Pittston Gazette and Luzerne Anthracite Journal |
Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
Lii*ern» Anthracite Journal. PUBUSHED WEEKLY BY MtttVT, BE YE A ft THOMPSON ■ k VJ :» { ° vr- «Cwp X 1 J 5" '*''D; x.'iIlii■ a;xuif*lr4 cif T ..TotflfB JOB PBIWPING AND BULWC - - ■ abbing Cffioe, .w/iW) cf'fts Jarfl UtvBT ! M oyfta tW PITTSTON Jrtlowmg^ I feCv PrinttBg 0(B«« of IS BEYZA, ftSacuSS rWUCuNu nwnitvi "Vuetti" Ivfldiig, Itii Stfwt, Wetl Side. 1FE8T8, ORDER®, PAMPHLETS, HANDBILLS, CttCULABS, BILLHEAD gjjow - BILLS, TICKA'IS, Tha GAZETTE *nd JOURNAL i» prubli»hed ti+rj Thurtd»y, »* Two Dollawt p*r * par- No po»t»go charged withia Ml* oounty. * iiff: AND LUZERNE A THRACITE JOURNAL. CARDB, '"juPVEBTIBINq BATES. i »t, (T I fiteralure, :i Igrintltare anb Enteral KUIJNU. Hut*.} work of all kind*. done In th« tad boat raumor, and prlnud u requotted. ETtrjtUnfla tW» Una will r«o«lT« prompt attention. Hnbo UM_1 8 00 jpttofeb to tjrt Coal Interests, politics, $Jetoa, j i «0 I 6 00 I 7 00 J 10 00 \J » qg i i oo | 10 oo | 1» oo blanks. 1 The following Blanks are kept on hand, or DrinUd to order. tAd told on NMOMM* term, t—SberitflalM, Warrant*, Constable Sale*. Summons, Judgment Con- Ooniraoii, Imm, *«.. etc. Maumw. •-*' * 00 I 10 7 00 I 10 00 | " o I Woo I Ys 00 I 30" 00 ?4orr»oo Regular yearly no* to ncMd with C*r4 time equares at aur time. Hi Business notices, with M *d*erti»ement, fl C*ch. v above rat®** will be strictly adhered to. PITTSTON, PA- THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28,1861. wm'i ** ttn'l n't" ! WHOLE NO. 578. VOLUME XI.-KO. 39. lie fell. 1 b —.. rrr— ' Mr. Hell Mis, how could we have done otherwise than remain neutral ? Bat I maintain that you are not neutral. When you find two bpyq at blows you must not forget that while you do not enter the ring, the more you hurra for Bill the 'stronger it makes him, and the more it discourages Joe. You ch»er one side CohtiBuatly and hiss tbfc othct, and call it neutrality, However, it bos taught America one l*Wt»n— that is,.not to put her trust in princes but t« rely on her own strong arm. It baa opened her eyes to many things, hat none more important than this, namely, that England ujay war with Russia, Frauce and Austria, and all Europe may be, blazing away with the flash of musketry, the clang of armor, and the sound of caunon, without America being affected. But when America, desirous of showing off her military nature, gets up a little sham fight within her own borders in three months' time with a milliotl of Abldiers, fires off a million of rifles, discharges a million of revolvers, and has her artillery booming on every hill—I say, when the American people, in the absence of foreign war, get up a grand review and hill ten thousand traitors oo the Champ* de Mar* of the Potomac, all the world tremblingly atops to gaze, and all the world's commerce becoiuos deranged. Europe may fight, but America cares not. America plays with firearms to keep her hand in and Europe is pale for (car, for it has come to pass that the commerce of the United States with Europe sums up each year one hwttdreki millions of pottnde tterkng lD Stop this commerce for twelve months and millions here are thrown oqt of-employment. Even my friend, Mr. Wood, will feel it, in the absence of orders from the ship yards of the north. 1 have listened with eaxneatness to the bpld words of Mr. Morse. I meet him to-night for the first time, and I congratulate our people, at last, at having a live Jonsul to represent them in London. We have had enough of dead men. His Union sentiments are refreshing. Now we shall have no more treason-hatching in the American Consulate! of England. His predecessor wbs baying muskets all the time—so was it at Liverpool, and so waa it with tbo Pari* Embassy—the flog was outraged, the consqls and the miuiUors are 5tylty of high treason and should suffer the oom of traitors. Jtfo man dared to speak out qnti) the Russian Ambassador arrived. 1 endorse every word of Cassius M. Clay, and wish all our representatives w«r« equally nntinnal f I say I welcome our new consnf, and' give hi1™ a cordial ehake of the hand'ever his brave, bold words for the landl love; and you, too, my' eloquent friend from Georgia— whttec name shall tiotgbitfto the papers, for I would not hdve your children who remain in' the State suffer for yoUr love for the Union-*you, too, we welcome for your honest defense of tba natiotv Jfo» have asteoisbed many present by your fapbic description of affairs in thC? south. knew it must be so; I knew that the southern Country was full ol Union men, who will spring around the flag the moment our forces land it) Savannah! Secession in your part of the country is fashionable; no wonder the fair southern ladies are enraged; for all their crinoline was used np long1 ag?, and they do not make it in the sooth, rf' How ean thty be out of fashion? Theybelieved that Mrs. Davis Would hold levees ia Washington; they believed that Mr. Walker would,raise the traitor's .{lag on 'he capital j but the truth breaks upou them, what a sensation of shame Awaits them; for it must be a terrible thing to realize that they have been the Wives and daughters and sisters who have made red so many battle fields. It lodks to me, I am sorry td atiy, tho' the rebellion was nearly dead—the war nearly over, I want it" to last another year. I want Europe and England to know us better, and another year's war will explain our Strength. ** I have a CpolioyCW my own. Away With free trade these distracted days. Lot England bare her own laws let America have hers. You may not agree with me—few people do—but nevertheless I have opinions, and will express them, even « the distinguished archangel who got put out of Court on a .memorable occaslou had his carriage at the door. Here is my platform: Take Japan and Chin»for a model; that is, live a few year? by ourselves—clap an export duty on our Cotton and tobacco, and double the Morrill tariff. Destroy the port of Charleston— make a Sebastopol of it* forts and block up iu channels, and givo Beaufort or Savannah «U its commerce. Partition the State and iuk-blot her name out of the mag.— Build the Pacific railroad and establish a line of bwift steamers between San Franoiseo and China. Make New New, the stock market of the world. Establish military schools ; have a decent army—-jj' looks respectable when you want a review. Augment the.natfy, and give Spain a hammering for her impudence in landing in St. Dumingo. Wait till she. gets into Mexico, under tho guarantee of France and England, and gets the military roads built; thon let the northern and southern army C;loae up and take Cuba as a dependency, and oarry out the Monroe doctrine. We wunt moro room. We are getting cramped and crowded, and we oust have an outlet far. the rush of emigrants that will pour into the country when we declare Put a discriminating duty on, shutting out English goods, if England continues to aide with, the rebel*, i M «l ,.i I Don't get alarmed, gentlemen, you know it is all fun- (Loud laughter.) You know you call me eoeeutrio, and I must keep up the illusion. England has slept in the middle of the bed long enough 1. Tho times are ohanging. Tho npeek on the horizon is already bigger than an ox-cart, i Tho firet of freo opinions h*Te becnsaouU The Late Ool. Baker—Almost a Pro* phecy. I CARDS. racBSLAinaouB. GEO. W. BBA1NERD % CO., , GROCERS, tOS Murray, n««r Wm» GEO. W. BBAltfERD, \ HEW YOUR. DAVID BELDBN } From tl»* Cincinnati Commercial. THtt gwkKTf Lrrfrrad ma.N, DIINMU M HI erican question. England's sympathies are with, and have been with the south, not out of hate to the north, but because she wished to see us break in two. When a man is very ill it is, to say the least of it, bad taste order fH your mourning, for perhaps he may get well again, arid how surprised he would be to see the notices of his death which were prepared. England's neutrality consists in standing on the platform and cheering the rebels on. Read the secession organs of the Country. Secession organs, did I say? There are no others save the Daily News, the Star, the Liverpool Post, and two M three more journals—the rest all have flags flying and cannon* booming to stimulate treason on to murder. The press leads the way. The Cabinet would declare war at once if it dared; and I am not sure but what the Mexican intervention is war in disguise.— Read the speeches of members of Parliament to their constituents. You find them secession to the backbone. Is there any question about Lindsay's language, or Captain Jarvis, or Bulwer Lytico 1 I like Bulwer for bis fraakneqf and his honesty. He is no hypocrite He talks as he thinks, and say* that he hopes tb« country will not only break up in two, but in four pieoes 1 It is already too powerful and iu growth should be checked. England's neutrality consists in giving all her sympathy to the rebels. SnppoSe yon and I, Mr. Chairman, were friendsof forty years' acquaintance, and some night on the highway a burglar tries to assassinate yott after having stolen your money, would you not think it almost out of the pale of humatiity in this civilized age to have me remain neutral ? or, what is worso, to hear me cheer tho thief on in his bloody work T— (Chairman—It is not a fair analogy ) Analogy or not, that is Engl .nd's position today towurd America. Ere many months you may have revolution in this garden island—tho revolution that arises from a starving population—for is thcro not unmistakable signs of a corn famine in Ireland and a cotton famine in England?