§lt»mu iribwic. !' ASTOGNA, PA. 4, ms. Ihk Qtnwndi? Sbttleo—-By reference loa deewoDiof Provost Marshal General Fry, published in another column, it will seen thatthePresident has ordered that “ every dtieen who has paid the $3OO commutation shall receive the same credit therefor as if he had furnished a substi tute, and was exfaoneratOd from military service for the time for which he was drafted, toyrit: for three years.” [This,then, settles the question as to whether a man who has been drafted and paid his $3OO is lialde .to be dtpfied a second time, ere the three yaarajhave expired. We ;have al ways been of the opinion that the pay ment of $BOO exempted a man for the time -for which he was drafted, but as there was considerable dispute on the point we did notVcare tomix in, as argn ments amounted to noticing, and we felt sure that we should soon have a decision from headquarters in reference to the matter. Those wbohave paid their $3OO, but were still trembling in their boots, lest the sth of January draft should catch them again, may now sleep soundly. WThe mjlitia force of the Northern States is pat down by the Washington Chronicle at 3,000,000, or that many males between the ages of 20 and 45, however, to a deduction for exempts. The enrolled militia of Pennsylvania are as one to six of the total population. This pro portion would give 400,000 of men be tween the ages of 18 and 45, This, .in a call for half a million of men, would take one in eight liable to militia duty. The rebels keep proclaiming that they; will ex haust the North and end the war for want of material to cany it on. But the. work of exhausting, as these facts show, will use the rebellion up, taking its own fight ing popnlation into account, before they have gone half ,through with it. ' The Govkbmob’s Peoclamation. —We publish to-day a proclamation issued by Governor Curtin, in which he earnestly calls .upon the people of Pennsylvania to enlist in the service of the United States, so that the quota of our State may be made up before the fifth of January, and a draft avoided. The qnpta of the State is 38, 268. Feterans who enlist will, receive $4OB bounty, and one month’s advance pay; others than veterans will receive one month’s pay in advance, and $302 bounty. Information can be obtained from the pro vost Marshals of the various districts. It is earnestly hoped that the. Governor’s call will bepramptly responded to. Thakkbgitiko P. CurtinhaSissued a proclamation setting apart the last Thursday of November as a day of thanksgiving. This day having been selected by Resident asa national thftwlragfging day, we presume it will be observed as snob in all die loyal States. A number of Governprs have already named it in tteir,prpfilamation, and urged iteob«rrance.Nodouhtthe citizens of Pennsylvania will abstain from all labor on said day, and unite in a general, gdyingfor the numerous blessings that have beepbestpwed upon us as a people. Nw 'SVfcfK Ewscnos I .—Special defl patcheeto ; the. Pittsburgh Commercial an aoonoe that the New York election has gone in favor of the Union party. In three wards in New Tori: City the Union increase is seventeen hundred, < From 25,Q00 tp £o,QOp:jnfyoritjt is claimed by tta Uu*mp make M " ; themqf i ty the light of; •rente nor tnupiring: •■M—rfnr Oar mo* nine* Doth Mn l»coor*7 ha Ugh eaacrataUtfaau. i ssm&i&SLis ■' in HcStwSS* ! W MrmrdlM b«wlll IlftwatonaantgiaMy. jfewelfriv SSHltsrfSifes I 'i:- »wt» *«>»*a»o«*» oooT«*i«m *»» flpiMUy OTftjd, Md ptofc oraia. to : ssttgs%&ar*‘ , *? : - ■‘ ■•' HffPM* rale* eo’ Ctynw?* Better front “ Augustus Sontag J Oor trip over tie Erieß. R.—Getting Of) stairs at tie St. Nicholas i tftel —Going op thcßadsoa I Viftw West Point Calliope music and the echoes. -1 ■ 4rc.,iix. ■' 1 Catskbu. Modbtain House, Oct., 18®. With deep regret tnj bid “good bye” to the tm equoled scenery, variety and realities ofNiagara, to seek new objects of 4terSt along the Erie Rail road, the “Hudson,* the “Catskills,”and the hills of “ Ulster.” We left Hu Halo by the morning train, for JJew York city, and had a delightful trip. The New York and Erie Railroad is a com fortable route, andtbe scenery cannot be sur passed, especially on tfaht portion of the route pas sing over the “ Gennessee Falls’?. Its conductors are gentlemen of the “ first water,” especially Mr. Harris, who is a “ Budget of Ftm” that need not be published oftenand, i who, in passing’ through bis train bestows a pleasant smile upon every at tention paid, winning the admiration of all his pas sengers. We were