TILE JOURNA Coudersport. Pa. Wednesdity. Feb. 6, 18 IL W. itdALARNEY, /° NEWS ITEMS. The Burnside expedition set out from Hampton Roads on the 11th and 12th inst: ;" it included more than 125 vessels; proceeding directly to Hattteras, it reseh ed that point of the eoast between the 12th Ind 17th, having been retarded! by Tough weather. It had no sooner. -arriv ed than a succesliou of the_mostlviolent gales kit in,' and made the situatici_of the °fleet hazardous in the extreme. The City of New-York, an American propeller of 574 iiins—went ashore, and was lest -. her crew were sailed; she was laden With a MIS and animuniti3n. The only los of life occurred'on the 15th ; then it was a sad ono; Col. J. W. Allen, of the l 9th cNew-tersey Regiment, with his Surgeon, S. V. Waller, and the mate of the ship Anna E. Thompson, endeavored to pass betweeo two vessels in a boat fur the pun , poiO . of givingassistanee.. The bout was swamped, and they were drowned. Thus oni lases, according to the official state ment of Geo: Burnside, were three lives and of vessel loaded with stores'. We have news of the first importance froui.Savannahovhich, coming as iti does. from rebel sources, may be intensified -considerably, and sell be impheitlY be lieved. It appears that the expedition Which has for some time been fitting out at Port Royal in great secrecy has set out, cleared itself a path around Tybee Island by a new change'', and taken up a posi tion. Where it Commands the Savannah River, and completely cats off all com munication between Fort Pulaski and the City of Savannah. The effect of this, so far aa the fort is concerned, is Merely - toltarve the garrison, bat the Expedi tion is undoubtedly directed against, the City . ; whieh, in spite of the bravado of the Southern' papers, cannot stand a well-or dered attack. The efficiency of the move ment in cutting off communication be tweets the city and the fort was at once shown, for the notorious Com. Tatnali r of whose Mosquito Fleet we hear now and I then; undertook, ,with his entire navy to convoy some vessels with provisions to ' Pulaski. He hes driven back,4efter what the Southern papers call a "battle;" of. forty minutes duration, and seems to have retired with, the cheerful alacrity Which , has. Marked all his movements in retreat.l .:-There appears to be some clashing be tween ..Generals Lane and Hunter.: Ac cording to a dispatch said to have been received at Washington, both. of phero desire to command the expedition seuth ward. hunter calls for $3,00q,000, which Lane says he can do without. The order has been sent to give the eourand , to Gen. Bunter. 4. fierce conflict lately• occurred be tween the Cherokee Indians and th Reb • els r iu whieh the latter were severalltimes defeated ; with great loss. The' Lbutsville Journal says: - "Mrs. Fry, Wife of the gallant. Col. S. S. Fry of the 4th-Kentucky Regiment, received a bitter from Ij:int-nit. on Friday last; from Col. Fry, written after the battle near Somerset, He details in. the letter the Mariner in which lug killed Geo. .Zilieof• fer, which varies somewhat from OM many - statements we have seen. Col: Fry was in the act of leading his regitheet Tinto a charge upon the Mississippians, when • Gen. ZolliCoffer, accompanied by his aid; rede'sup•to him and said : • 'You are not going ,to 'fight your friends, are you ? These. men (pointing to the ississipians,) tire:all yogi. friends.' In the Meantime Zollieoffor's aid fired upon Col. Fry, wounding his horse, from which the ad: , ° mai...died., Col. Fry then turned and fired upon Zollicuffer with fatal effect.— Gen. Zollieoffer evidently labOied under the impression that Col. Fry .was a• rebel nffieur.,. The bturies about the old hairne t:v.:of the twp officers are all 'untrue.— They .had.never tut t before, nor did Col. PS, know the rank of the officer upon whiam.hc,fired,..as the evidences of his rank were covered la.y a cloak which Gen. Zugienffer wore iu baqie." /or Gen. Fremont is still quietly domiciled in Washington. The charges against him and th requests he has made to be Chart martialed have not, so far as can be ascertained, been definitely acted upon by the Government, and therefore, it• is not k'neiwn what eourse will be ,pursued to. ward that gentleman. •.