— Suppose such to happen, and class should be arrayed against class, would you not think it damnable for-America to join the rebels, and cry lustily for the destruction of this proud nation, as England is continuing to cry for America's ruin r Here ore the facts I wish to make known. The south has always been the eirtrtiy of England; as the north has Bfcfti her friend. Every actxif btostility has fcflianated from that quarter. Look along our history's page. W hat was the Nori-intcrcoursc' act previous to the lust war hut a southern institution ? Was not the embargo act and the war of 1812 itself a southern institution ? The whole north was against it, aud the Hartford conventionitcs, to this day,.are subjects of derision by the southerners for the sympathy New England showed for Old England. What Was the high Tariff act, the twenty-five cent a yard duty on cotton, of 1816, but a southern institution t All Now England voted against Mr. Calhoun's American system. It was the same in 1820 and but the south having pissed their high tariff, the nortt showed its enterprise by putting up eotton mills, und it was not for some years after (1828) that the north voted for protection. Then Mr. Calhoun, in 1S82, wanted to kill the bantling he had created in 1816, und because he could not succeed, started his hell-lDorn nullification cry, which' was so summarily stopped by General Jackson. What was the Mexican wur but a southern institution to get new slave lands ? W bat were the filibustering expeditions against Cpba but southern institutions? Where did Lowest hail from ? where Walker? Where did Lynch law, the bowie knife, and the duelist originate but in the south ? Is not repudiation purely a southern iDStitotion ? Who wus it that showed their sympathies against England in the Russian war but the entire democratic party, which for forty year* has been a southern institution ? The whigs werp with Eogland, but the democrats cheered the Russian arms. These are ull southern institutions, and certainly negro slavery is not an institution of thg uorth. Where, then, does England fiud sympathy wiih the damned traitors in this hell-born conspiracy? Was it the north or the south who sent the contributions to Ireland in their distress? Was it the north or the south who put the flags »t half-mast on tho death of Havelock? and tell me, gentlemen, who received the son of your Queen with open arms, but the proud children of our northern country ? Boiling over with good will to we took the prfnoe and embraced him, because we loved this old land' und its mighty associations. We loved to mix our history and lose it even in yours. NVe loved your Christian Queen, and showed all these thing* in the warm and honest reception we gave her son. All this war in the north, but when be crossed the border into th« slave country, he hastened away quickly for fear of repeated insult 1 Yea, gentlemen, it was iu the capital of the socalled confederate 8tates, Richmond, that the Prince of Wales feared the action of the mob, und saw for the first time that he was not welcome in the land where onoe his ancestors ruled. Knowinc, then, that all these acta of violence aud hostility against England came from the south, you cat} imagine the disgust of the ntDrtn at reading the Times day after d-»y, and the Telegraph, the Herald, the Chronicle, and nearly all the entire British press, encouraging the rebels on in their unehriatiau work 1 England baa mado a mistake—a fatal mistake. To make sure that I an) not in the wrong, I am preparing a book of opinions of' the press—extract* from i speeches of members of Parliament and the Ministry, which will prove the hostility of England against the Federal Power. I daring in Europe for nearly fifteen years. Poor Poland is in sackcloth and ashes!— Hungary sleeps swakingly, and will shortly spring upon the enemy's camp, when Capreras chief will land in Venice. France groans under a disordered commerce and a diseased finance. Europe has enough to look after with troubling herseffwith America. Let America lock her gate* fqr a while—"eeonomise—bay so foreign fabrics —lire within herself—manufacture her own cotton, and take the profit we have so long given to England. Our strength is shown by this contest. Six hours of such rebellion would hare .changed a dynssty in France; six deys in Austria, or Prussia, or Spain. Six weeks without a Ministry would capsize the English Constitution,but after six months of preparation America begins to shoW her strength. It was a clever move of the President in this great national game of chess to give up Fort Sumter—always give away a castle to cheokmate your opponent. The Cabinet have done nobly—Seward upheld our foreign relations, and proved himself the man wo knew he was. So has Chase—and Welles, with his five hundred ships of war, urmed to'the teeth; and Cameron, too, with his half a million of fighting men.— ! don't belieVe in the reports of corruption ib the departments; they are circulated bv rebel spies and enemies of the country. I bavo faith in 8eward and Cameron, and Welles and Chase, and know the President is an honest man. I like; the Strong measures of the Administration. In times like these one cannot do things too firmly. Act first and apologise afterwards—strain a point in the Constitution, if necessary, to save a nation—over with the spies—down with the traitorous women —down with the vile hoards who infest the country with their treason—macadamize Fort Laftyette with the best bones of the land if they have crystalized into patricides. muK Wheft the lamented Col. E. D. Baker was in Congress, in a debate in Committee of the Whole, ho was assailed afc a foreigner by Mr. Venable, of North Carolina, a Democratic partizan. Below is the reply which he made at the time, in which he seems to have foreshadowed the present unhappy conflict in which the country is engaged, as well as his own brave defence of his country and her Constitution and flag. The extract will bo read with interest by many if his friends and admirers: "1 have bared my bosom to the battle on the Northwestern frontier in my youth and on the Southwestern frontier in my —" hood. 1 have earned somewhat of the good will of my country. In the councils of my State for a period of ten consecutive yean, and in her service here, my constituents have confided in my devotion to their interests and my attachment to the Union.i I have only to say, that if the time should come when disunion should rule the hour, and discord is to reign supreme, I shall' again be ready to give the best blood in my veins to my country's oause. I shall be prepared to meet all antagonists with lance in rest, to do battle in every land defense of the Constitution of my country, which I have sworn to support, to the last extremity, sgainst disunionists and all its enemies, whether of tho South or the North —to meet them everywhere, at aH times, with speech or hand, with word or blow, until thought or being shall be mine no longer. OTrTOSsBrmwo*.1 PA — HBNBY HUFFOED, Proprietor. H. -H i. AT LAW.—•f- U, ftc. hi th. Jhitlar House, Main Street, 1'ittason. J»n- 28' 1859' VitROMB O. MILLRB.—ATCOHKBY AT CJD ."LAW. OflSco im :U« CJ»urt II«u»e, Wilk*s- Iktfre. Penna. . / Now while the (oldieri are fighting our battles, Each at hii po«t to 3o all that he can, Down among rebalaaml einttfcband ehatlels, What are you Cioiag, my pweet little man ? All the brave boya under canvass are Sleeping, ' A1Fof them presflng to mar«h with the van, i Far from tbe home where their aweothearU are weeping; What are you waiting for, my aweot little man 1 B. SMITH, IMPORTER Of SranVies, SUmrs, (Sins, No. 191 Wait Street, l door »bovo boons St, March T, 18«1. **1?! G. fa tOftS RtCHARDB.-ATTORNEY AT LAW. »|"C(JWVEYANnKH. and NOT ART PUBLIC, Ocileotioni promptly to. Offtco—One C•»—»"w l" 1 Ton with the terrible warlike mustache*, • Fit for a colonel, or Ohi*f ofaolas, You with the waist made for iword belt and Where art' your shoulder rtrapa, sweet litt'e man 1 'C J. K. * E. B. PLACE. WHOLESALE GROCERS, -do xaw and Collection Offlo*. /~y go ROB B. KULF, Mtomer at Law,—Office C T in the Court House, (Register's Office,; Zn,rL [Dec. 13T1880. 529 No. 30 BROAD Street, Bring him the buttonleia garment of woman, Cover hit face, lest it freckle ana tan ; Muster the Apron-String Guards on the common, That is the corps for tha sweet little man. CM«, W.„ yoRK FLETCHER PLACE. Sewing. Mm. PAVIE9 having procured » serwing taackino, it »ow urepared to do family s«*mz and atitchiui of all Itindi. at »hort notice, in Stunner's new brick, iccond floor. Fab. 15, 18M.—tf. Give him for escort a file of young misses, Each of tbem armed with a deadly rattan ; They shall defend him from laughter and hisaes Aimed by low boys at the sweet little man. A" the td mnidena about him shall cluster, Pluck the while feathers from bopnet and ft*, Make him a plume like a turkey-wing duater, That is the creel for a awoet little ou. Mantuamaking. MMBR3. DAVIS would respectfully *-i*H the attention M Ml# Ladios of l'i«»ton ahd vicinity to her large vurioty vf wont approved Sew l'aterna Just received ftorn "Cow York. Particular attention paid to the cuttlnKand rlttingehlldeenlt eloches. Mantilla*. (Jfoaks and Dresses cut, fitted and made on short not too. Plae* of bturitieB*, In Cfopt. Stunner's New llriok building. i'liird "toryt ii Plttston, Apr- *», ««». CB. DECK. M. D.—DENTIST, issasssssfc H.ujire. East Side, Wllkrt-Barre, Penna. DBly !», ly. - UUY YOUR GOODS AT THE C1IEAP CASH H Store bf Clark and Oranahan, Main street, Pitwton Penna. , . -4Phey kave a full assortment of all kinda fll merchandise constantly on hand. Jilly n. 1.S60, •au5 3u J; 1 lUiit- H" i1 *—" 11 1 111" 0, but the Apron String Guards are the fellows ! Drilling each day since oor trouble* began, "Handle your walking sticks 1" -Shoulder untbrellaa!"That is the style for the sweet little man. S) OBE8T BADE.