Valley of the Shadow
Page 1

Lincoln's Denial of Constitutional Right

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Lincoln's Political Record

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Henry D. Foster

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Biography of Lincoln

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Page 2

Speech of Mr. Benjamin

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Advertisements

Senator Benjamin's speech

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Page 4

Railroad to Gettysburg

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The Baltimore Convention

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General Jackson

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Going to Baltimore

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Judge Douglas

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Douglas in New York

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Page 5

Railroad

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Excerpt:

"This we say is a common sense view of the matter--men of wealth are not likely to invest their money unless they have well grounded assurances of it yielding a profit."

Full Text of Article

--As a Railroad spirit has been awakened since the convention in Harrisburg on the 23rd ult., and a deep interest seems to pervade the public mind, would it not be advisable for the citizens of Chambersburg and county of Franklin to profit by the remarks made by Mr. Shriver, of New York, in the aforesaid Railroad Convention, viz: "convince the New Yorkers by subscribing liberally to the road and then proving that if made it would be a profitable investment and all the balance of the stock necessary to make the road can easily be raised in Wall street."

This we say is a common sense view of the matter--men of wealth are not likely to invest their money unless they have well grounded assurances of it yielding a profit. If we, as citizens of Franklin county, go on this principle, it will not be either a duty or a principle with us to try and convince either the capitalists of New York or Philadelphia that this road would be profitable to either of them, as the interests of New York are no benefit to us, but directly the reverse, by drawing the trade from the west and north-west of this county and the counties of Fulton, Bedford, Somerset and west of the last named entirely from us, reaching the Sasquehanna six or eight miles above Harrisburg, connecting with the New York Dauphin Railroad. As regards Philadelphia we are already connected with her, and if she chooses to let New York take the untold wealth of Pennsylvania's western counties with her, so be it, let her abide the consequences. But as regards Baltimore we stand in a very different position;

Accident on the Franklin Railroad

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Blind Horse in a Confectionery Store

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Mail to Waynesboro

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Grand Opening

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Sabbath School Celebration

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First in the Field

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Malicious Mischief

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Hope Fire Company

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Sale of Personal Property

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Firemen's Parade

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Mormon Life

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Street Preaching

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Large Eel

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Letter from Utah

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Married

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Deaths

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Deaths

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Clubs! Clubs! Clubs!: White Men Must Rule America

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Page 6
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Advertisements

Page 7
Page Description:

Advertisements, including agricultural machinery.

Summer Arrangement: Cumberland Valley Railroad

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Page 8
Page Description:

Market information from Chambersburg, Philadelphia, and Baltimore; advertisements; legal notices; foreign news.