sorry when he left iis at twelve o’clock, midnight, and; we were ushered into the noisy and bustling streets of Gotham. Coming to New York just now is something like going to ►Newport, Saratoga, or any other fashionable water ing places during the heighth of “the season," When yon may count yourself lucky if yon Imve the first week’s chance-to sleep under the dining tables, trusting that the second week yon will be promoted and “git up, stairs.” We got figures placed in front pfour names that would, decidedly, be a caution to the gentleman who “viewed from Fisgah’s heighth the promised land.” Little Blossom’ remarked- “that the dav was very fine, ’ and was somewhat anxious to know what kind of weather they i had down in New York.— But her reverie was soon interrupted by the en trance of a Frenchman from Belfast— bearing upon his shoulders the “North River trunk,” ip which “Blossom” was soon—by die aid of a step-ladder —emerged, and in pursuit of—we don’t know yvhat. We are informed that die bt. Nicholas Hotel actually clears $lOO,OOO a year! But while theses speculations have been indulged in, the fog of the morning had cleared away, and the prospect of a “golden day” on the “Hudson” river grows brigther; so my dear reader we invite i you logo with ns on board the elegant boat “Dan iel Drew” andspend the day skimming over the j beautiful and picturesque “Hudson.” We have now passed Fort Lee, of the Picnicks, and Fort Washington of the Bennetts, and the grand old s palisades throw out every chink and crany of their bold, square summits to the cloud-shad owed sun. Here a range of rocky pinnacles' lie in a dnsk al most like night, and there a group have caught the fall glow of the sun and stand warm and yel-, low under view. The frees on their tops look like stunted shrubbery, and the houses iat their (feet nestle down close to the Water as if the rocks be hind them were a terror that at any moment might topple over and they would then be obliged to take to the softer element for protection. Little “ Blos som” brings into requisition the opera-glass with which she used to scan Medon at the opera, and— oh, fie, that such budding lips should tell such ter rible stories’—declares that she can see them cooking the late breakfast in one of the houses, detect |he sputtering of the griddle-cake and see an old woman shelling::the podded green peas, in one ofthe coiners, for;dinner! TJhen there is a shuddering reference to the Reindeer and Henry Clay cajgpity, and a quick glance at the remains' of thelittle dock at “ Ypnkers,” and a thought how the church scorns and tiwafrs the Theatre, as the nunnery on the beigtjis is seen frowning .down upon Forests belittled .and abandoned castle.— Then we sweep on and on, the sunlight growing brighter and brighter and the river widening to wards “Haverstraw Bay,” while pleasant groups of persons, who have never met itefore, gather at the port side of the steadier and exchange notes of travel, banting up intimacy throngh an ppera-glass meanwhile; and the harp, (when the landings are not in sight) and the caliope—which makes a. little better mnsic than its twin sister on Lake Erie—is kept in requisition, keeping little “Blos som” all the while humming over snatches of fa-' vorite operas and fragments of pet ballads. There are but few boats on this river, though occasion ally a cumbrously-loaded lumber sloop will sweep i by, throwing back the reverberatioas of our wheels from her deformity of cargo, and at still larger in tervals, one of the tallrpiped river tow-boate will, conie laboring down surrounded by such a swarm; of barges and canal boats clinging to her that she seems to be temporarily in the rebel ma king a raid into the floating commerce of the ca nals and the Hudson, and conveying “ away down South to Dixie” everything that can be eaten, or worn, or burned. And here comes the Highlands, little “Blossom”—the Rhine and clifisof America, one of the noblest and -grandest passes of rivers through mountains thait the geography will show yon in many a long day of study.