—BOOK BINDER. NORTH V East corner of Public Square and Main-at ilkes'oarre, Picture Frames,Common0Dlt and Mahogany, ornamented and pTain. matte to order, of any else. Job Binding neatly executed. A largo selection of ooinmon and fine pictures. Albums. Blank books, Stationery, Novels, Ac., always on hand. Juhe It, 1843. Have we a nation to saV®? In the first plaee ' Saving ourselves is the seneible plan: Surely the spot whero there's shooting '• the worst place Where I can standi saya the aweet little man. l~v Jl. C. R. GORMAN having resumed the I • orac-ice of lUa profession, respectfully ten- niTlervlcei to the people of Pitt.ton and CI./U' at the EAGLE HOTEL will receive prompt attention night or day. fitlston, July 24, Mt»l. tf '» » A ; S. — ' Plttiton Banery. TH15 staff ofllfe la floodBread, krtd 1 would respectfully inform the citizen* ol I'lftsto* and vijinity,that I always keep the g«tuiii»- article on hand tor aale, with all kinds ol onwk ers, pies, cakes. &c. Families and parties supplied with evetythlog In his line, on stuut notice,and on reatDonali1e terms. My establish mens Is opposite Jacob's store on Maln-at. FRANKBRANDKNBUUU • H: . • . ; : : ,j , Catch me confiding mv person with strangers! Think how the cowardly Bull Runners ran! In the brlgado of the Stay at Home Rangers Marches my aorps, says the sweet littl* man. Enormous Trade in Breadstuffs.— Curious Calculation.—The trade in breadstuffs at the west this season, remark* a ootemporary, has been enormous, and how • the amount yet remaining is to come forward in a brief month of navigation, is *: subject of lively interest. Of what the, trade in breadstuff has been thus far, some idea may be formed from the fact that at Buffalo the local receipts of grain, and of, flour reduccd to wheat, foot up the enormous aggregate of fifty-two millions 6f buthels. We read the figures without being able to comprehend their immensity. To do so we must resort to illustrative statements. Supposing this vast amount to ba afloat again upon the canal, it would fill 8,666 canal boats, holding 6,000 bushels each ; and these boats, each 100 feet long, and lying stern to stern, would form 164 miles in length! Or supposing all this grain to be thrown into one pile or stored in « „;»AU fci. nf fliirh o rcceptacle would make a column 201 feet square and 1,000 feet high. Or, to put it more practically—suppose it atl to be stor* ed in one warehouse of the ordinary depth and height of street stores, say sixty-five feet from front to rear, and sixty-five feet high, and that warehouse would be fourfifths of a mile long, allowing nothing for partitions, and its contonts would Supply ten millions of people with breadstuff* for one year. This, it will be remembered, is the business of the single port of Buffalo, and the enormous amount, it is estimated, before the end of the season, will be swath led at that point to at least sixty mUlioua of bushels. -rvR. J. A. ROBINSON,—HOMEOPATHIC 1 I Physician and Operative Surgeon, PittstSi, Prf.. respectful! offers his serviees to the peo*1* er Pitlston and its vicinity. ■ K constant supply of Ireah medicines always on 1'K»iiiilrDDR«e«fi(rnliDl»ed or refilled to order. OFFICE insecond Story Capt. Stnrmer » New Brick R«Mlag. Pulsion. May s, lseo.—ly. Such was tho stuff of the Malakoff takers. Such were the soldiers that scaled the RedaU ; Truculent housemands and blood-thirsty Qua- Brave not tho wrath of tho swoet little man. The civil power is nothing when a country is to besaved. dire us martial law— overboard with Habeas Corpus Act, and command obedience with the sword and the gallows. Yes, gentlemen, to put down treason I would put on thC? thumbscrew.— Out with the guilotine—raise the inquisition «nd enforce the law, at whatever oost Of money or men. Break np the printing press—shut the mouth that dares to breathe against the "Army of the Constitution."— Who thinks of saving brush aud comb, sponge and towel, when the house is in flamta ? /Who stops for overooat and carpct-bag tk® »Kip in the breakers l Who thinks of wearing white kids when shells are exploding in the drawing room t Let the Administration save the nation and overlook any little thing may have been omitted. NEW GOODS! Yield him the sidewalk, ye nursery maidens ! Sauvc qui vtui 1 Bridget, and right about, Ann, Fierce as a shirk in a school of menhadens, See him advancing, the swoet little inan I The Wants of the People dnly Considered! D'H. J. M BARRETT.—DBNTI8T. — Office at his residence on Franklin street, oppos it* the Motbodist Cliuroh, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., where lie may hereafter be found at all hour? Dr. B. Inserts Teeth on Gold Mid Silver plate, !(. | aIwj operates in all the branches of Dental Surgery. i» the best manner. A deduction from usual charges sufficient to cover expenses, allowed to persons who eome fcnui a distance April itt, IStW. ly. ■pifE undersigned hsvingjust returned from 111'' head L nt market with one ofthe most extensive stocks dl merchandise ever offered to the people of IDuaerne oiinty would respectfully announce in a few word", to hi* friends and the'public in general, that Ma purchase!, have ticca made Willi a view to tlws wants of the people, I lie Miner and laborer, as well as the elean handed gentleman, or fair lady, liroccrlas and provisions, flour and feed in large supplies always on hand. J. IJ. MCMII^LAN. Odd Feltows' Block. North Side Pittaton. June 14. IMS. When the red flails of the battle field threshers Beat not the continent's wheat from Its bran, While the wind scatters theohaffy secssbers. What will become of oar sweet little man ? When the brown soldiers come back from the borders. How will he look when his Ceatures they scan? liow will he feel when he get* marching orders, Bigucd by his lcdy-love F swoet little man. Ha yd en Brothers, IMPOftTEftS MB DEALERS III Pancy Goods, Yaifkeo Notions, Cigars, &c.. HVW MlbVORX) 3P»- a . , w*. Kivrncx, J»n* H.1VMJ, ||j; ' TIIAVT HATDKSj OJtOBOe BAYDK*. Ituf IS, 1U1. »3tf m Vh ' MANUFACTURER '-fc- Pear not for him, tho1 tharehels aapeet hiaa— Life i« too precious to shorten its spoil; Woman her broomstick will raise to protect bim, Will she nok fight for the sweet little man? 8. STUKKEB, Now, then, three cheers for the Btay-at-Home Blow UUfgTMi fish •** ft* th® bi« P*°' First in the field thai is Cartt»'»t from danger, Tuke your w hi to feather plume, sweet little man. DEAI.BIt IX TJOOTS. 8HOES. T.EATHFRttnd FINDINGS, Slain J3 street. I'nuton. A large anaorunaqt ot Jfrengli tuff Kiu. and Patent Leather iilways on haft if R«]wrinti done with punctuality on ri-alanable terms. CJJ*h paid for all kinds of hides and skins. Jan. 1- »■ Christians bate Iscariot, Romans despise Cataline, Americans loathe the name of Arnold So *111 the southern pirate chieftains in their exile bo marked'with contempt by tfc6 patriots of the Constitution !' Separation is impnasible! Annihilation absurd ! Who. ever heard of twenty millions being annihilated ? Ameiica must change her policy; be more republican, less aristocratic, overcome our mjdesty.and not be tfto religious about furms. America fights with her own men—our solders go to battle for glory, law, liberty—Europeans fight for pav. Ours ia a volunteer army; We have no Hessians of hir?«l battalions. Our thirty million loan, so readily taken by our people, is nothing tolrnat we can do; England spends that sum every year on army and navy. The days of Perry nnd Dcentnr and Paul Jones are to be revived. The fleet* are off—a new set of tactics— take Hatferas. Send back the North Carolina troops! telegraphs the Governor.— Take Savannah,! Send back the Georgia regiments, telegraphs the general in command to Beauregard;—take New Orleans! —send baqktho Louisiana 09Ptingent, and shortly Beauregard is left high and dry without aq army, having reduced Virginia to a desert like a vineyard destroyed by locusts. Whfefce is Beauregard ?—alone, uncared for, forgotten. Where is Davis ?— ill in mind, ill in body, the shattered fVame battling with the diseased brain and the seared eonsoience.. The north flourishes amid the. clash of arms—a tonka rising, bullion increasing, ships launching, factories building, corn.shipping, while the south is Saralyzed, ana England and'the world wonering where it is all to end 1 Why do consols droop day aftoe day unless there is some terrible secret in Downing Streets- Why does France borrow two millions on the Rank of England unless France is about to lead ah army somewhere. Verily the times are changing; and it may turn out that America is not only the richest country, but possesses one-half the common sense, thre«.fourths the enterprise, and seven-eighth* the beauty of the world. M*MTU!«IKING.-Mrs. 8. J. GED- DtS would rasfiactfully inform the ladies of PitUton that she atill continues the business of Ladies' Dressmaking at lur old location, over Lson iait's, opposite Cooper's Hall, and holda herswlf in readiness at all tii*rakDMrve her customers iu tbe best manner. A Bold and Timely Speech. From the London American, The reflecting men of England arc concentrating their thoaphtt on the American question; all classes discuss it, and it is the nenerul theme of conversation wherever tn«n gather together. Each newspaper has its leader*, and eaah member of Parliament has his fling at the "bubble bursting Republic ef.tbe Weal." At a dinner given by Henry Wood, Esq., the large anchor and chain manufacturer ot Birkenhead* at the U'estmin8ter l'aluce Hotel, this all-absorbing sabject, the Amerioan question, Was the feature of tho entertainment. Our Consul, Mr. Morse, made a most eloquent speech. Mr. Bell, tbe builder of the Warrior,' Mr. Gladstone, and a who recently left (Utttlt for hie UnioB sentiments, and aeveral other gentlemen joined in the animated debute between the English, theiSooteb and the Ameriawis;— Mr. George Francia Train, whose strong Union sentiments have ao often been jecofded in theae columns, created sort* «*- eitement'by his «*taok tin England's unmanly coursc in lliia ungodly rebellion, and some ef h» atrictwres were emphutic illy denied' )by some of the geotloitien present—the chairman espeetallyv who asserted that he knew there was the most friendly feeling in thie country towards America. Some eitraotafrom Mr. Train's speech triH show the warmth of- the debate i Wilson, Barnes Se Co.,1 WHOLESALE GROCERS AND Ptodire C'lii istsion Mcr li.kBts. DRESS PATTERNS. • fihe is i a receipt of tho latest patterns for Ladles' Dreaaes and Cloaks, and Children's Clothing and Will avail herself of these advantages in •«rving ker customers. 