Peter Cagger
have been published and circulated, there
fore it is proper that you give them imr
mediate correction.
(Signed) JAMES B- FRY,
Provost Marshal General
$3T A farmer living in the State of Illi
nois, writes to his brother, in the east as
follows : 1 have got one of the hand
some st farms in the State, and have it
nearly paid for. Crops are good and
prices never better. . We have had a most
glorious revival of religion in our church,
and both of our children (the Lord be
praised ! ) are converted. Father got to
be rather an encumbrance, and last week
I pent Lira to the poor house.";
DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE
Sacredness of Personal Rights.
GRANTING OF
MAGNA CHAUTA AT RUSNT-
In the course of a very able and effec
tive speech at the Cooper Institute, New
Y'ork, on Saturday night, the Hon. S. S.
Cox, the gallant and fearless Representa
tive of the Ohio Democracy, drew two
pictures worthy of the most artistic pencil,
and which, together, will ever possess a
lively interest wherever lilierty is cherished
one of the granting .of Magna Charta at
Runnvmede, and the other of its conse
cration at Westminster Abbey with the
authority of the Catholic Church. The
effect which they produced upon the im
mense audience, says' the World, was
striking. , After reciting some of the more
notorious instances of the violations of
personal rights and liberties of which the
Administration has been guilty, Mr. Cox
said : :
.Vrf . . . X V . ...aw ..-.. ... w
meadow in the river Thames, near Wind
sor, now used as a race course, and still
known as ltunnymede, does not go there
to see the horses run, but because that
meadow marks an era in the progress of
human freedom. There, six hundred and
fbrtj'-four years ago, on the morning of
the 12th of August, the iron-clad barons
met King John and wrested from him the
same rights which have been' violated by
Abraham Lincoln, and ostracised by the
indemuity bill of rlie List Congress.
Cheers. These rights were written in
the latin of that day. Mullus Ixbcr honw
capiatur ' it began. Dead language, but
vital with liberty, which Chatham said
was with all the classics.
No free man shall be arrested or im
prisoned or deprived of his own free
household, or of his liberties, or of his
own free customs, or outlawed, or ban
ished, or injured in any manner, nor will
we pass sentence upon him. nor send tnal i
ujKjn him, unless by tlte' legal jiuljment of
his j)cers or by Vie law of tlie land.1
Cheers. '
This was the germ of our civil free
dom, which the pigmies of to-day are en
deavoring to uproot, now that it lias
grown from the acorn to the oak ! As
another (Judge Thomas, of Massachus
etts,) has so finely expressed it, 1 from the,
gray of that morning streamed the rays,
which, uplifting with the hours, coursing
with the years, and keeping pace with the
centuries, have encircled the whole earth
with the glorious light of English lilierty
the liberty for which our fathers planted
these commonwealths in the wilderness ;
for which they went through the baptism
of blood and fire in the Revolution ; which
they imbedded and hoped to make immor
tal "in the Constitution ; without which the
Constitution would not be worth the parch
ment on which it was written. Cheers. J
As if to make this great charter sacred
forever in the Anglo-Saxon memory, to
connect it with the holiest emotions of re
ligion, and to sanction it by the hopes and
the terrors of the unseen world, the
Catholic "hierarchy of that day long be
fore Protcstanism arose before the Re
formationbefore we had the trancedenml
lisht of our Puritan preachers (laughter),
this Catholic hierarchy,' then the friend of
the oppressed and the people,' were con
voked. A few days after the unwilling
kins signed the charter. ' I would like to
make a picture to your eye of that great
rnnvmntion. Thev met in Westminister
-uu ,
Abbey, the mausoleum of the dead; roy-
olt-o- and nonius of Britain. Here was
the king upon his throne, sceptercd and
crowned, impurpled in his robes of office ;
near him were the lords temporal in their
scarlet jrowns ; on his right were the gen-
tlpmpn of England representing the Com
mons the oeonle of the realm and
within the altar were the Lord's spiritual, j
clad in all the pomp of ; their pontiticial
apparel ! In the midst stood Stephen
Landon, the primate ot ingianu, .Arcu
bishop of Canterbury. The great organ
rolls its miisic amidst the Gothic arches ;
the air, suffused with a dim religious light
from the stained windows, trembles with
the thrill symphony divine,' and the
choir sing Te Deum laudamus praise to
God for the great charter of human free
dom ! Censors swing and the incense
rises, an offering to the God of justice!
And in that impressive presence the arch
bishop arises, and, gathering r ujon his
brow and in his voice the terrors of the
invisable and eternal world, he sequesters
and excludes, and from the body of our
Lord Jesus Christ, from the company of
the saints in Heaven and the good on
earth, he forever excommunicates and ac
curses every one who should dare violate
that great charter' ot Anglo-Saxon tree
Think you, men of
riom! lneer.i . j. uiun.