- They have; been looming up darkly before us for the last hour ; —now we are at their feet and beginning to thread the tortuous course of the Rock Gate of the North. Look to the left and see that low, comical knoll, scarcely too large for one of the humpbacked rocks of tfae Alleghenies, and covered with stunted herb age and shrnbbery, a white dwarf light-house and straggling groups of arbor >itte. Not much to charm the eye or command attention, in the view, ! and yet the sudden start which little “Blossom” gives when the magic word is uttered, has been shared in by many a thousand of those who love the history of our, nation's birth; for this is “ Stony Point,” and no nobler work of valor was ever done, oven at Monterey! Cfaapultepec, Roanoke- Island, Pair Oaks, Fredericksburg, or that glori ous fight on the Pennsyjvania hills near Gettys burg,* from which the shrieks and groans of tor ;ture have scarcely yet ceased to go np to Heaven than ope dark and stormy night of .the Revolu tion saw, frhen Mad, Anthony Wayne and'his handful of men scrambled np those slippery rocks under a plunging fire and made themselves doubly immortal; Now weareipthe midstoftbe “High lands” proper, with the rocky giants enclosing us aronnd op every side and that sensation growing upon evdry - passenger which has so often been commented upon, and yet so difficult to describe. Were I a Macatdey I would write volumes upon this scene to hand down to the coming generations. Were I a Boms or a Btyon I would weave son nets to its {anise that Italy or-Switzerland would covet. The old remark is beard over and over again,, “.that there cannot be a passage through these mountains,” and that the little steamer rpnst intend to make a tunnel borer of herself and go plowing throngh the side of some one of them.— To the left and ahead lies “Cro' Nest,” with the shadow lying warm in its bosom. On either hapd, to the right and the left, rise Breakneck and But ler hills'; while farther on to the right is the bold front of St, Anthony's nolm, with a turned np pro pensity in the saint's nasal organ, which seems to have increased with years and may be induced by disgust, at the condition of national affairs genet ally. A Utile farther in the middle of the “ Horse-Race" the tunnel of the Hudson Kircr Road showing like a gigantic rat hole rhroiigh the base of a sharp ion.—Gov. ,cl(ff ahead, to the right, and the hoc kg round totheleft fading away into first glimpses of the faraway hills of “Orange." And sec I—to mate the resemblance to an old painting we once seen more perfect, at this moment a sloop ««l a schooner working slowly up the river drop info the exact position there indicated, and a train at the railroad—a la “nona sigma"—that his been snort injg and puffing for half an hour at the different stations below, dashes into view, gives a shriek, a roar and a rattle, which may be intended for defi ance to any kind of moving body that cannot go any faster than a steamboat—then plunges into ■the tunnel and disappears, throwing out a long wreath of smoke that comes’ whirling back and floats, tangled in the trees, up the side of the moun tain. And now “West Point” comes into view, and the first glimpse is eagerly sought after by some of the voyagers who have never before as cended the Hudson, and that wonderful opera-glass win great demand to catch better glimpses from a distance of that ruined line of sloping, cream-col ored wall with the sharp corners, grown up inside with arbor vita;, which crowns the hills far ahead and to the left. Then the new castle of tne giant Spairowgrass breaks into view, saucily crowning a height where it seems to hang over the river, and looking very much, loan observant . possenger, as if )t might be an extensive summer hotel, kept bv a tasty wine merchant with literary tendeficies.— Behind it and farther on stands a cluster of brown buildings, one' of them surmounted bv a dome, and tripi roads sweeping up towards them from the river. This is the West Point Military Acad emy, a name, so intimately connected with the military glory of our countiy that little “Blossom” reddens with anger and pats her foot ominouslr, aiid Sontng has a serious intention of making' a fool of himself by throwing somebody into the riyer, -when a thin young man, with simdv mous tache, on a short leave of absence, intimates that “ West Point and the officers it raisesare nllhum bngs. ’ The remark may be true, perhaps, but if there is any greater humbug in nature than the fact of that young man being in personal existence at all, some of us have failed to make the discov ery. Anoft, we sheer sharply in to the left, almost under the overhanging “ Cozzens,” and approach the little dark, that lies at the foot of the steep toad that comes down from the Military Academy. A few loiterers, one or two in military undress are on the wharf, and two or three stages, labeled for “Roes” and “Cozzens” are waiting to toil up with visitors who wish to sojourn in a military at mosphore. Now it is that we first begin to dis cover