'i. 5 Fittston, Oct. J, 1*81. ,, ,j .,: AKD E VTKNSIVK DKALEB8 IS T A J. No. 115 WARREN STREET, '' (Third door below Washington Street',) William II. Wilson,. Daniel V.Barnes, -EW YORK A liner C. Kceney, j , " Samuel N. Delano. Sept. 17, 1800. " . ' BOBERT L M L'LFORD, CORTLAND A. SPBAGUE Mulfori & Sprague, 1 PORTERS k WHOLESALE DEALERS IN HARDWARE, PluoJc of the Hoosier Girls —The young ladies of Logawpert, Indiana, at a meeting held oti the 80th of September passed the following resolutions : i_. .t nru_ « ' 1861. FRESH FALL e00DS 1861 RE IB EL, BAWD A CO., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF rORKIOS AXD AMERICAN Resolved, That we deem it Co be the duty of every young unmarried man to «Bt list and fight for the honor of his country, hit flag, and his own reputation. 2. That the young men, in this time of our country's peril, hare but one good cuso for not being a soldier, ana that is cowarilicc. 3. That the young man who now fails to respond to the call of his country, is not worthy the kind regards or the smiles of the young ladies of our native Hooeier State, and that none but ladies of a doubt' ful age will smile on such men. 4. That we will have nothing to do with • young men who refuse to go to the war, and that "Home Guards" must keep their distance. CUT ER Y AND GUNS, ALSO. SOI.E AGEST8 FOR BBOWi * SPEAGUE'S CELEBRATED MINERS' SHOVELS, SCYTHES, A. ES, And EDGE TOOLS, Greenwich Street, near Vesey St., NEW *ORK. pril DRY OOODS, No. 47 North Third Street, PHILADELPHIA, PKNJTA, Would ro»poctftil!y lunte Ifcu attention of Country Merchants to their i ' Large k Well-8«leeted Stack e( Frtih Fall Goodi, w huh they are now r»poi»in« in store. J; Merchants would find It to their advantage to call and examine our stock. May 81, "CO.—CM-17,'M S45yl SE3ITI8T8T.—Tte Citizen* of Fittaton and *iCjinlty will beir'in mind that Dr. A. SB la permanently located here and will be a* hie office with Dr. J. A. Bobinsoa. orer Caf*. flturiuer'a ahee store, near tlic Oazette office, deafly to watt upon all who may require the aid of hie profeaaion. llis acquaintance in town rahderi it unnecessary to say what he can or will d* farther than, try him and if you are not Satisfied return the work and he will charge yon ■MMU&i ■ Work in all its branehea dona on short notice, ««4 charges as reasouaDle as any reputable denote open at all times excepting the first ten daVs ef each month. affirtUa, August li, 1841.—tf . • ;.i.„ PBACTICAIi WATOHKASEBS NORTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIAI 11- |i -j... v, rM I'iUi .I-' !' !• tl H"* 5. That the young man who has not pluvk ondugh to fight for his country has not the manliness to make a good husband.Mr.' Chairman—Youare an old fridnd of mine, nod knowing me bo well I am surprised that you should call me up o# street railways when Ibe American question is on the table. I admit I am good for a speech on that or any other topio, but feMlight I intiend to sink the ahop and talk the Henate chamber—suffice it to know thut my suooess is complete. I have run the gauntlet, With all kinds of weapons aimed at me, but have psosod ike Manassas (Jap of English conservatism snd introduced a carriage for the people with colors flying and lotd of money still in the treasury. But no rtore of that, let me tslk on America. I thank you, Mr. Wood, and you, gentlemen, for your good wishes for peace, but we want no peace. You say England is with us, I know that she is •gainst us, and has been from the first.— (No, no.) I say yes, yes—and the, question is, how1 niuith plain talking oaoyou stand from a man who loves his wife, his children, and his God, but who loves his country more than all—for a man without a country is unworthy of wife o' children, •lid poor tiod-fbrsaken devil, he had bettor die—and this, gentlemen, is what England has recommended. 6. That wc will marry no man who 1m not been a soldier. i!t 7. That we will not marry until after the war is over; and then Home Guards I ho, never.' T) ESIDEST DElfflST.—"A clean and ill wholesome appearance of the mouth id the strongest letter of recommendation." a Dli J. W KBtJL.BR, Surgeon and Mechanic*! Dentist, haa permanently located io Pitlston and respectfully tenders his professional Services to Artificial Teeth inserted from one to aa entire sett, on Gold, Silver or Vulcanite plates, to look as well a* the natural. Ploase call and examine rfpeeimena of Teeth. Teeth filled with Gold, Tin «r B.»de Filling. All work in the Dental Art ex* eouted with neataess and dispatch. Teeth extracted when desired by the aid of Francis' GaV Mraie Process. The sensation pratfsced by the MUMSge of the current is not painful, it being se adjusted as to be just perceptible to the patient Jf. B.—Persons wishing operations performed at the(T bouses will be wuited upon by leaving their WMrese at hie office. A superior lot of TOOTH POWDER always on to Iter. 0. M. Peek and Steuben Jenkias; Esq., Pitts ton ; aad Dr». E. Shelp and J. M. Wilke«B»rre Office formerly occupied by Dr. Flagg, in Mrs. PbrCmaa's building. CharKes moderate. Ang.«, uuu—a Not ooe person in a thousand estimates the value of newspapers in timea of war. We have heard some peoplo say "what a harvest for the newspapersthey do not take into consideration that the proprietors scarcely get back the money the paper costs on which each issue is printed, and in these times additional expense* an sustained which are seldom inoideni tc times of peace. In auoh timea, too, adver tilting instead of increasing, falla off. ThC very life of a paper is aotuaUy taken awa; and additionalWd' ' "" w V. PETERSEN, PittsUm, Pa. H. Ct A. PETERSEN, Scran ton, Pa. C PETERSEN, Honesdfle, Pa. Nor. 8,1800, REMOYAjL!; Now Located Cor. of Sain k William Street*. Watches aad Jewelry. a sew stock. m/mh JAMES AITKBlf, would respect fully iaform Mb friends and the pablio is general,that he has just replenished his store with a new and extensive assortment of Watehti, Clock.*, & Jeteelry, of all deseriptions. Together with SILVER AND PLA?KD WARE, Combs, Brushes* Pocket Cutlery, lower Vases, aud a thous«nd other articles which Will recommend themselves. They have beefn purchased of the beet manufacturers in the United States, and cannot be surpassed in quali- Mfatehes, (Slocks and Jewtflry repaired at all tlrteS, by the most exp*rie*eea workmen. Thankful for the liberal patronage heretofore enjoyed, a nontfaukuce of same is respectfully solicited. J. A. Oemer of Mala M William Streets. Pittstod.Jtafc«,ims. jj, A LawVUr's T*ick.—A shrewd triek to identify the handwriting oi • suit was resorted to in a taae tried in the Supreme Court a few days ago. A man, his wife and son, made a joint note, al three eir~° their names. When thi going y T- , - - lal burdeus two imposed by the iota came due it woa repudiated, and the iarg6 amount of gratuitous laW that w iolders commenced suit. No difficulty b th(J. publio in wa- of for ras found in regard to the identity of the meeting8( noticeg of variou, societies, millignatureb of husband and son, but no one tory 6mpthieB ct0. Accounts of a pub-. ,ould be obtained to identity the handwri- Uc oharacter aro chargeable in time, of ing of the wife. In this dilemma the The therefore, to-day, »**• soUumI for the holder of the note got an al, donatiBg more in proportion to Ha Hipreea ittonwd enveloped, ft» which he put than any other institution ift t* i subpoena. A boy was sent with this en. landC and withD perfjap,, the leaat apprwri* ralop* and** receipt book to the house of aud the im,Ueat thanks. the lady. The lady fell into the trap, re- j T r , - . ■. oeived the envelope and sinned the receipt jqt An editor out weat who aerredI «m in tbe bqy'a book. When the trial came days on a jury aay§ that be Of Uw on #10 lady did not appear; the boy, how, that It is hard work for bi» to keep from ever, produoed the book, and the siuna- cheating ererbody. tures being oompared. tliey were found the ' , . .. gamct, 4nd a verdict rendered again* all tW Med of narrow waya are Ml_« »• three—if. r. Barrett. « narrow way weommended in tbe fllWe. JUST IMPORTED FROM THE ar-.nl MANUFACTURERS. England's neutrality hsa already cost five thousand lives She has made a great mistake, and three months hence she will acknowledge it. Will you let use speak tty mind r Wow I beg of you, gentlemen, not to get .slotted when I tell you a fow startling fkcta to prove how unwise, i how ungenerous, how dangerous has beou I England's »o-c*lled neutrality on the Am- f f\ Crates «f the Water Lily Pattern White A V Stone Ware, the first importation and the only new pattera in market Call aad see, and you will be pleased. CHAS. LAW * CO. Aprffll, IWl. ATOTftEfeall whom it »*v concern. Tho subscriber takes this method to' Inform thodte who have unsettled aeeourits with him'(hat they must call snd settle the same within thirty days from.this date, or oe.t will ■ndaan i To Hotel Keepers. PPCICXTION8 attd BONDS fer TAVERN •' OFFICE. Pp£. so( lie?. - Wtf Oct. 22,1861.—3^
Object Description
Title | Pittston Gazette and Luzerne Anthracite Journal |
Masthead | Pittston Gazette and Luzerne Anthracite Journal, Volume 11 Number 39, November 28, 1861 |
Volume | 11 |
Issue | 39 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1861-11-28 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | Pittston Gazette and Luzerne Anthracite Journal |