• OUV. Curtin, tbis State Laving already furnished her full quota of troops, asks permission/Ao send eight u regiments nf.infantry and one- of caralrv, now in 'ennsylvania, on an expedition to tlo Southern coast. -Dravo for-the old Key btone,State ! There is great rejoicit among the friends of the Union in entuoky; It tinist prove a severe blowto the rebellion, sod'serve to open the way for our troops to' 'Raster's Tennessee. ~.31r.11ehri-Wilkoff is about to proceed to Aurope on a. confidential mission of diploluatie nature from President Lincoln and )fr. Secretary Seward. • Dishop Ames and the Hog. Hamilton Pfsh - have been appointed Commissoners to Richmond for the paves° of giving their attention to the comfort of the Union prisoners,. Russell, correspondent of the Londtin Times, will, it is said 1 retina Ito Europe Asti in' February, • Trms and 'Wacolnt , . A 'Wash a ington •correspondent of t. , e New York 2'ribune ;states that a v t.,y interesting conversation took place be tween President Lincoln and Gen. J;tu Lane jut before the latter left Washitig -1,3 ton to - lake command Of his Kansas Br g-, ade. The writer says', "I . knew this ill ;wan, hopeful confidenCe in the brew is of thousands whose solicitude and pa ri otic impatience have shAen their fa th ic. the eletfroess - of the Executive heiod; and in the courage of the; hand that i- at the helm.'' .1 There were preient at the time Pr•si dent Lincoln,'Gen. Lane, , Senator POll3B - COmmissioner Dole, 'a few memb•rs of ,the House, and ,a few officers nd clerks from the different ;departmen of Government.. On. turning to leai,e, Gee. Lane sa d : "Nell; Mr. Lineoln, you ltnatv my y ; I shall pursue the policy upon whit. began ? and somebody will get hurt." To which the President replied: "Yes, General, I understand you. And the only difference between you and 'Me i 3, that you are willing to, surrender fUgi- Lives to loye(dwnersiin case they are wil ling to return ; while do not believe 11w anited States Vovel l :n tfient has cry rlsd(to give , thent. Ili in: any ease. • And if. i bad, the People trotild not yermi us to exercise it." • . . r r Cien. Lane rejoined : Presidents “ i That remark, mr. . makes : happier than anything that has, trans pt re9i since . the cuMmencement of 'e w..tr.i And if you will . at 'nounce thaws the pctice pOlicy of the Administrat on, arid let us sin one victory on it, you be the most popular -wall ever on co ntinent." Felix K. Zollicoffer. Felix K. Zollicoker, ;General of the southern, inSurgents i , who _ fell mortally w otinded at the battle of,Sonierset, Ken t, icky, January 19t4, 1862, was horn of S wins parentage in Mowry county.,Teu. n Issee, May 19: 1812. Ile was a printer b y trade, and edited, when 22 years of a ge, The Columbia; ObServer; iri 1835 ;was made State Print* and in 18.12 lhecame editor of The Nhshville Bariber, then the leading Whig paper in the State. In 1853, 'be was chosen to Con gress as an "American?' served_ three terms with considerable !credit; and was a leading champion of BELL•EvERETT Unionism in 1860. When it became evident that, the tebeilien would gain the upper hand in Teimessee, he plunged into -the current, and has since been a prominent rebel. In September la, he was made a' Brigadier General, ansent into East Tennessee as commander in that department, wbere be did very much to crush out or stifle the hitherto over. whelming •Ijniea senthnent. He Was a man of narrow but acute mind, and of good personal character and habits, whose I early Jacksonian] and ;later Whig,<• r ery ' qurlifled him to exert a powerful uflu. euce in East Tennessee.; ECLIPSES FOR TIIE YEAR 1862.—Ac cording to i l the Almanacs there wi I be five eclipses this year, a's follows : '3. A•trotal eclipse of the moon juSt be fore and after midnight of Jutiu 11th. IToti-1 eclipse begins one hour and seven I minutes after egiuning, and lasts one I hour and three minutes. Total duration. ' three hours and seventeen minutes. ! ' 2. A partial' eclipse of the sun,' June r 1 27, in the 'morning. Invisible in !net ica. but visible in the Indian °cos. . 