what the Calliope is made for, as the dragoon Gen. Hamey did what was the use of his long, gang ling trooper when he sent him out lt is especially designed as company through the “ High lands.” Two or three times, while: coming up through the “Horse Race,” it has given fitful and temporary sqneals; but now when approaching the dock and while lying at it to land and receive pas sengers, it shouts and bellows awav with an energy - worthy of its antique namesake. The steamer lies immediately against the bank, her twin pipes so near to the verdore-clad, perpendicular cliff that the branches of the trees almost sway; upon them and the organist peals out wild snatches of melodv of even-description, varying from the “ miserere” to the “Devil’s Dream.” and to each such a reply is made in echo that all previous experiences of re verberations grow to be trifles. The notes rattle against the rocks, and peal through the branches, and tangle among one another as if t|tey had the leap with which they are representepted 'on the mqsical scale, and go oft into wild, truant absences among the higher crags, and come hustling and shouting back again like so many school bovs, and play altogether snch fanatical musical' tricks that little “Blossom,” v/bo has had years of fun with the echoes among the Cove mountains, finds a qew sensation here, albeit there is ohlv one rep etition of each note—claps her hands in delight and begs to be taken immediately to ‘Woodbury, without waiting for the steamboat, so that she and Sadie Kiny can commence carricattiring the new discovery upon the piano. Then the musician ceases any attempt at playing and merely runs up and down the scale, pausing an instant between each cluster of notes to allow the echo to be heard and there is no more entanglement of : confusion’ hut every remembered sound in the universe, from the, hunters horn to the wail of the funeral trum pet.and the ringing of choir music through the great trees of the backwoods or the' columned aisles of old St Clements, is heard in a perfection that only Echo Lake can pretend to rival. The last trunk is on board and the steamer swings away from the dock, and is once mote ;in motion. The Calliope ceases ejecting music discursively and plays a connected melody. Bnt—shades of all the : departed heroes of all the American wars! what is it that the* Calliope plays under thfe eaves of the Military Academy? Nothing more and nothing less than “When this Crnel War is Over,” at which fairy “Blossom” ponts, and con siders the melody a reflection on “West Point” and the war for the Union, and marks down the musician Us a more o» less intriguant copperhead, according to sex. She has occasion to notice an other striking incongruity in the management of the instrument, when high up the river it bellows ont:“ Rock me to sleep Mother” in such anUn reasonable burst of melodies as would waken all the babies—to say nothing about the whining of curt—within twenty miles radios, instead of sooth ing one to slumber, whereupon she recalls her opinion of the invisible musician, and sets him or her—down as merely a severe satirist who vents rough reflections, that might be cruel in words, through the more harmless medium of the pipes of a steam-organ. And speaking of “ Bock me to sleep Mother,’’'that almost comes to us like a rev elation when we think how tenderly our mother cared for Us. We thank “Florence Percy” who Wrote this song—and whose wedded life has been so bright and brief—for this noble effusion of sen timent. Ah, well! sculptors were hqrn todie and poetesses to grieve, or neither w’ouid become im mortal. A short run across “ Tappan Bay” or more , properly “Tappan Z,” then a stop at Newbnrg, that “city set upon a hill,” looking up the steep street of which “Blossom” remarks that she never before knew the blessing of being something else ■ than a dray-horse, while a corpulent chap over on the . other side of tlie boat remarked that “ he once got the best dinner and ale the best fjrange county butter there that he ever tasted fn bis life,” and Sontag makes a mental note that someof the cars standing on a parallel to'the river have the letter ing of the Erie Bail way, which have a branch ex tending to tin's point. We cross the;“Tappan” and the river narrows, and the brown hills of “Ul ster” loom to the left while Poughkeepsie sits en throned on the lulls of Duchess to the right—that partiof the town which is visible from the steam boat-landing, seems to be written ail over with magjc words, similar to what we were brongt in