Masthead | Pittston Gazette and Luzerne Anthracite Journal, Volume 11 Number 39, November 28, 1861 |
Volume | 11 |
Issue | 39 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1861-11-28 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | PGL_18611128_001.tif |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text | Lii*ern» Anthracite Journal. PUBUSHED WEEKLY BY MtttVT, BE YE A ft THOMPSON ■ k VJ :» { ° vr- «Cwp X 1 J 5" '*''D; x.'iIlii■ a;xuif*lr4 cif T ..TotflfB JOB PBIWPING AND BULWC - - ■ abbing Cffioe, .w/iW) cf'fts Jarfl UtvBT ! M oyfta tW PITTSTON Jrtlowmg^ I feCv PrinttBg 0(B«« of IS BEYZA, ftSacuSS rWUCuNu nwnitvi "Vuetti" Ivfldiig, Itii Stfwt, Wetl Side. 1FE8T8, ORDER®, PAMPHLETS, HANDBILLS, CttCULABS, BILLHEAD gjjow - BILLS, TICKA'IS, Tha GAZETTE *nd JOURNAL i» prubli»hed ti+rj Thurtd»y, »* Two Dollawt p*r * par- No po»t»go charged withia Ml* oounty. * iiff: AND LUZERNE A THRACITE JOURNAL. CARDB, '"juPVEBTIBINq BATES. i »t, (T I fiteralure, :i Igrintltare anb Enteral KUIJNU. Hut*.} work of all kind*. done In th« tad boat raumor, and prlnud u requotted. ETtrjtUnfla tW» Una will r«o«lT« prompt attention. Hnbo UM_1 8 00 jpttofeb to tjrt Coal Interests, politics, $Jetoa, j i «0 I 6 00 I 7 00 J 10 00 \J » qg i i oo | 10 oo | 1» oo blanks. 1 The following Blanks are kept on hand, or DrinUd to order. tAd told on NMOMM* term, t—SberitflalM, Warrant*, Constable Sale*. Summons, Judgment Con- Ooniraoii, Imm, *«.. etc. Maumw. •-*' * 00 I 10 7 00 I 10 00 | " o I Woo I Ys 00 I 30" 00 ?4orr»oo Regular yearly no* to ncMd with C*r4 time equares at aur time. Hi Business notices, with M *d*erti»ement, fl C*ch. v above rat®** will be strictly adhered to. PITTSTON, PA- THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 28,1861. wm'i ** ttn'l n't" ! WHOLE NO. 578. VOLUME XI.-KO. 39. lie fell. 1 b —.. rrr— ' Mr. Hell Mis, how could we have done otherwise than remain neutral ? Bat I maintain that you are not neutral. When you find two bpyq at blows you must not forget that while you do not enter the ring, the more you hurra for Bill the 'stronger it makes him, and the more it discourages Joe. You ch»er one side CohtiBuatly and hiss tbfc othct, and call it neutrality, However, it bos taught America one l*Wt»n— that is,.not to put her trust in princes but t« rely on her own strong arm. It baa opened her eyes to many things, hat none more important than this, namely, that England ujay war with Russia, Frauce and Austria, and all Europe may be, blazing away with the flash of musketry, the clang of armor, and the sound of caunon, without America being affected. But when America, desirous of showing off her military nature, gets up a little sham fight within her own borders in three months' time with a milliotl of Abldiers, fires off a million of rifles, discharges a million of revolvers, and has her artillery booming on every hill—I say, when the American people, in the absence of foreign war, get up a grand review and hill ten thousand traitors oo the Champ* de Mar* of the Potomac, all the world tremblingly atops to gaze, and all the world's commerce becoiuos deranged. Europe may fight, but America cares not. America plays with firearms to keep her hand in and Europe is pale for (car, for it has come to pass that the commerce of the United States with Europe sums up each year one hwttdreki millions of pottnde tterkng lD Stop this commerce for twelve months and millions here are thrown oqt of-employment. Even my friend, Mr. Wood, will feel it, in the absence of orders from the ship yards of the north. 1 have listened with eaxneatness to the bpld words of Mr. Morse. I meet him to-night for the first time, and I congratulate our people, at last, at having a live Jonsul to represent them in London. We have had enough of dead men. His Union sentiments are refreshing. Now we shall have no more treason-hatching in the American Consulate! of England. His predecessor wbs baying muskets all the time—so was it at Liverpool, and so waa it with tbo Pari* Embassy—the flog was outraged, the consqls and the miuiUors are 5tylty of high treason and should suffer the oom of traitors. Jtfo man dared to speak out qnti) the Russian Ambassador arrived. 1 endorse every word of Cassius M. Clay, and wish all our representatives w«r« equally nntinnal f I say I welcome our new consnf, and' give hi1™ a cordial ehake of the hand'ever his brave, bold words for the landl love; and you, too, my' eloquent friend from Georgia— whttec name shall tiotgbitfto the papers, for I would not hdve your children who remain in' the State suffer for yoUr love for the Union-*you, too, we welcome for your honest defense of tba natiotv Jfo» have asteoisbed many present by your fapbic description of affairs in thC? south. knew it must be so; I knew that the southern Country was full ol Union men, who will spring around the flag the moment our forces land it) Savannah! Secession in your part of the country is fashionable; no wonder the fair southern ladies are enraged; for all their crinoline was used np long1 ag?, and they do not make it in the sooth, rf' How ean thty be out of fashion? Theybelieved that Mrs. Davis Would hold levees ia Washington; they believed that Mr. Walker would,raise the traitor's .{lag on 'he capital j but the truth breaks upou them, what a sensation of shame Awaits them; for it must be a terrible thing to realize that they have been the Wives and daughters and sisters who have made red so many battle fields. It lodks to me, I am sorry td atiy, tho' the rebellion was nearly dead—the war nearly over, I want it" to last another year. I want Europe and England to know us better, and another year's war will explain our Strength. ** I have a CpolioyCW my own. Away With free trade these distracted days. Lot England bare her own laws let America have hers. You may not agree with me—few people do—but nevertheless I have opinions, and will express them, even « the distinguished archangel who got put out of Court on a .memorable occaslou had his carriage at the door. Here is my platform: Take Japan and Chin»for a model; that is, live a few year? by ourselves—clap an export duty on our Cotton and tobacco, and double the Morrill tariff. Destroy the port of Charleston— make a Sebastopol of it* forts and block up iu channels, and givo Beaufort or Savannah «U its commerce. Partition the State and iuk-blot her name out of the mag.— Build the Pacific railroad and establish a line of bwift steamers between San Franoiseo and China. Make New New, the stock market of the world. Establish military schools ; have a decent army—-jj' looks respectable when you want a review. Augment the.natfy, and give Spain a hammering for her impudence in landing in St. Dumingo. Wait till she. gets into Mexico, under tho guarantee of France and England, and gets the military roads built; thon let the northern and southern army C;loae up and take Cuba as a dependency, and oarry out the Monroe doctrine. We wunt moro room. We are getting cramped and crowded, and we oust have an outlet far. the rush of emigrants that will pour into the country when we declare Put a discriminating duty on, shutting out English goods, if England continues to aide with, the rebel*, i M «l ,.i I Don't get alarmed, gentlemen, you know it is all fun- (Loud laughter.) You know you call me eoeeutrio, and I must keep up the illusion. England has slept in the middle of the bed long enough 1. Tho times are ohanging. Tho npeek on the horizon is already bigger than an ox-cart, i Tho firet of freo opinions h*Te becnsaouU The Late Ool. Baker—Almost a Pro* phecy. I CARDS. racBSLAinaouB. GEO. W. BBA1NERD % CO., , GROCERS, tOS Murray, n««r Wm» GEO. W. BBAltfERD, \ HEW YOUR. DAVID BELDBN } From tl»* Cincinnati Commercial. THtt gwkKTf Lrrfrrad ma.N, DIINMU M HI erican question. England's sympathies are with, and have been with the south, not out of hate to the north, but because she wished to see us break in two. When a man is very ill it is, to say the least of it, bad taste order fH your mourning, for perhaps he may get well again, arid how surprised he would be to see the notices of his death which were prepared. England's neutrality consists in standing on the platform and cheering the rebels on. Read the secession organs of the Country. Secession organs, did I say? There are no others save the Daily News, the Star, the Liverpool Post, and two M three more journals—the rest all have flags flying and cannon* booming to stimulate treason on to murder. The press leads the way. The Cabinet would declare war at once if it dared; and I am not sure but what the Mexican intervention is war in disguise.— Read the speeches of members of Parliament to their constituents. You find them secession to the backbone. Is there any question about Lindsay's language, or Captain Jarvis, or Bulwer Lytico 1 I like Bulwer for bis fraakneqf and his honesty. He is no hypocrite He talks as he thinks, and say* that he hopes tb« country will not only break up in two, but in four pieoes 1 It is already too powerful and iu growth should be checked. England's neutrality consists in giving all her sympathy to the rebels. SnppoSe yon and I, Mr. Chairman, were friendsof forty years' acquaintance, and some night on the highway a burglar tries to assassinate yott after having stolen your money, would you not think it almost out of the pale of humatiity in this civilized age to have me remain neutral ? or, what is worso, to hear me cheer tho thief on in his bloody work T— (Chairman—It is not a fair analogy ) Analogy or not, that is Engl .nd's position today towurd America. Ere many months you may have revolution in this garden island—tho revolution that arises from a starving population—for is thcro not unmistakable signs of a corn famine in Ireland and a cotton famine in England?