3. A partial eclipse of the sun, Nov. 21. ltivisiihle in ;America, but son in the great Southern' Ocean. ' 4. A partial eclipse 'p f the sun, Dee. '2O. Invisible in America, but visible in Asia generally. I-- 5. A total eclipse of the moon early on ithe morning of Dec. 6, visible. The !eclipse 'becomes total one hour and nine i minutes after tho; beginning, and lasts I one hour and thirty-two minutes t Total !duration, three hoUrs and forty-nine minutes.• - ,1 At a festival on some occasion among the soldiers in Missouri, one of them from Adrian offered the foll Owing, extravagant sentiment, which is printed, in a 14issou ri.paper : i • "JEFF DAVIS—May, ho be set a oat in ian open boat, without compass or r dder; may that boat and contents be swallowed l'by a shark, and the shark by a whale, the whale in the devil's. belly, and the devil in bell, the door locked and the key lost; and further, may he be chained 'hi' the southwest - corner of hell, and a northeast wind blow ashes in his eyes to all eternity." / - 412. Four of the border states have fulraish eki one half of the army which is now struggling for the perpetuity and the pesos of the nation. These state and the number of troops thus furnish d, are us follows: Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, Indiaana, Total, 334; Tirree• h undred and thirty-fcur, sand four hundred andleighteen me wished by four free border states, m third of that number contributed by Pennsylvania, ,leaving' the othf thirds to be divided among three The Tennessee Senate has inerea Ingo of the tebel s poldiers of that Advicea from Mexico report that the Allies are pleat& dissatisfied with their' ,reception, and itccitse Miramon of decep tion. - Expeeang to find a strong friendly party, they find the population aspne mu against them, and realize that their pretk ent forces lute ~ Im atirely inadequate to the task before them. ' Already an - outbreak, attended with; blOadalied, had taken place bet Ween a Prench and a Spanish regi ment. , , Additional 4dvices from Mexico mate that a reaetiOn lhas taken place among the people, and they are generally coming up to the support of the' Government. This, it is ' presuiuQd, Makes -hostilities more certain so lOug as there is a hostile soldier on Mexican) soil. , [Poor , Mexico! Let our cowry take warning ; by her fate.— Overun byl a' merciless foreign foe. fur the only reason that internal politicians had corrupted her Government, degraded her people and iinsulted foreign ;powers] FRESH MAPLE ' MOLASSES.—A corres pondent of Field 'Notes, gives the follow ing. Maple Molasses well made and put up in cans Tight from the kettle /and her metically sealed, , as you would can and seal fruits,! will ,keep as fresh as when first bulled from the sap, and this is.de cidedly the best i plan for keeping, as when made in calves, if :exposed to the air, it will lose somewhat of the peculiarly delightful flavor for which it is so prized, and is often injuved by insects. All this is obviatedi by canning while hot. To many families who do not make on a large scale,is need be but little expense, as the cads!; that have been emptied through the winter can be used.until au tumn fruit demand them again. Put! up your best in this way. Where large quantities are Made fur market, the buy ers must select and can for themselves. - Lincoln is the sixteenth Itresidept, who has occupied the Presidential. Chair ot this Republic ReoublicJ Of this nuinbr only four survive, viz: Mar tin Van Buren, Millard Fillmore. Frank lin Pierce uid James -Buchanan. -Mr. Van Bure i the senior, in age, being eit , hty yeiMs old. It is twenty-one years since he left the Presidential office ; and a whole generation of men have passed off the stage of action since that event. TENNESSEE.-'Mr. Ethridge, Clerk •of the House of Representatives, has. re- turned frem Kentucky without having been able to reach home in Tennessee to attend the funeral bf his father. He brings back, .hoirever, cheering intelli gence thai the Union feeling in his State "is not dead,' but slecpeth," and that when our hrueies roll away the secession stone frem the sepulchre, it will appear in a glorieus resarrection. THE TRENT AFFAIR IN RUSSIA.