contact with on “Goat Island.” A few minutes afterwards we round “Crumb Elbow,” a bold, rocky point extending into the river on the left, when—what is that- long blue line, “ Blossom" that long bine line, irregular in heighth, and im palpable ns the clouds in substance, laying far away on the west of the river, and seeming to still event voice as one after another of the passengers catch it and realize what the vision must be. That loom is the Catskil) Mountains forty miles away—a beautiful and yet stately presence that i haunted some of us in by-gone years, like some ; thing divinely awful, - looking down on the errors and vices of humanity and forbidding the hand .when lifted in vice or violence. A few miles fur ther and the line becomes less misty and indistinct. The dim bine surface becomes flecked and broken ! hf, shimmering Indications of foliage and the .duskier spots made by deep ravines. Then, with ith’e aid of the inevitable opera-glass, and at length •with the naked eye, a white speck is seen two thirds up the height and relieved against the north-. ernmost mountain of the range. It broadens rap idly ns we near it, and soon the naked eye can .trace; the sharp outlines of roof and of corner and even of the heavy white columns that stud the front, ;■ This is the Catskill Mountain House, and not ojdy ope of the most elevated of the resorts of pleasure seekers on this continent, but a monument W taste and enterprise. And we halt here fur a 1 few Honrs, so ad ien for to-day, j < AUGUSTUS SOSTAG. Attempted Insurrection in Ohio. Cincinnati, Nov. I. — An extraordinary case of treason has recently come to light, implicating •everal persons in thist city, Columbus, Covington l and Newport, in conspiring to release the prisoners ; at Camp Chase and overthrow the SUte Gorern ( mem. The conspiracy was brought to light by United State detectives, who were supposed by the * parties implicated to be spies from the Rebel army, and ttcrc treated with full confidence. The plot, ns disclosed to the detectives, w that an attack was to be made on Camp Chase, release the prisoners confined, 3500 in number, to seise the arsenal at Columbus, take possession of the Penitentiary, release John Morgan and other officers confined there, and then to commence the Rebel campaign in Ohio. United States Marshal Sands and Provost Mar shal Major Heaney, arrested the following priso ners, implicated in the plot:—phas. W. H. Cath cart, of Columbus, formerly School Commissoi|er of Ohio; J. D. Crossop, of Columbus, formerly sut ler, Eighteenth Regulars, who were to lead in the attack on Camp Chase; James D. Patton, of Covington, regular agent of the Rebel Govern ment, who famished money to the detectives un der the impression that they were, spies and according to the agreement were to' meet Oath cart and others at Camp Chase, and to mature the plan of attack on Camp Chase ; Ruth McDonald, of Covington, who acted as mail carrier through the Rebel lines, and whose house was the bead-quarters of the Rebels; Samuel P. Thomas, a merchant tailor of Cincinnati, and his wife, and Catharine Pannenter, of Cincinnati. Information has been obtained that an organiza tion exists in Illinois, awaiting the out break in Ohio, to procure similar results in that State. Mrs. Parmenter was. a washerwoman at the United States barracks in Newport, and a go between of the prisoners and outside emissaries. The detectives gained her confidence and that of Mrs. McDonald and became parties to their plans. They all m e ® freqently at Thomas* house.— Thomas furnished money to buy axes and chloro form to release the prisoners, and furnished a disguise to the detective who traveled between the Coiambus and Cincinnati confederates. He vis ited Columbus frequently and conferred with Cathcart and others there, and was in conference with him when arrested. The plpn of release at Camp Chase was as follows: When the ‘prisoners saw a beacon light at a certain point, they should be ready. The guard would be shot by, their out pide friends, and axes would be thrown' over to them. Once out, with axes and arms provided, they were to storm the Penitentiary, release Mor gan and the other officers, and strike for the Ohio river and cross near Maysville. Cathcart was to go along, receiving a commission in the Rebel armv for his reward. 