Valley of the Shadow
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Advertisements, columns 1-3; news items from Washington, column 5

Flood in the Susquehanna--$1,000,000 Worth of Logs Adrift

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Wanton Destruction of Property

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Union ticket, column 1; report of the Republican convention in Massachusetts, column 1; advertisements, columns 4 and 5

The Union Ticket

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Full Text of Article

Every patriot, every local citizen and every lover of good Government, should support the Union ticket. The situation in which our country was placed imperatively demanded that party strife should cease until the storm which threatened the very existence of our Government, had passed and we were assured that we had a Government to be transmitted to our children. It was an act of magnanimity on the part of Republicans, so far as the spoils of office were concerned, to propose and adopt the Union policy. Yet any other action on their part, at such a time, would have been utterly unworthy the character of a patriotic people. They rose above all selfish feelings and with them, a noble band of their fellow-citizens of the Democratic party and formed a ticket of the very best material: a ticket on which the Democratic party was fully and fairly represented. Democrats in other days were proud to vote for such men as James Nill, John Rowe and D. K. Wunderilch. These men have all been nominated and supported by their party for important offices at different times, and have but recently discharged the duty of their respective offices to the entire satisfaction of their party. But what gave them a peculiar fitness for the position assigned them on the Union ticket was their energetic support of the Union cause, both in word and action. We hold, then, that a ticket so formed, at a time so critical, should have been supported by men of all parties. This Union policy should have superceded [sic] the necesity [sic] of any party ticket. What, if some of the Democratic nominees had never been nominated? Is it so important to the community or the country that the loyalty of such men as Augustus Duncan, Christian D. Lesher or Dr. Wm. H. Boyle should be endorsed, on a ticket which of course will be defeated, by a party action? We hope good and loyal Democrats will join us in supporting and electing men whose loyalty "is seen and read of all men."

Judge

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Fatal Mistake Near Fall's Church, Virginia

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Page Description:

Advertisements, columns 4 and 5

Religious

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Left

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To Take Command

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Not True

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"Camp Slifer"

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Excerpt:

"All the tents have been pitched, and 'Slifer' appears more like a camp than it did, in times past."

Errata of the Chambersburg "Times"

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Excerpt:

"It has not been our custom heretofore, to parade ourselves before the community as a literary critic; but on the lex talionis principle, we would kindly assist the great man of the Times in entertaining the public in that way."

Stockings

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List of Jurors

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Marriages

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Deaths

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Page 4
Page Description:

Prices current, column 1; advertisements, columns 1-5