- The Russian government is pushing to its legitimate couchrdous the victory gained to the commerce' of nations by the posi- tion in which• we placed England in the Trent affair. It calls upon the Cabinet of St.'Janie to give to the world solemn guarrantees that'it will be baund for the future by (the principles which:it has it self, contrary to the precedents previously established by it, .enforced. REBEL Loss CF GEN ERAL OFFICERS. —Since the breaking out or the rebel• lion, the Southern Confederacy have lost the following :mined rebel Generals : David Twiggs, resigned. " " Henry B. Jackson, resigned. " , " Robert S. Garnett, killed. 'W. H. T. Walker, resigned. '• " Barnard E. Lee, killed. " . " pid6on J. Pillow, resigned. "' " 'Phomag T. Fountleroy, resigned. John B. Grayson, died. " " Felix K. Zollieoffer, killed. • " " Philip St. Georgo Cocke, committed suicide. By late southern news we learn that General Beaurecard hus been relieved of his coin tilting on the Potomac and sent to Kentuck i p ti; assist in the• defence of-Co lumbus. 7 He will be sub Ordinate there to no one except General Albeit Sydney Johnston. The reason for thn chanize is not given. Ile will be succeeded at Man lases by General Gustavus W. Smith, es-street! commlssioner of New York, who formerly held the position of captain of, engineers in the regular army of she , Union. , . . LARGE FIRES I'N NEW Youx.—On Saturday evening arid Sunday morning, two large bonded warehouses in Bridge r s L street. is New 17 . ,rk city, were burned. down; tbe lcsses mounung : to about half a million , of 'do ars. Ten other buildings were consume by fire on 'Sunday morn ing, in !Fulton and Pearl :streets; the losses anuouutitig:to upward of' $200,000. 1 , - Resolutions have been intioduced in the •Nlafyland• Legislature, calling upon Senators:Pearce and Kennedy to resign, the ground that their sentiments are in direct opposition to the settled views of the State: Capt.illugh' W. McNeill, of- Warren. has been elected Colonel of the "liucktail lieghnent," in the Potomac Army. The election took place on the 22d inct , and .•- the contest was between . Capt. McNeil and LieUt. Col. Kane, the former defeat ing the latter by 223 votes. 109, 15 77,:44 84, 41 62,0 1 18 18 thou. 13 fur ,nd one alone ; r tno - tates trode l r the instructions of Secretary Chase, one item of $50,000 is save, to the GOeremect by the discharge of some eighty employees in the New York• Cus tom, Holum ed th© I 'State. I A new paper has been started at Oil Cite, Venaago County, by W. It: Johns, entitled the, Oil City Register. 1 OUR Ain't CORRES . P4MENCE. , ' ----' •,' ~' tr. - .., At t- From the. 40th Pettult Re * - /1, ;,-:. • .ii , 1_1: - 1 4/Ascoci. i1itt;'00,662 7 - : '7 MR. gai!itit. !, We hurl biio ,B l l. 1 ,. PliiiS,7 _fingagett in ehangii3equarter4 and veeeiv ing the kind, andi welcome ?attention 'of Paymaster-Jib ertnani:lhat • have ; - :. bees unpble. to write earlier ';eort erning uttr i march from Frederick to Wiflitimpart-vur Hagerstown, and our subsequent arrival at the ludeserted village" o, IlanePek• Inn, "hetter.late than -never?' Leaiing I our camp near Frederick; Mtpday• morn ing, Jan. 6th,- just bercire dayliglit!...sre, were jOined by the:l9th - and '2otli - Neii _York and sth; Ceatleiticaeltiglinentii; ill' belonging to the Brigade . - og Gen. • 1,1 7 i11- , lams. 'Our Regiment 'took the advance.; The snow was about four inches de.cp and l , the weather iery cold:: ThOnen•Were it 3 excellent:spirits end' although 'we ',ltrcid on slippery places;"` the. nketi ' 'marched well and' cheerfully. :- :Altang Pie foci and especially in the pretty f litqe iillages. of Boonsbonit and lenekstown:ei . vie,-,;Were cheered withktvery detuptistsion of boy; alty towards the'Union.,':'-Tile stars , acid stripes floated graceftilli frain , the twin: dows of many dwellingsliti4nranyn fer vent 'wish andltearty God.speed 'was giv en Us. At half-past .fotir oglock in the afternoon we; reached Hagaistown;hait ing mart:lied, a distancit • tit' • twenty:six miles' ;through the snoir,--ithe toes of some heittg entirely exPosed—tind' leav ing but nine stragglers, beind ; a feat ' unparalleled in the history o the present it rebellion. As we entered , ye streets of Hagerstown the band struck np a lively tune, and the men marched •as though , they were just starting on 9 holiday ex- J We halted lathe Public square and were so o n enclosed:in !comfortable quarters. The citizens almost over whelmed us with kindness,l and coffee and sandwiches were', aburrdantly sup plied; after ;Which the ' men ` i Were. given the freedom of the city; I Thp is .a pleas ant and neat. town, quite a 13iIiA •business place. and ever will the :46tb PentAt' re member the • hospitable' 'receiit ion given them, by her generous ' andl benevolent I people. On t Thursday morning at ten o'clock we were again formedevery ntaa:being in hisl place—and started f 4 Williams- I port, !having' been detached from our Brigade and . ordered to report to Col. Leenard of the 13th Massacbusetts, 'act ing Brig.