1 Cathcart was arrested at Rev. Sabin Hough's house. Hough is the secessionist to whom Vai landigham wrote in 1861 that “ the Union was hopelessly divided.” Cathcart was from Dayton and one of Vallandigham’s particular friends and admirers. Wild as the scheme is, there seems to be abun dant evidence that it was to have been tried a week ago; but the plans miscarred them. Other arrests are to be made. It is not known how ex tensive the organization for this infernal business was. A Proclamation, Whereas, The President of the United States, by Proclamation, bearing date on the Seventeenth day of Oct. inst., has called for THREE HUN DRED THOUSAND VOLUNTEERS, to re cruit the regiments now in the field from the respective States; And whereas, By information received this day, the quota of the State of Penn sylvania under said call is declared to be THIR TY-EIGHT THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED AND SIXTY-EIGHT MEN, (38,268;) And whereas ; The President, in his said Proclamation, requests the Governors of the respective States to assist in raising the .force thus required : Now, Therefore, I, ANDREW G. CURTIN, Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, do earnestly call on the good and loyal freemen of the Commonwealth, to enlist in the sendee of the United States, under the Proclamation afore said, so that the quota may be made tip before the Fifth day of January next, on winch day the President announces that a draft will commence for any deficiency that may then exist in the same. ' . The freemen of Pennsylvania enlisting under this call will be attatcfaed to regiments from this State. All who are willing 19 enlist are requested to present themselves at once; for that purpose, to the United States Provost Marshal, recruiting and mustering offices, in the respective cities,' towns and counties. They will rdeeive the following sums as allowance,pay, premium and bounty, viz : To every recruit who is a veteran volunteer, as defined in General Orders of the War Depart ment of June 25, 1863, No.. 191, for recruiting veteran volunteers, one month’s pay in advance, and a bounty aud premium amounting to $402.. To all other recruits, nth veterans, accepted and enlisted as required in existing Orders, one month’s pay in advance, and in addition a bounty and premium amounting to $302. Any further information desired can be ob tained from the Provost Marshals of the respect ive districts. In making this appeal to the good and loyal freemen of Pennsylvania, 1 feel entire confidence that it will be effectually responded to. The ap proaching expiration of the term of enlistment of the men now in the held renders it necessary to replenish our regiments. Let hs maintain the glory which their valor and conduct have reflected on the Commonwealth, anil let our people show, by their promptness and alacrity on this occasion, that they have not abated in courage or love of country, or in the determination-that the unholy rebellion, already stunned and staggering, shall be utterly crushed and extinguished. Given under my hand and the Great Seal of the State, at Harrisburg, this twenty eighth day .of October, in the year of l. s. our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, and of the Common wealth the eighty-eight. By the Governor: ‘ A. G CURTIN. En Slifeb, Secretary of the Commonwealth. Andrew Johnson’s Views.— The New York World’s Nashville correspondent says: ✓ “ At a meeting held at the Capitol on Satunlay evening last, to congratulate on the Republican election in the North, Gov. Johnson spoke of the freedom of Tennessee in the future. He adduced many facta to disprove the assertion that slavery was necessary to the culture of cotton and sugar, and advocated the policy of leasing or letting out in small leaseholds the extensive plantations on the lower Mississippi. Hedilated upon the fine natural advantages of Tennessee and remarked that ‘ the war would contribute to purge- the State of the great curse of slavery, and throw its borders open to the immigration which free labor invites.’ He regained the defeat of Vallandighan as a ‘ national 1 blessing,’ and concluded with advocating a more vigorous prosecution of the war, so that a perma nent peace might be entered upon within the earn ing year.” How They Pass their The.- I The rebel prisoners nt Port Lookout pass their time in bar tering with each other. This traffic is significant only as to the comparative value of the United States and Confederate money, the prices of small articles being among them s'cents in greenbacks or $2.50 Confederate script. 