— Suppose such to happen, and class should be arrayed against class, would you not think it damnable for-America to join the rebels, and cry lustily for the destruction of this proud nation, as England is continuing to cry for America's ruin r Here ore the facts I wish to make known. The south has always been the eirtrtiy of England; as the north has Bfcfti her friend. Every actxif btostility has fcflianated from that quarter. Look along our history's page. W hat was the Nori-intcrcoursc' act previous to the lust war hut a southern institution ? Was not the embargo act and the war of 1812 itself a southern institution ? The whole north was against it, aud the Hartford conventionitcs, to this day,.are subjects of derision by the southerners for the sympathy New England showed for Old England. What Was the high Tariff act, the twenty-five cent a yard duty on cotton, of 1816, but a southern institution t All Now England voted against Mr. Calhoun's American system. It was the same in 1820 and but the south having pissed their high tariff, the nortt showed its enterprise by putting up eotton mills, und it was not for some years after (1828) that the north voted for protection. Then Mr. Calhoun, in 1S82, wanted to kill the bantling he had created in 1816, und because he could not succeed, started his hell-lDorn nullification cry, which' was so summarily stopped by General Jackson. What was the Mexican wur but a southern institution to get new slave lands ? W bat were the filibustering expeditions against Cpba but southern institutions? Where did Lowest hail from ? where Walker? Where did Lynch law, the bowie knife, and the duelist originate but in the south ? Is not repudiation purely a southern iDStitotion ? Who wus it that showed their sympathies against England in the Russian war but the entire democratic party, which for forty year* has been a southern institution ? The whigs werp with Eogland, but the democrats cheered the Russian arms. These are ull southern institutions, and certainly negro slavery is not an institution of thg uorth. Where, then, does England fiud sympathy wiih the damned traitors in this hell-born conspiracy? Was it the north or the south who sent the contributions to Ireland in their distress? Was it the north or the south who put the flags »t half-mast on tho death of Havelock? and tell me, gentlemen, who received the son of your Queen with open arms, but the proud children of our northern country ? Boiling over with good will to we took the prfnoe and embraced him, because we loved this old land' und its mighty associations. We loved to mix our history and lose it even in yours. NVe loved your Christian Queen, and showed all these thing* in the warm and honest reception we gave her son. All this war in the north, but when be crossed the border into th« slave country, he hastened away quickly for fear of repeated insult 1 Yea, gentlemen, it was iu the capital of the socalled confederate 8tates, Richmond, that the Prince of Wales feared the action of the mob, und saw for the first time that he was not welcome in the land where onoe his ancestors ruled. Knowinc, then, that all these acta of violence aud hostility against England came from the south, you cat} imagine the disgust of the ntDrtn at reading the Times day after d-»y, and the Telegraph, the Herald, the Chronicle, and nearly all the entire British press, encouraging the rebels on in their unehriatiau work 1 England baa mado a mistake—a fatal mistake. To make sure that I an) not in the wrong, I am preparing a book of opinions of' the press—extract* from i speeches of members of Parliament and the Ministry, which will prove the hostility of England against the Federal Power. I daring in Europe for nearly fifteen years. Poor Poland is in sackcloth and ashes!— Hungary sleeps swakingly, and will shortly spring upon the enemy's camp, when Capreras chief will land in Venice. France groans under a disordered commerce and a diseased finance. Europe has enough to look after with troubling herseffwith America. Let America lock her gate* fqr a while—"eeonomise—bay so foreign fabrics —lire within herself—manufacture her own cotton, and take the profit we have so long given to England. Our strength is shown by this contest. Six hours of such rebellion would hare .changed a dynssty in France; six deys in Austria, or Prussia, or Spain. Six weeks without a Ministry would capsize the English Constitution,but after six months of preparation America begins to shoW her strength. It was a clever move of the President in this great national game of chess to give up Fort Sumter—always give away a castle to cheokmate your opponent. The Cabinet have done nobly—Seward upheld our foreign relations, and proved himself the man wo knew he was. So has Chase—and Welles, with his five hundred ships of war, urmed to'the teeth; and Cameron, too, with his half a million of fighting men.— ! don't belieVe in the reports of corruption ib the departments; they are circulated bv rebel spies and enemies of the country. I bavo faith in 8eward and Cameron, and Welles and Chase, and know the President is an honest man. I like; the Strong measures of the Administration. In times like these one cannot do things too firmly. Act first and apologise afterwards—strain a point in the Constitution, if necessary, to save a nation—over with the spies—down with the traitorous women —down with the vile hoards who infest the country with their treason—macadamize Fort Laftyette with the best bones of the land if they have crystalized into patricides. muK Wheft the lamented Col. E. D. Baker was in Congress, in a debate in Committee of the Whole, ho was assailed afc a foreigner by Mr. Venable, of North Carolina, a Democratic partizan. Below is the reply which he made at the time, in which he seems to have foreshadowed the present unhappy conflict in which the country is engaged, as well as his own brave defence of his country and her Constitution and flag. The extract will bo read with interest by many if his friends and admirers: "1 have bared my bosom to the battle on the Northwestern frontier in my youth and on the Southwestern frontier in my —" hood. 1 have earned somewhat of the good will of my country. In the councils of my State for a period of ten consecutive yean, and in her service here, my constituents have confided in my devotion to their interests and my attachment to the Union.i I have only to say, that if the time should come when disunion should rule the hour, and discord is to reign supreme, I shall' again be ready to give the best blood in my veins to my country's oause. I shall be prepared to meet all antagonists with lance in rest, to do battle in every land defense of the Constitution of my country, which I have sworn to support, to the last extremity, sgainst disunionists and all its enemies, whether of tho South or the North —to meet them everywhere, at aH times, with speech or hand, with word or blow, until thought or being shall be mine no longer. OTrTOSsBrmwo*.1 PA — HBNBY HUFFOED, Proprietor. H. -H i. AT LAW.—•f- U, ftc. hi th. Jhitlar House, Main Street, 1'ittason. J»n- 28' 1859' VitROMB O. MILLRB.—ATCOHKBY AT CJD ."LAW. OflSco im :U« CJ»urt II«u»e, Wilk*s- Iktfre. Penna. . / Now while the (oldieri are fighting our battles, Each at hii po«t to 3o all that he can, Down among rebalaaml einttfcband ehatlels, What are you Cioiag, my pweet little man ? All the brave boya under canvass are Sleeping, ' A1Fof them presflng to mar«h with the van, i Far from tbe home where their aweothearU are weeping; What are you waiting for, my aweot little man 1 B. SMITH, IMPORTER Of SranVies, SUmrs, (Sins, No. 191 Wait Street, l door »bovo boons St, March T, 18«1. **1?! G. fa tOftS RtCHARDB.-ATTORNEY AT LAW. »|"C(JWVEYANnKH. and NOT ART PUBLIC, Ocileotioni promptly to. Offtco—One C•»—»"w l" 1 Ton with the terrible warlike mustache*, • Fit for a colonel, or Ohi*f ofaolas, You with the waist made for iword belt and Where art' your shoulder rtrapa, sweet litt'e man 1 'C J. K. * E. B. PLACE. WHOLESALE GROCERS, -do xaw and Collection Offlo*. /~y go ROB B. KULF, Mtomer at Law,—Office C T in the Court House, (Register's Office,; Zn,rL [Dec. 13T1880. 529 No. 30 BROAD Street, Bring him the buttonleia garment of woman, Cover hit face, lest it freckle ana tan ; Muster the Apron-String Guards on the common, That is the corps for tha sweet little man. CM«, W.„ yoRK FLETCHER PLACE. Sewing. Mm. PAVIE9 having procured » serwing taackino, it »ow urepared to do family s«*mz and atitchiui of all Itindi. at »hort notice, in Stunner's new brick, iccond floor. Fab. 15, 18M.—tf. Give him for escort a file of young misses, Each of tbem armed with a deadly rattan ; They shall defend him from laughter and hisaes Aimed by low boys at the sweet little man. A" the td mnidena about him shall cluster, Pluck the while feathers from bopnet and ft*, Make him a plume like a turkey-wing duater, That is the creel for a awoet little ou. Mantuamaking. MMBR3. DAVIS would respectfully *-i*H the attention M Ml# Ladios of l'i«»ton ahd vicinity to her large vurioty vf wont approved Sew l'aterna Just received ftorn "Cow York. Particular attention paid to the cuttlnKand rlttingehlldeenlt eloches. Mantilla*. (Jfoaks and Dresses cut, fitted and made on short not too. Plae* of bturitieB*, In Cfopt. Stunner's New llriok building. i'liird "toryt ii Plttston, Apr- *», ««». CB. DECK. M. D.—DENTIST, issasssssfc H.ujire. East Side, Wllkrt-Barre, Penna. DBly !», ly. - UUY YOUR GOODS AT THE C1IEAP CASH H Store bf Clark and Oranahan, Main street, Pitwton Penna. , . -4Phey kave a full assortment of all kinda fll merchandise constantly on hand. Jilly n. 1.S60, •au5 3u J; 1 lUiit- H" i1 *—" 11 1 111" 0, but the Apron String Guards are the fellows ! Drilling each day since oor trouble* began, "Handle your walking sticks 1" -Shoulder untbrellaa!"That is the style for the sweet little man. S) OBE8T BADE.