-Gen., where we artived at noon. Distance, seven miles. We k l uartere'd in large open warehouses belowltown of the river banks, remaining there !teal Friday Imorning The men suffered greatly, it being very cold and havin no stoves. Many of the citizens were very kin& On IFriday morning we receiv- t ed the Lvery cheering' news that we Werelsgaiwto join our Brigade, and by' eight/ o'clock we, were . en our way. We marethed steadily and soon' reached a Small - ?laee culled Clear Spring, and starting float :there on Saturday mornirg at an' eatiphoui, Dr. rived in Hancock about three' o'clock, - . ey. It ' I ' just as it began raining sever was nearly an Lour before quarters for the whole Regiment could be ProcUred, by which time all were pretty w;et, our com pany, the "Curtin Rifles," was : , finally quartered in .an Episcopal church con taining a laige stove and other necessa ries to make us coutfortabld The boys soon pritvided themselves with cakes, candies nod other edibles, ad after hay ti ing made a fire they Seemed generally "at home." ' - 1 . .. On Sunday morning rumtirs were cur rent that the Confederates ?mild prob ably wake an attack upon ri f Compa- • Dies' were ordered to stay in q 'afters and . every premonition of "lively I'ti t ties" were -I apparent. ,About noon we Oti 6 ordered to leave, as the enemy. had th stetted to' bombard the town ; stud, retirig in good order, halted on a hill . back t: f, the bat teries of Capt. 'Mathews and. Kihapp, who occupied a, commanding- posttian.. All anxiously awaited. she appear' ceuf the 3 enemy,'but they came not.. After re maining three days in env w again re moved to • town and 'are quer ered in a large unoccupied 'dwelling:ft:34e, which is quite comfortable, there bbilitg a stove in each room, a good kitchen with a cooking-stove and fire place. •I • ' , Considering the' hardships a id' expos ure which 'we have encountered during the pact few `weeks, the Regiment is en joying good health, very few being seri ously ill. t No more tor this tiuie. Yours, , . I SOLDIER. The Hutchinson fatuity, who, under the permission of General Modlellan; re. ceutly commenced singing for tte soldiers in camp in Virginia, have - been ordered away hy Generals Franklin andi Kearney; fur havingdared to sing end of Whittier's noble antislavery scms. 'Thdse Gener als lectured them for their, ] Presump tion, Kearney inforniiiti theca that he "thought just as mach of 'l4ttels'as of AbMitionists " and Franklin expressing the opinion that: the seog was "tticencliary, and ought to be suppressed."ll Are such Generals St to command in' this tear? • , , • It is instructive to observe how the plainness with which the republin jour nals criticise the conduct of the national government, surprisei the leeefine organs, It, was never so when their foi l ks 'were in power. They do not undeietandf it. In the days of Buchanan . ; Pieree, poik, Yeti Burenand Jackson, :all' the, dared do was to approve. Even when loytt stole the, guns and sacked the 'Treftinry they did not dare to open t:h4r headS in die. sent. ' They thought It 'wmild.lhe ever fir( with the republican 'press: iLet them' bye and learn the &it:lei - of - He men. *On .eta permitted to copy followingjte-s from a letter,written - , o friendin. iecuntcfom _vittlitiV* • WO in the '.Bllth If. Y. 7 r - CAMP G0V10PE,44N;46,18r.J,1s - -RattEstn—,-;—ttPautipose i you get-Saco kind -of informatitionhoutriheWar;perli, al - T e nch 'at we' , diiii . 4tit YOU dOn:t; hay ihe ,ftittmers'? is often 'as wiAo. shin' e!. , yarn," eVerY day,l each `DM makes a ,subjeet for specilation with ;Us; fora;short time.] You have no dortbt heard Ottie:Dranesville fight, I have a cousin in the - ,Bucktail' ' Reg't. thinks oue More Mach "skrimrnage" ironic! cteset BUllßten and Ball's Bluff. 