6ne of the prisoners having erected a mud-briek chimney for an officer charged $3O in Confederate money for the job’ but willingly compromised for 50 cents in United States currency. They sell everything they have, even the shirts and clothing which are furnished buying tobacco principally with the proceeds. They also buy Confederate money of each other, undone sergeant has thus accumulated $lB,OOO of Jeff. Davis’s currency ’ Important Deeiaion Relative to the ‘ Draft- HOSTRT'FKR'S WAsbinc.tom. Nov. I. CEtEBBATED fSiSVf** ** 4 * /w ‘STOIM APU The representation* madebv Dean Richmond j A VJr iTji x3L V_>i X X i and Peter Cagger, in a printed circular dated Oct.) - 1 -^ 1 j 27th, 1863, in respect to the action of the Frovuet i~S I 1| : 1 1 I-?. R i Marshal General, arenntrne. it is nut true that! • • | the State of New York is charged with a deficiency I for every citizen who has paid the three hundred ! dollars commncation money receiving no credit ) therefor. On the eomrary.'lhe (state receives the same credit for a man who has paid couunuta | tion. as if the drafted citizen, had gone in person j or furnished a substitute, and in like planner : towns which have raised the money to pay their j quotas, receive the same credit as if actual substi tutes had been furnished; and'the President has ordered that evety citizen who has paid the three hundred dollars commutation shall receive the same credit therefor as if he Had famished a sub stitute and was exonerated from the military ser vice for the time for which he • was drafted, to wit: for three years. As the misrepresentations of Dean Kicbmond and Peter Cagger have been published and circulated, therefore it is proper that you give them immediate correction. (Signed) JAMES B. FRY. . Provost Marshal General. » WS~ The ravages caused by the war in Ten nessee are thus graphically described:—‘i There is a portion of this State so devastated by the civil war as to be practically abandoned by the foot of man; - The men are slumbering at Shiloh, Corinth and Stone Hiver; the servants have gained th'eir freedom; the women and children have fled to more retired precincts. Falling in behind the retiring footsteps of humanity come the four-footed beasts and creeping things, The fox mokes his burrow under the ruined dwellings where a happv people once dwelt. The serpent crawls under the floor of the church and the school-house.' The squirrel chatters and builds his nest upon the lo cust trees in the old yard, once noisy with the mirth of children. The gum is rotting in the cool spring—the partridge whistles from the ridge-pole of the cabin. The wild bee seeks a storehouse for his honey, fearless of detection by the human eye. All is returning to a state of nature. What a monument of the ravages of war.” tar A handsome young lady,' named Pauline Coshjman, said to be a member of the secret army police, stopped a few days at New Haven last week. She has had adventures of the most varied and exciting description. She has crossed the army lines on several occasions, has been in. Rich mond two or three times, once as a prisoner ; has visited Nashville, Chattanooga and Huntsville, Alabama; was once taken prisoner by John Mor gan, and advertised to be hung in Nashville as a Federal spy, from all of which perils she escaped by singular cunning, daring and courage. She is an adept ot drawing, and has frequently obtained sketches of the enemy’s works. The Match between Heenan and Kino foe $lO,OOO. —This event is creating extraordinary in terest in sporting circles, the like of which can onlv be found during the anticipated “ mill” between Heenan and Sayers. At jattersall’s (London,) about two weeks since, a bet was made on Heenan of $3,000 to $2,000 and taken. The sixteenth deposit of $250 was made at Jemmy Walsh's, in the Borouli; the seventeenth, of s2sof was to be made on Thursday last, at Hariy Dime's, Shore ditch, It is the intention of Heenan's friends to give him a complimentary benefit before he goes into strict training at Newmarket. * Going to Russia.—The Philadelphia ledger says it is authoritatively that J. Edger Thomson, Esq., President of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, now in New York city, Will in a few days embark for Russia with his family, where it is said he goes to fulfill an appointment tendered to him by the Russan /Government, through their Minister at Washington. . The position is similar in its character to the one he now holds on the Pennsylvania Railroad. Col. Thonas A. Scott will be the acting president of the Company, ad interim. . WT The principal summits of the White Moun tains are now covered with snow. Persons who ascended, after the first fall of snow, says the Bos ton Transcript, were