—BOOK BINDER. NORTH V East corner of Public Square and Main-at ilkes'oarre, Picture Frames,Common0Dlt and Mahogany, ornamented and pTain. matte to order, of any else. Job Binding neatly executed. A largo selection of ooinmon and fine pictures. Albums. Blank books, Stationery, Novels, Ac., always on hand. Juhe It, 1843. Have we a nation to saV®? In the first plaee ' Saving ourselves is the seneible plan: Surely the spot whero there's shooting '• the worst place Where I can standi saya the aweet little man. l~v Jl. C. R. GORMAN having resumed the I • orac-ice of lUa profession, respectfully ten- niTlervlcei to the people of Pitt.ton and CI./U' at the EAGLE HOTEL will receive prompt attention night or day. fitlston, July 24, Mt»l. tf '» » A ; S. — ' Plttiton Banery. TH15 staff ofllfe la floodBread, krtd 1 would respectfully inform the citizen* ol I'lftsto* and vijinity,that I always keep the g«tuiii»- article on hand tor aale, with all kinds ol onwk ers, pies, cakes. &c. Families and parties supplied with evetythlog In his line, on stuut notice,and on reatDonali1e terms. My establish mens Is opposite Jacob's store on Maln-at. FRANKBRANDKNBUUU • H: . • . ; : : ,j , Catch me confiding mv person with strangers! Think how the cowardly Bull Runners ran! In the brlgado of the Stay at Home Rangers Marches my aorps, says the sweet littl* man. Enormous Trade in Breadstuffs.— Curious Calculation.—The trade in breadstuffs at the west this season, remark* a ootemporary, has been enormous, and how • the amount yet remaining is to come forward in a brief month of navigation, is *: subject of lively interest. Of what the, trade in breadstuff has been thus far, some idea may be formed from the fact that at Buffalo the local receipts of grain, and of, flour reduccd to wheat, foot up the enormous aggregate of fifty-two millions 6f buthels. We read the figures without being able to comprehend their immensity. To do so we must resort to illustrative statements. Supposing this vast amount to ba afloat again upon the canal, it would fill 8,666 canal boats, holding 6,000 bushels each ; and these boats, each 100 feet long, and lying stern to stern, would form 164 miles in length! Or supposing all this grain to be thrown into one pile or stored in « „;»AU fci. nf fliirh o rcceptacle would make a column 201 feet square and 1,000 feet high. Or, to put it more practically—suppose it atl to be stor* ed in one warehouse of the ordinary depth and height of street stores, say sixty-five feet from front to rear, and sixty-five feet high, and that warehouse would be fourfifths of a mile long, allowing nothing for partitions, and its contonts would Supply ten millions of people with breadstuff* for one year. This, it will be remembered, is the business of the single port of Buffalo, and the enormous amount, it is estimated, before the end of the season, will be swath led at that point to at least sixty mUlioua of bushels. -rvR. J. A. ROBINSON,—HOMEOPATHIC 1 I Physician and Operative Surgeon, PittstSi, Prf.. respectful! offers his serviees to the peo*1* er Pitlston and its vicinity. ■ K constant supply of Ireah medicines always on 1'K»iiiilrDDR«e«fi(rnliDl»ed or refilled to order. OFFICE insecond Story Capt. Stnrmer » New Brick R«Mlag. Pulsion. May s, lseo.—ly. Such was tho stuff of the Malakoff takers. Such were the soldiers that scaled the RedaU ; Truculent housemands and blood-thirsty Qua- Brave not tho wrath of tho swoet little man. The civil power is nothing when a country is to besaved. dire us martial law— overboard with Habeas Corpus Act, and command obedience with the sword and the gallows. Yes, gentlemen, to put down treason I would put on thC? thumbscrew.— Out with the guilotine—raise the inquisition «nd enforce the law, at whatever oost Of money or men. Break np the printing press—shut the mouth that dares to breathe against the "Army of the Constitution."— Who thinks of saving brush aud comb, sponge and towel, when the house is in flamta ? /Who stops for overooat and carpct-bag tk® »Kip in the breakers l Who thinks of wearing white kids when shells are exploding in the drawing room t Let the Administration save the nation and overlook any little thing may have been omitted. NEW GOODS! Yield him the sidewalk, ye nursery maidens ! Sauvc qui vtui 1 Bridget, and right about, Ann, Fierce as a shirk in a school of menhadens, See him advancing, the swoet little inan I The Wants of the People dnly Considered! D'H. J. M BARRETT.—DBNTI8T. — Office at his residence on Franklin street, oppos it* the Motbodist Cliuroh, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., where lie may hereafter be found at all hour? Dr. B. Inserts Teeth on Gold Mid Silver plate, !(. | aIwj operates in all the branches of Dental Surgery. i» the best manner. A deduction from usual charges sufficient to cover expenses, allowed to persons who eome fcnui a distance April itt, IStW. ly. ■pifE undersigned hsvingjust returned from 111'' head L nt market with one ofthe most extensive stocks dl merchandise ever offered to the people of IDuaerne oiinty would respectfully announce in a few word", to hi* friends and the'public in general, that Ma purchase!, have ticca made Willi a view to tlws wants of the people, I lie Miner and laborer, as well as the elean handed gentleman, or fair lady, liroccrlas and provisions, flour and feed in large supplies always on hand. J. IJ. MCMII^LAN. Odd Feltows' Block. North Side Pittaton. June 14. IMS. When the red flails of the battle field threshers Beat not the continent's wheat from Its bran, While the wind scatters theohaffy secssbers. What will become of oar sweet little man ? When the brown soldiers come back from the borders. How will he look when his Ceatures they scan? liow will he feel when he get* marching orders, Bigucd by his lcdy-love F swoet little man. Ha yd en Brothers, IMPOftTEftS MB DEALERS III Pancy Goods, Yaifkeo Notions, Cigars, &c.. HVW MlbVORX) 3P»- a . , w*. Kivrncx, J»n* H.1VMJ, ||j; ' TIIAVT HATDKSj OJtOBOe BAYDK*. Ituf IS, 1U1. »3tf m Vh ' MANUFACTURER '-fc- Pear not for him, tho1 tharehels aapeet hiaa— Life i« too precious to shorten its spoil; Woman her broomstick will raise to protect bim, Will she nok fight for the sweet little man? 8. STUKKEB, Now, then, three cheers for the Btay-at-Home Blow UUfgTMi fish •** ft* th® bi« P*°' First in the field thai is Cartt»'»t from danger, Tuke your w hi to feather plume, sweet little man. DEAI.BIt IX TJOOTS. 8HOES. T.EATHFRttnd FINDINGS, Slain J3 street. I'nuton. A large anaorunaqt ot Jfrengli tuff Kiu. and Patent Leather iilways on haft if R«]wrinti done with punctuality on ri-alanable terms. CJJ*h paid for all kinds of hides and skins. Jan. 1- »■ Christians bate Iscariot, Romans despise Cataline, Americans loathe the name of Arnold So *111 the southern pirate chieftains in their exile bo marked'with contempt by tfc6 patriots of the Constitution !' Separation is impnasible! Annihilation absurd ! Who. ever heard of twenty millions being annihilated ? Ameiica must change her policy; be more republican, less aristocratic, overcome our mjdesty.and not be tfto religious about furms. America fights with her own men—our solders go to battle for glory, law, liberty—Europeans fight for pav. Ours ia a volunteer army; We have no Hessians of hir?«l battalions. Our thirty million loan, so readily taken by our people, is nothing tolrnat we can do; England spends that sum every year on army and navy. The days of Perry nnd Dcentnr and Paul Jones are to be revived. The fleet* are off—a new set of tactics— take Hatferas. Send back the North Carolina troops! telegraphs the Governor.— Take Savannah,! Send back the Georgia regiments, telegraphs the general in command to Beauregard;—take New Orleans! —send baqktho Louisiana 09Ptingent, and shortly Beauregard is left high and dry without aq army, having reduced Virginia to a desert like a vineyard destroyed by locusts. Whfefce is Beauregard ?—alone, uncared for, forgotten. Where is Davis ?— ill in mind, ill in body, the shattered fVame battling with the diseased brain and the seared eonsoience.. The north flourishes amid the. clash of arms—a tonka rising, bullion increasing, ships launching, factories building, corn.shipping, while the south is Saralyzed, ana England and'the world wonering where it is all to end 1 Why do consols droop day aftoe day unless there is some terrible secret in Downing Streets- Why does France borrow two millions on the Rank of England unless France is about to lead ah army somewhere. Verily the times are changing; and it may turn out that America is not only the richest country, but possesses one-half the common sense, thre«.fourths the enterprise, and seven-eighth* the beauty of the world. M*MTU!«IKING.-Mrs. 8. J. GED- DtS would rasfiactfully inform the ladies of PitUton that she atill continues the business of Ladies' Dressmaking at lur old location, over Lson iait's, opposite Cooper's Hall, and holda herswlf in readiness at all tii*rakDMrve her customers iu tbe best manner. A Bold and Timely Speech. From the London American, The reflecting men of England arc concentrating their thoaphtt on the American question; all classes discuss it, and it is the nenerul theme of conversation wherever tn«n gather together. Each newspaper has its leader*, and eaah member of Parliament has his fling at the "bubble bursting Republic ef.tbe Weal." At a dinner given by Henry Wood, Esq., the large anchor and chain manufacturer ot Birkenhead* at the U'estmin8ter l'aluce Hotel, this all-absorbing sabject, the Amerioan question, Was the feature of tho entertainment. Our Consul, Mr. Morse, made a most eloquent speech. Mr. Bell, tbe builder of the Warrior,' Mr. Gladstone, and a who recently left (Utttlt for hie UnioB sentiments, and aeveral other gentlemen joined in the animated debute between the English, theiSooteb and the Ameriawis;— Mr. George Francia Train, whose strong Union sentiments have ao often been jecofded in theae columns, created sort* «*- eitement'by his «*taok tin England's unmanly coursc in lliia ungodly rebellion, and some ef h» atrictwres were emphutic illy denied' )by some of the geotloitien present—the chairman espeetallyv who asserted that he knew there was the most friendly feeling in thie country towards America. Some eitraotafrom Mr. Train's speech triH show the warmth of- the debate i Wilson, Barnes Se Co.,1 WHOLESALE GROCERS AND Ptodire C'lii istsion Mcr li.kBts. DRESS PATTERNS. • fihe is i a receipt of tho latest patterns for Ladles' Dreaaes and Cloaks, and Children's Clothing and Will avail herself of these advantages in •«rving ker customers. 