43 it — T43 " froth', .Wriihingecin. The Camps and Nita -around? tire 'Make , .it one of the strongest fortified chic's in the worht.'—: The Woodi, havebeen eutdown, and there , is scarce afoot of groUnd but is guarded by some ; gun: , Besides the proper , bat.: series, rifle pits ' preinterspersed so - :as:. to clean the raiinet that are, se , , numettins: All the forts, that 1, ,have: yet seen ar4liti sight of the dome of the - Capitol, which is, the Signalk i tower of the whole. Artny I officers with• their signal flags can trans., mit erdets as . ferias they can See, it Man with! their field glasses. • iThe general, ,is cliarrhcea; some have been' sick who say they' never kneW what it Wu to be sick before. , Oar feed; is as weli' as we`would average at home.. ; , ;The weather has been 'very cold, but in our tents Twit[ our army Stoves we are quit comfortable. The sunall tents are relied by bending nOu square frame of pales and b anki gup or mudding !the cracks like a Po ter. COuntv log house or 'stable. ;Iye have built bunks so we' del not lay on ".thel ground'. yor bcdi we j have cedar boughs and straw to sleeper,. I I have' slept as well on a bed of cedar I boughs .as I. ever did, and sometiines when it was eneagh 'to freeze ice in a canteen close "to my bead. A: A. U . '; ! ,•, • Broiin; thought 'will be Com= pelt d, frOo-1,1 ill to give up his cowcuaud,of Fort Pielieus. ; n 1 I PRICE CURRENT.,,, Corrieted'every IVednesday by P. •41. ST,Ell r BINS* Da i l • Wholesale and Retail • • Dealers in GrOceries and Provisions,. , opposite•D: F. Glassruire's , ! CnUdersport, Pa. • Apples, grew?, push.; $ 31, to; 624 IdO dried; 100 zOO Beans. •! ;/ 00 50, 152 BegSwia, IV., 20 25 . Beer, I , 4 • 5 Berries, dried, re ,quart i '6 1: 1:1i Buckwheat, `.44 B l otter, fib ,th 4 ,1 12 'l5 Cheese, - • Core; bush.i Corn 31eal; pee;c' 7, > j 10 75 1,88 150 Zoo .::t.,- Egg l s, ,doz , , 1 114 Flour, extra,; ,; 19 bbl.', . 650 700 do Scirierfipe [" 1 , 550 6 00' Ennis, 10 lb.i. , 12& •15 Hay; 1 1 3 ton,.; 1 I 550 6 00, Honey, per lb.i . - I ; 10 ; 12i Lard, , ",; I , 10 'l2 Maple Sugar ; _ per ilb., • 8 Pl 2; Oats, ail bush. I .. 25 .I'3o linking, I"' 1 1 • - ' 50 75. Pork''' , o , 6lll. 21 06 23 00 , •• ~ •,do 11 lb., . 10 l3' ,Ido in whole h a g. '.14 lb., 6 ; 7i Potatoes, per bush.: . , , 25 ; I 371 Peaates, dried, V :lb., ' ; I 25 Poultry,; `ifl m, • , 5 : 7 Rye, per bush`., , I ', ' 63 1 75 ~_ Salt, Ifl bbl.;, :. I ; 275 . 3,50 do 1.1 sank,;' I . 15 Trout, per t, hb1.,1 , ; 450 p 00. Wheat, v buHi..l , 100 t 12i White Fist, V - Ibbl., • 450 600 . Eega). and Court, ' - COURT PROCLAELLTION,I, - WEREAS ;the Hen. Robert G. White Presidentjudgerand the -Hons. !b. S. Jerks and G.'"G. Colyin, Associate Judges of lie Court's of ;Dyer It Terminer . and General. jail Deliiery.Quarter Sessious of the Peace, Orphans' Court-and. Court of Common Pleas forithe County of Potter, have issued 'their their Precept, hearing Ante the seventh d ay of .I,annary, iti the year bf our Lord one dine sand eight ;hundred and sixty-one, and to me dimcted,for hel4ing a Court of Oyer and Term iner and General Jail Delivery, Quarter, Spa eions of the Pea e, Orphans' Court, and. Court Of Com Mon Pleak in the Borough of Coiideri- Part, On MONDAY, 'the. 24th day of Feb. 'twit, and to continue one week : • • • I .: I Notic,e is therefore hereby given to the-Cor pners, JuStices . Of the Peace and Constables Withialthe; con*, that they be then and there hi their proper persons, at'lo o'clock A M. of Said day,' with t heir rolls, records, ingnisi dons; examinati ns, and other remembrances,: Ito da;thOse things which; to their :offiees, ai pertain to be4Ori,e.:. And those who are ;bound ,by, 'their; recognizanees to prosecute Ogainst Abe prisonera that are or shall be in thd jail of .sal.tl'e,Ounty of- ot ter„ are to be then and 'there Ao'Proiedtit&ng. lust them as will be just. 5 ' :•• Dlitettat:Qou EitsPorrr, Jan, 15 1861, and the 84th ±ear`of he Indeptudenee of ' the Cnitird 1 . . . !States of Ameri a. - ', , . • . .. ' . !' .' W3l W 3. F BURT, r ff.:.. • Sh er . , Au/Itoes IVOTICE ig herebY given; that thO Under. _OF signed Auditor, appointed by the Court Comnion pleas of Potter. County to•; make distribution'of proeeeds of the 'Sale of real' estate the case ',of D. P.l Reed for-, use.of J.ll 'Smith: Its. G., W. Turner ;of February Terat'lll3s7 No. 34; will attend to the do ties' of hii_ appointment, =at the office'• of - the ProthOnoiarY,.iirC.ouileraport, on Monday the 17th day, of FOruaryilB62, at ,1 e'eloefF, 'P. M. Those,mterested ire hereby notified to attend. 