New Y'ork, these cries are not living yet t
a ioaanrhii3etts Senator has said that
vour honored Governor is now
being
DISTRIBUTED ALIKE. UPON THE HIGH
dragged at the chariot of a Federal Ex
ecutive, usurping the rights of the people
and violating the great charter, as eter
nized in our traditions, our history, and
our Constitution. , ' But the people of this
country are meeting as of old not in any
Gothic minister, not in the presence of
the great hierarchs, not with cermony of
Church and States, not to the music of
organ and choir or the rising incense of
praise, not amidst the fulminations of pri
mates ; but under the great sky of heaven,
from the Atlantic to the Missisippi : and
excomunicating and accursing and from
the body of the just God in heaven and
from the company of the good and pa
triotic everywhere Abraham Lincoln
(immense cheering) and the minions of his
power who have dared in " this age and
land to violate these sacred rights of per
sonal and constitutional liberty." t (Great
cheers.)
Taking the Clock to Pieces.
Artcmus Ward related that once, when
hard pressed for something to eat, and
without a cent in his . pocket, he stopped
at a farm house and, pretending to under
stand clock mending, took the farmer's
clock to pieces, ate his dinner, and then,
not knowing how to put it together again,
complained of dizziness, took a walk into
the open air, and forgot to return. In
continuation of his narrative he says
" Those polititions who went to work to
take the Union clock to pieces to get their
dinners, never meant to nut it together
agian. They have stolen their dinner,
but they will not restore the clock."
How true this is. The miserable
bunglers have taken the Union clock to
pieces and now, if they would, could not
put it together again in as good running
order as they found it But they do not
even wish to do it they make no eliort.
They were in a hurry to work the mis
chief they are in none to try to repair it.
It was easy work to take out the pins am
screws ana separate tne parts. Xwo
years ago, says the "Buffalo Courier, the
politicians North and South had a jubi
lant time together at the old clock. Thev
could not do their infernal work quickly
enough. "Without a little blood-letting,"
said Zach Chandler, of Michigan, " this
Union will not, in my estimation, be
worth a curse." " Let the Union slide,"
said others of the black-licarted gang.
And those who foresaw the consequences
of- their parricidal efforts were " weak,
womanlv Union-savers ," of whom Mas
sachusetts Wilson said scoffinglv : '' This
setting up with the Union docs not pay
expenses. And so, piece by piece,
wheel by wheel, they took the Union clock
to pieces. The Southren rebels who took
part in the operation have made nothing
by it, but the Northern disunionists, in
cluding office holders of all .grades, civil
and military, contractors, &c, are
now " diniuing " gluttonously at the na
tion's expense. ;And the country has the
broken, disjointed " chick " ; upon its
bauds, which the radical quack9 in clock
niending never meant, and never mean to
put together again. And, strange as it
may seem, the. " loyal " and ' uncondi
tional Union " men now m the country
are the bogus clock-members. Patriot
and Uuion.
Wouking GikijC Happy, girls who
cannot love them ? ' With clieeks like the
rose, bright eyes and elastic step,' how
cheerfully they go to work." Our word
for it, such girls make . excellent wives.
Blessed indeed will men be who secure
such . prizes. Contrast those who do
nothing but sigh all day, and live to fol
low the fashions ; who never earn the
bread they eat, or the shoes thev wear :
who arc languid and lazy from one week's
end to another. Who but a simpleton
and a popinjay would prefer one of the
latter, if he were looking for a companion ?
Give us the working girls. They are
worth their weight in gold. lou never
see. them mincing along, or jumping a
dozen teet to steer clear ot a spider or a
fly. , They have no affectation, . no silly
airs about them. When they meet you,
they speak without putting on a half
dozen airs, or trying to show off to better
advantage, and you feel as if you' were
talking to a human being, and not to a
painted or fallen angel. ,
If girls knew how sadly they miss it
while they endeavor to show off their del
icate hands and unsoiled skin, and put on
a thousand airs, they would give worlds
for the ' situation of the working ladies,
who are above them in intelligence, in
honor, in everything, as. the heavens aie
above Ihe earth.
er The man who lives for himself
lives for a mean fellow.
New Y'ork election gone to the devil.
AND THE LOW, THE RICH AND
11, 1863.
Great
Discoveries made
too
late. i
They tell us of gold, a silver, an iron, a
brazon and a dark age. The present is
the age of discovery. That of Columbus
was a Calvin-Ldsonized cypher in com
parison witn it. Lt us enumerate a
little:
1 . Greeley discovered tliat the South
was a bill of expense to the rest of the
Union the sooner it, left the better.