'i. 5 Fittston, Oct. J, 1*81. ,, ,j .,: AKD E VTKNSIVK DKALEB8 IS T A J. No. 115 WARREN STREET, '' (Third door below Washington Street',) William II. Wilson,. Daniel V.Barnes, -EW YORK A liner C. Kceney, j , " Samuel N. Delano. Sept. 17, 1800. " . ' BOBERT L M L'LFORD, CORTLAND A. SPBAGUE Mulfori & Sprague, 1 PORTERS k WHOLESALE DEALERS IN HARDWARE, PluoJc of the Hoosier Girls —The young ladies of Logawpert, Indiana, at a meeting held oti the 80th of September passed the following resolutions : i_. .t nru_ « ' 1861. FRESH FALL e00DS 1861 RE IB EL, BAWD A CO., IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS OF rORKIOS AXD AMERICAN Resolved, That we deem it Co be the duty of every young unmarried man to «Bt list and fight for the honor of his country, hit flag, and his own reputation. 2. That the young men, in this time of our country's peril, hare but one good cuso for not being a soldier, ana that is cowarilicc. 3. That the young man who now fails to respond to the call of his country, is not worthy the kind regards or the smiles of the young ladies of our native Hooeier State, and that none but ladies of a doubt' ful age will smile on such men. 4. That we will have nothing to do with • young men who refuse to go to the war, and that "Home Guards" must keep their distance. CUT ER Y AND GUNS, ALSO. SOI.E AGEST8 FOR BBOWi * SPEAGUE'S CELEBRATED MINERS' SHOVELS, SCYTHES, A. ES, And EDGE TOOLS, Greenwich Street, near Vesey St., NEW *ORK. pril DRY OOODS, No. 47 North Third Street, PHILADELPHIA, PKNJTA, Would ro»poctftil!y lunte Ifcu attention of Country Merchants to their i ' Large k Well-8«leeted Stack e( Frtih Fall Goodi, w huh they are now r»poi»in« in store. J; Merchants would find It to their advantage to call and examine our stock. May 81, "CO.—CM-17,'M S45yl SE3ITI8T8T.—Tte Citizen* of Fittaton and *iCjinlty will beir'in mind that Dr. A. SB la permanently located here and will be a* hie office with Dr. J. A. Bobinsoa. orer Caf*. flturiuer'a ahee store, near tlic Oazette office, deafly to watt upon all who may require the aid of hie profeaaion. llis acquaintance in town rahderi it unnecessary to say what he can or will d* farther than, try him and if you are not Satisfied return the work and he will charge yon ■MMU&i ■ Work in all its branehea dona on short notice, ««4 charges as reasouaDle as any reputable denote open at all times excepting the first ten daVs ef each month. affirtUa, August li, 1841.—tf . • ;.i.„ PBACTICAIi WATOHKASEBS NORTHEASTERN PENNSYLVANIAI 11- |i -j... v, rM I'iUi .I-' !' !• tl H"* 5. That the young man who has not pluvk ondugh to fight for his country has not the manliness to make a good husband.Mr.' Chairman—Youare an old fridnd of mine, nod knowing me bo well I am surprised that you should call me up o# street railways when Ibe American question is on the table. I admit I am good for a speech on that or any other topio, but feMlight I intiend to sink the ahop and talk the Henate chamber—suffice it to know thut my suooess is complete. I have run the gauntlet, With all kinds of weapons aimed at me, but have psosod ike Manassas (Jap of English conservatism snd introduced a carriage for the people with colors flying and lotd of money still in the treasury. But no rtore of that, let me tslk on America. I thank you, Mr. Wood, and you, gentlemen, for your good wishes for peace, but we want no peace. You say England is with us, I know that she is •gainst us, and has been from the first.— (No, no.) I say yes, yes—and the, question is, how1 niuith plain talking oaoyou stand from a man who loves his wife, his children, and his God, but who loves his country more than all—for a man without a country is unworthy of wife o' children, •lid poor tiod-fbrsaken devil, he had bettor die—and this, gentlemen, is what England has recommended. 6. That wc will marry no man who 1m not been a soldier. i!t 7. That we will not marry until after the war is over; and then Home Guards I ho, never.' T) ESIDEST DElfflST.—"A clean and ill wholesome appearance of the mouth id the strongest letter of recommendation." a Dli J. W KBtJL.BR, Surgeon and Mechanic*! Dentist, haa permanently located io Pitlston and respectfully tenders his professional Services to Artificial Teeth inserted from one to aa entire sett, on Gold, Silver or Vulcanite plates, to look as well a* the natural. Ploase call and examine rfpeeimena of Teeth. Teeth filled with Gold, Tin «r B.»de Filling. All work in the Dental Art ex* eouted with neataess and dispatch. Teeth extracted when desired by the aid of Francis' GaV Mraie Process. The sensation pratfsced by the MUMSge of the current is not painful, it being se adjusted as to be just perceptible to the patient Jf. B.—Persons wishing operations performed at the(T bouses will be wuited upon by leaving their WMrese at hie office. A superior lot of TOOTH POWDER always on to Iter. 0. M. Peek and Steuben Jenkias; Esq., Pitts ton ; aad Dr». E. Shelp and J. M. Wilke«B»rre Office formerly occupied by Dr. Flagg, in Mrs. PbrCmaa's building. CharKes moderate. Ang.«, uuu—a Not ooe person in a thousand estimates the value of newspapers in timea of war. We have heard some peoplo say "what a harvest for the newspapersthey do not take into consideration that the proprietors scarcely get back the money the paper costs on which each issue is printed, and in these times additional expense* an sustained which are seldom inoideni tc times of peace. In auoh timea, too, adver tilting instead of increasing, falla off. ThC very life of a paper is aotuaUy taken awa; and additionalWd' ' "" w V. PETERSEN, PittsUm, Pa. H. Ct A. PETERSEN, Scran ton, Pa. C PETERSEN, Honesdfle, Pa. Nor. 8,1800, REMOYAjL!; Now Located Cor. of Sain k William Street*. Watches aad Jewelry. a sew stock. m/mh JAMES AITKBlf, would respect fully iaform Mb friends and the pablio is general,that he has just replenished his store with a new and extensive assortment of Watehti, Clock.*, & Jeteelry, of all deseriptions. Together with SILVER AND PLA?KD WARE, Combs, Brushes* Pocket Cutlery, lower Vases, aud a thous«nd other articles which Will recommend themselves. They have beefn purchased of the beet manufacturers in the United States, and cannot be surpassed in quali- Mfatehes, (Slocks and Jewtflry repaired at all tlrteS, by the most exp*rie*eea workmen. Thankful for the liberal patronage heretofore enjoyed, a nontfaukuce of same is respectfully solicited. J. A. Oemer of Mala M William Streets. Pittstod.Jtafc«,ims. jj, A LawVUr's T*ick.—A shrewd triek to identify the handwriting oi • suit was resorted to in a taae tried in the Supreme Court a few days ago. A man, his wife and son, made a joint note, al three eir~° their names. When thi going y T- , - - lal burdeus two imposed by the iota came due it woa repudiated, and the iarg6 amount of gratuitous laW that w iolders commenced suit. No difficulty b th(J. publio in wa- of for ras found in regard to the identity of the meeting8( noticeg of variou, societies, millignatureb of husband and son, but no one tory 6mpthieB ct0. Accounts of a pub-. ,ould be obtained to identity the handwri- Uc oharacter aro chargeable in time, of ing of the wife. In this dilemma the The therefore, to-day, »**• soUumI for the holder of the note got an al, donatiBg more in proportion to Ha Hipreea ittonwd enveloped, ft» which he put than any other institution ift t* i subpoena. A boy was sent with this en. landC and withD perfjap,, the leaat apprwri* ralop* and** receipt book to the house of aud the im,Ueat thanks. the lady. The lady fell into the trap, re- j T r , - . ■. oeived the envelope and sinned the receipt jqt An editor out weat who aerredI «m in tbe bqy'a book. When the trial came days on a jury aay§ that be Of Uw on #10 lady did not appear; the boy, how, that It is hard work for bi» to keep from ever, produoed the book, and the siuna- cheating ererbody. tures being oompared. tliey were found the ' , . .. gamct, 4nd a verdict rendered again* all tW Med of narrow waya are Ml_« »• three—if. r. Barrett. « narrow way weommended in tbe fllWe. JUST IMPORTED FROM THE ar-.nl MANUFACTURERS. England's neutrality hsa already cost five thousand lives She has made a great mistake, and three months hence she will acknowledge it. Will you let use speak tty mind r Wow I beg of you, gentlemen, not to get .slotted when I tell you a fow startling fkcta to prove how unwise, i how ungenerous, how dangerous has beou I England's »o-c*lled neutrality on the Am- f f\ Crates «f the Water Lily Pattern White A V Stone Ware, the first importation and the only new pattera in market Call aad see, and you will be pleased. CHAS. LAW * CO. Aprffll, IWl. ATOTftEfeall whom it »*v concern. Tho subscriber takes this method to' Inform thodte who have unsettled aeeourits with him'(hat they must call snd settle the same within thirty days from.this date, or oe.t will ■ndaan i To Hotel Keepers. PPCICXTION8 attd BONDS fer TAVERN •' OFFICE. Pp£. so( lie?. - Wtf Oct. 22,1861.—3^ |
Tags
Add tags for Pittston Gazette and Luzerne Anthracite Journal
Comments
Post a Comment for Pittston Gazette and Luzerne Anthracite Journal