1 , .1:1:-BAICER; Auditor. Jaa. 3t 1863 •• " • Auditor's Notice. , OTlpp is. hereby given, that the un- N - 4eisigpeOlAudieorlppointectl3y the Or fibrins • COurt of Potter County, to mike die tributfon din funds in the hands of the' Ad utinistrattni‘of the estate 'of N. Sehonnanker deceased, wilC attend to the duties oats tip paintutent at the °Mee of,,the Prothonotary, in•CoudetspOrt• an Tuesday . the 18th day, of Fehruery:,lB62,j at 1 O'cloek. P. 'DE Those in tereited!are hereby notified to ntfead and sentibeii, elaitios. j D." BAKER, I ::jitt:rls,.lBt. • .• : ••.11.141it0r.. 1 ' ' :SHERIFF=S SALE& 30 ; 31i:rug of eunctry trrim Yenditionl Fieri Facias tritl'Lor.4l Faris Pooh of Common Plea! of p ut , h);,=fotottg, Peniagicanicti and to me diroi r d r ja ,c4pria — e - io4t 141 k -salt or thaciy, at I the IroairinVirmicripoi4 tai - MONDAY, ts r . 24th 1602, at I Voyuck, jr, 71., the fgt. . latrilist'fleitiilieitirato or parcel! of 14d la fri t j> eettniri Mid of lattil situate in fl o w n "tiliyn.4o 'arid u it liegiiiiiinWirit't.lse South East curneri of J acob Itertd:st-Lbt, thence.Eat4 29. roils to a p ast 04 the 'river bank, thence r the river srouth as , East 10 .r o d 3, , South 44 3 , East 8 rud r , South' 40°, East -32 rods to the South. %rei t cor.ter of John SuritleslLot, thetike'North ft°, Fast along West line of Smith's' Lot oa rods' thenee. : Norrk 4.rods,,thence, West 7 1 3 rods r,, the North East ' twiner :of-Jacob IttiOl's Lot, thence South along East line of: said ltettds lot, 1100.6 rods W the place of begit4irig co t ,. tnlnto 40,7..;Acres, strict Ineastiye, l i ib out Acres of 'ultra arc itnproreil iritit orie Praizie Hotise and one Frain Barn thereon'. Sei 2 ,,i taken in cseUirtion,aml to be sold as the prop erty: of Francis Wad. Also:One lot of land idtaitte -in the instil ship of 17;ysses and village of I..e.wistille.Put ter Co.,:Pa.' Begninhig , iit . . the Soinh • west corner of the •3?. acre, lot conveyed by 0 ; A_ LeWis and Rife, to the pa"ty Of the first par: hereto bY dep*l dated Sept. 9, 1857; being in the Centre - of 'the' highway passing- through Lewisville and.being.aisotiventy-tnie perches. North of. the Sotith west vorher of this lot No : 21', 'conveyed by H. H 'Dent to said 6. A. Lew_ is, Sept. 17„'18.57.i; and the South west corner thereof, 'thence North i° Edit 8 and five-terit» perches", to, a post also in the centre of the highway. thence South .811°, East eleven - and four-tenth pereheS to'n post, thenee: Sou th `ID Wi.St B:aud five-tenth perches to a poSt,beh:g nisei a 'Crimer dekribed in said deed of O. a• Lewis and Wile, thence es by said North 894° west . ll arid four-tenth i,ierches to the place of, beginning; containing 9u and nine tenth perches at land, and being lot No. 1, oe libel division, .of 'Button - Lewis 'party beret‘: w i t h ono-Dwelling House, 1 Store House and Small Barn and Fruit Trees thereon Seized., takini in'exechtion and to be Sold as :he prap.A erty ot ,Elymus thicket and Dan. Baker. Also, it 'certain' lot or - tract , - or hind sitnan3 in Summit Township, Potter. County.. Pa . anti • deseribed as' follOws ; Beginning at rise South east corner qeorge t:yres lu:. thence 'West 43 rods and seven-tenths to the Northeast corner oft he Ross lot. thence Siuth 119irods to a 1)1)0, thence East 93. rod ,. .seven-tenths'to a post Thence North 125 * rods to a post in the South line:of a Jot in pves siori of'Slartin,Watson, thence West sla . todi to ri post 'in the East line 'of the Ayres Is:, thenee South 6il rods to the -place, hegin ing beingprirt of Warrants No. 22t and 2189, tinitaiiiitig .71 and.four-tentlis Acres of Land; aboat ! ls Acres of which is , improved 6 acres choped one small Frame:Shanty or House thereiin. Seized taken in'', execution and sold as the properly of Isaac Catlin. Also. 