.t TL. 1 :.. - r.....nll.. lint tlir
inc auuuuuium Kv..Jt
South was a poor house and supported by I
the North.
3. That the generallity of the South
erners could neither read, write, work or
fight.
4. That .we- could neither kick the
South into a fight nor out of the Union.
5. That nobody but Keitt, or at most
South Carolina, would insurrect.
G. That the paupers would sooner se
cede from the town farm than the South
attempt to leave the Union.
7. That w
e could quell the South " bv i
, ,v i 7 .,.. ;
1 black cow down there.
. . .
driving an old
8. That the slaves would do it in three
months.
9. That one Massachusetts regiment
would dc it.
1 0. That three Massachusetts regiments
could do it.
11. That To.OOO three-months men
would do it.
12. That 400,000 would do it.
IS. 700,000 men were more than
enough to do it, so we must stop volun- j
tee ring.
See Henry Wilsoff
14. That 300,000 more three years
men would finish it.
15. That 300,000 nine months' men
would finish it.
16. That the Maine, New York, New
Jersey and Ohio militia would do it.
17- That 300,000 drafted men will do
it.
18. That the whole North from 20 to
45 shall do it
10. That " A.' Lincoln" is the sole
and final judge whether the country is in
vadod or insuiTected oriwt.
20.
l nat wnen ne says mat is me laci,
t 1 .1., .T1' .4
he has the jiower to hang roast, broil,
banish or stew every person in the United
States. See Lincoln to Corning and
others.
21... That if Slate Governors and Leg
islature don't suit him, the provost mar
shal " will keep them in order." See
New Y'ork Tniies."
22. That by touching " a Ik 11 " Lin
coln has mor power than any one, aside
from the Almighty, ever attempted to ex
ercise on earth See Seward to Lyons
and Burnside to the Judge.
"23. That is the duty of the white men
to marry sooty uenches. See Elder Til.
ton-
24. That all men ought to have niggers
marry their daughters- See Bishop Jen
kins. 2.. That love for the male blacks con
sists m putting them where. . David put
Lriah. See Port Hudson and Morns
Island. :
- 26. That I lumbal was a niygrr. See
Solicitor Whiting. :
The corrollary would seem to be that
when we die we should go to lainblack
heaven.
One Enocgii ton Him. A middle
aged fanner ami his wife were enjoving a
winter evening coseily together, when the
conversation turned upon religious matters
as described in the Bible, which the man
had ojicn before him.
' " Wife," Faid the farmer, 44 I've been
thinking what happy society Solomon
used to have had in his day, with so
many wives, ect., as is represented."
44 Imleeil f" replied the wife, somewhat
miffed, " you had better think of some
thing else, then.' A pretty Solomon gmi
would make why you can't take projier
care of one wife. What a figure iyon
would cut then, with a dozen wives, and
all of them as snunkv as I am!"
The farmer took Ins hat and went to
the stable to feed the cattle for the night.
O" Some music teacher once wrote that
the " art of playing the iolin requires the
nicest perception, and the most sinsibility.
of any art known in the world." Upon
which an editor comments in the follow
ing manner: '"The art of publishing a
newspaper, and making it pay, and at the
same time Iiave it please everybody, beats
fiddhiv higher than a kite."
C3" An eminent divine once preached
from the text: " Ye are children of the
devil," and afterward, by a funny coinci
dence, from the words, " children obey
your parents.
C3 Our devil says he is going to set a
column of type this afternoon, if it takes
him two wreks.
THE POOR.
vol: 16-no: 49.
Exempts. The following is an abstract list
of exempts for this county, and the cause ot
tbeir exemption."
neniy Shomo, White, paid commatatioa
Dennis Cawley, Clearfield, . '
Joseph Doyle," ' " " -
Jacob Witlers, "White, disability i
Jacob Stiger, Ctirroll, only son widow
Adam Esch, White, unsuitableneaa age
John A Krise, Cbest, "
j Samuel Kubn, White, disability,.
David Westover, paid commutation
I John T Peterson, disability
i David A Watt, Chest, unsuitablenee-s age '
i;5rtiiii. Fvrs. White, disability
jjenrv Foster, "
Daniel Matbews. " father molberk-Ff chil
i Arthur Wharton, Clearfield, disability
! Thomas J Burns, Cbest. paid commutation
William Cochran, Clearfield, father mother
less children
Thomas Burns, Clearfield, only son widow
Michael Waltz, Cbest, only sou infirm par'
P J M'Kenzie, " paid commutation
William Wharton. Clearfield, disability
John Bardir.e, White, nnsoitableneta age
i David Brown, Clearfield, , " "
John Troxell, , non-residence
Frederick Uanstead, White, unsuitable ega
I'cter Flanagan
Jam t-3 Devor, Clearfield. ',
. . ', . .