'a certain - piece or parcel of land site ate in the to;rnship of hector, Potter Co., Beginning at the North east corner of a'lea W Skinner. thence East 138. perches to a post. thence South by the Ltinds . of the ham P.State •129 perches to a Post corner, thence West , to the North line of Stuckter Carr's lot 136-perches to a.post corner. thence North along'the East line of a lot now or Ette Of B. W, Skinner 129 perches to the plnceol l beginning, -containing lit acres and three tenths of sin acre. and being lot No 4 (d the sub'-diYlsion iof the ltingluinr lands in hector towinsllip ntoresaia-nnd part of Witrrant 1187 ; about 25 acres are lemirored, with one Log Honse tlfer-on. Seized taken in. excco r lion And to_ lie sold as the property of W. A. Tanner. Also,‘the following, tract nr paricel of land, beginning at a post on -the South west corner of lot conveyed in Isaaz Ityam, thence South 89.1' East by Soutn litre of saithlut•No. 43 i26i perehes to i post, theitee Snnit, 1' West by West tines of (hits 'rti and 13t; ) and 5-10 perches to a post. thence North sW West by North line of ,lot No. 54. 12t; percla..l to 'a post, thence North by East line of lots Nos. 52 anal 130. perches to the place of beginning, eentaining 9t; and 9-10 acres of land with about 60 acres improved, one Frame Duelling Bause, two Barns and al pie orchard thereon. Situate in UlysSzts. Potter Co„ Ps , and to be Old as the property ofT, E Grid leyi Also the following; described tract or par• eel of ind, viz Situate lying 'and ing in the township of Uswayo, Potter, c'outity, Pie. Beginning : at a post. a corner of lot NP. 84 of the allotment of the lands of the Foe Estate i . u.Oimayo township, thence North 7i.° East by ,la'nd' of N; k 11. & W.' Johnson 17, perches tea. post, thence.. South 20° East by said Johnsons' laudi 21. perch s to a post, thence North 70° East by said Johnsons* faed 6t percheslto it Post,%thence South 2o' Ea=t by said Johnsons' land 15 perches to a pot. thence, North 70 0 'Eost by osaid:Johnsons' land 13 lierehes 'to a post. thence Srittli by said Johnsons: land and land of the .I;inglutte Es tate 72 G-10 perches to a post, thence West by landS.of Samuel P. Lyman .61 perches to a post;thenpe South by said Lymans' lauds 22 perches to a. post„thence . West by lot No. $4 40, perebei to a posi, thence North by said lot No. 84 106 perches to the ,place df beginning. Containing 52 acres be the same More cr less, with the usual allowance of 6. j)er ceut for rpitds, k.c.; being lot No. 71 of the allotment of the land of the Fox Estate in o.i . lyci.,yo town ship, end part of Warrants NOs:1871 and 1872, 2.40 , 14,'35 acres of which is imProved, with one Log House, two Board Shanties, a small . Apple,OrChard, and otherlfruitl Trees there on. Seized. taken in execution and to be, sold as the property of Thomas I'y e. ALSO, The :following describ : ;sil, piece or parcel of land,.viz: situate in, the township of Pike Potter county.. Pa., I)6U - rifled on the north y lands of S. T. Morton, On the edst by lands clf IlunSicker .1 Garlick, on the south by a lot deeded to Joseph Sunderlin; and on the west by lands of Ilunsicker & Garlic, con taining 93 ,and 2-10th acres, be the . same more or lesS, being subdivision ‘ no. - 6 and part of warrant. no 5122; about thirty acres of:which are itoprored, with one'frame hoiise,one frame barn, onei,shingle mill, and some fruit trees thereon. Seized, taken in execution nod to be sold' as` the property ;Of Ward Sawyer. WM..F. BURT, Sker:ff- Jan'. 25; 1862. ~ . , '., Divorce Notice. } MARY A. BL ANCRARD, N0 , .114 Sept. Term ; -:' • ; - -i - s;: . ' - . 3:!•41 - , in .Common GUY, W.* BLANtHARD Pleas of Dert'r Co. ' ;To ; GoY W. Bitinehard Respondentaborc mimed.;' Snbprena aud alias Subpeena in Di vorce having been issued in this case, and re turned .Aribit.' You are hereby , notified, thnt the , Court of - Gorninon-Pleas aforesaid hate fixed Monday the 24th , day of Febroary next, for hearing - the application of the,:iaid. Mars 'A. Ilianchard fora Divorce froni`yonfat which time eind.place yon raay.attend andironke de fence if you think prober.' : WM:F. BURT. • Jan. 22; 18G2.., :.. . . , Sheriff. . . :TAYNE'S F.4.JULY 31ElapfICES sale #l, siElfBiSS
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