James rjnrtzel, TN hue, disabilitv
j James M Towle, Cleartield, disability
John Conrad, Cheat Springs, paid com
' Henry Wngoner, Clearfield,
! John C Hughes, eiecUoa by parent
j Jacob Mathews, White, paid commutation
j John T Burns. Clearfield,
, Michael J Dunegal, '
' N T Holmes, Cbest Springs, disability
(.1 A 11 Barker, " paid com '
I Samuel B Rntler, , paid commutation
( Ambrose Lancyj Chest, "
D Hernnsrtoi, Johnstown, "
Hiram Herrington,
election mother
Sylvester Little, Loretto, disability
Henry Fick, Munster, unsuitablene's age
William Carroll, Washington, "
Philip Farren, Muuster, disability
John G Kaylor, " father moth cbil
Geo M'CuIloch. 44 ! paid commutation
John H Kennedy, Washington, disability .
William Brown, . only son widow
PetT Helleshein Chest, paid commutation
John Divor. Munster, disability , ..
John Carroll, Washington, only son widow
John Stt-inbiser, Ebeusburg, disability
David F M Cartney, Washington, father moth
erless children
j James A Brown, Man?tcr, p.iid com - "
j John W Gillespie. Summerhill, disability
James Christ. Munsttr. election bv f. ther
Samuel F oei,
- - '
Michael M'Call, Washington, otly son widow
Patrick Bradlev,
alienage
hrancis U llara. ilunster, disability
James Myers, Washington. -" -Charles
O' llara, Munster, palfi com . ,.,
John Itel, Washington, ;
William Brown. " only boh widow
Thomas Lego, Munster, taid commutation..
I James i? Luckett, Carroll, only on aged par
William Bche, Washington, furnished sub--Hen.-y
Suultz. Carroll, .
John Roland. Washington, paid com
William Dnrbin, 44 .
Thomas Bo! mi, 44 con-residence
Samuel Mowery, Wiimore, nnsuitivbleness ge
George Dieopp, Samir.erhill. disability '
James Skelly. 44 only son -wido
William Kick, 44 only sn i:.f par
Lewis K DilaLunt, Wiluore, pai.l rem
Albert Wilson, Croyle, only ton wido .
Aaron Sherbine, pnid commatatioa
Joseph Flummer, " furnished substitute
Daniel C Morris, Johnstown, pnid coin
William Ncff. Croyle, only so:i infirm parent
J B I'iricr, Summerhill, disability "
Daniel K Davis, " paid comtnatatian
Woociburu Benson, fSuimnerhill, disabiiitv .
John Litzinger,
William W Porter,
William Smay, . ;
Michael Skelly.
William Clossin.
unsuitable
asthma .
disability
i Michael Hummers,
Josept ilartz,
Jesse II Diamond,
44 orJvson inf par
John Dougherty, Ebcnsburg, oistLbllity- ;
Bernard Conly, Summerhill, p.ud com
Richard Robe'rts, 44 ...... . :
N S George, Croyle, disr.biihv . : -
Joseph Ktieppor. i;o:i-residcnce
John Bomhort, Richlan J, pa: I commutation '
Daniel Varner, 4 ..
Hiru.i ShaSer. 44 enb in ser J.1 Miica
David C Strnyer. -4 ' disability
William Noon, Ci.emaugli,' 44
George Huntley, Eueuaburg. : 44
Daniel Buing mluiT, RithUli l, debility
Isaac On-i.
David W Uarbhberger, 44 paid com "
J B Fyoek. .
CharlfS Helvrl, .
David Stall, ....
Levi Wingnrt.
Mnnasi8 Miller,
Peter Follm'.r,
.ur.Fuitai.ic
paid com
i
UllS:iit kbi-J
only iiAh it. '
paid com
disubility .
! c,ob OrxuMiug
! Levi O Lehiuun,
John liuingtu'iliii-r.
John O'llairn.
Christian Myers, . ..
George Fye,
Christian BumgirJncr, "
George Caster, -
John Orris, 44
Samuel Bn Wharf. Jackson, did
paid com
lisabiaty
James l linger, . ..- ,
Jouathan W i-sicger, Richland, paid cow -Samuel
Varuor. 4-
Jareph II Livingtun, ''
David Coftlow, 44 ' . .
Edward Lvuch,
J. D. CAMPBELL, Capt. Pro. Marr
. O" A man the other day gave a n
reason for laying up golden treasures,., that
moth and rust wouldn't corrupt and
then, besides, they would be a safe thing
to fall back on, let wlw will ke p house
hereafter. . - :
V