richly repaid for their trouble by the magnificent views obtained, and by the striking contrast between the glittering snow on the mountains and the brilliancy of the autumn landscape spread out beneath and around them. An elderly female of an unprepossessing appearance recently applied for “ her rights" at the Bow street police office, London. She said that before he wedded Alexandria, the Prince <*f Wales had married her; that she lived with him two days; and that the Government had promised her compensation, which she could'not get. It was “funny” insanity. _*3*The supply of poultry and game in New York markets, just now is very large, but prices, like the prices of almost everything else, are reach ing a beautiful altitude. Turkeys are quoted at 19@Mc ¥ lb; chickens 18c.; ducks, 18@20c; partndges, $1,12 per pair; quails, $3 per dozen woodcock, 62@75c. per pair. Stewart, the New York merchant prince, will sell $30,000,000 of goods this year.' The September, sales of cloths for men’s wear alone were $700,000; and for the last year in that department alone will be from six to seven mil lions. MRS. KING’S SELECT SCHOOL iy-oJ H; u In the Lutheran Church in West Al toona, on MONDAY, OCTOBER 19th. 1 ** Tuition from $4 to *6 per term of 12 weeks. oSMIMa" P&lntiDE “ d Embtoider * «««* T OTS FOR SALE.—The undersigned in LOGAVTOWN, offer, a P ?.°f t fe m J r “ follows, to wit:—tots Noe. 2 3 n D . d wif Noe. 1 and 4 in Block C; No. 3 to Block SJ a *8 in Block F. Also, the following half, lota, No. 1, Block A; Nos. 4, S, 6. and 7;\Block B;i Nos. 6 e, 7 and 8, Block C; Noe. 1, 2,3, 4, fi, 8,, 7 and 8 Block K 1 N05.4,5,6,7,8,13and 14, BlockP: Noe. I, f1,’7,12, is’ VMI iS-Ts s : 7 NO *,; I' JfA u > l2 •“4 W, Black “ • „ 3 ' !• *’.?' A 7 an d 8, Block I; Noe. 1 2; 3 4 s li 7 i2 8, 14 % V 16 ’ ir& K lod ls'm&T ’ k *’**■ *’ - 3 ’ 4 ’ 6. 7. 8. 12 . 811 "“P*? J n bOGANTOWN, adjoining Altoo na. andore very desirable for persons wishing to pnrehase. fording eligible sites tor building, and wilf g be oßmihr sale on reasonable terms. As Altoona is improving. nd are cnnBta ntly increasing inralne and will in time become Quite valuable ■ * ■ ' ■ • *■ pW MW Oct. 14, ’63-lm. - MAHOAIIKT B. MOWRV, . AVOID THE NEXT~ DRAFT» T HERE IS a PBBVAILING'ifiX. «a t «o' with their beloved ones, for their rapport, than to risk their lives Jo thin bloody war. \bw to iirinw »ho » Street, East Altoona, kept by GUIS A CO., they will SAVE THE THREE HUNDRED they are «lUng for Cash « the lo"«t liS/S ’ lhl< * I aV« g ® “■»;“»“* -® f LADIES’ COATSWDCinCD- L 455 s * In from $4.50 to $12.00. ’ i., V The attention of the public U particularly drawn ts* aua " e U«8 MnTna rro.L 0 l 4 8 s tolS t o a, cn?s a, pTy 8 ar f ™ m ‘° 25 ■ ** Assscsajrsa NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that a heretofore raistlng betwserr John Riß^n l u-k 11 2.^ 08 tj5 i,^ R vV* n,lck ' soto devisee of Roman Riebenark, deceased, has tbu day been mutually dissolved , A p '' r * on " •“'''UK claims against the “25 rtih“sA *° John Sohmldt ftr settlement, hVn ’' h “ mtliebo °k> and papers of thefirmwiU be found, ■bt the old stand on Julia Street, Altoona, ’ JOHN SCHMIDT, .lOSBPHINE RIEBKNACK Sept, 1", IStl'l, A pure and powerful IVmie, eorrrctire sad «it» r «ti„. r. woudcrfal efficacy In iHseaw of the STOMACH, LIVER AN® BOWELS. Core. Dr.pep.te, Liver Complaint, Debility. Nervousness, Depreadon of Spirits, r.. u ,ti ntiou, Colic. Intermittent torn, Cnunp. Spasms, .nit an Complaint. of either Sex arising from Bodily Wsakness. whether inherent in' the ayetom or prodnceii • by special cum*. Noinuro that is not wholesome, cental and metornlre in it. nature enter, into the composition ofHOSTBTTKRs STOMACH BITTRE|. This popular preparation contain, no mineral of any kind; no deadly botanical element „„ fiery excitant; bnt H is a combination of the extract, of rare baUamic herbajand plant. with'the pnreu ami niilu . Mt of all diffusive stfmalaoU. in. well to be forearmed against disease, and, so &r a» the human system can be. protected by human mean, against maladies engendered by an unwholenome atmo ■phere, impure waterand other external causes HOSTPT Tiai-8 STOMACH BITTERS may be relied in as . « f l guard. • In districts iniecfcd with fiver m d Ag tie, it ha. been fonnd infallible as a preventive and irresistible as a reme dy, and thousands who resort to it under apprehension ~i an attack, escape the scourge; and thousands who neg|„., to avail themselves of it. protective qualities in advance are cured by a very brWf course of this marvelous medi Fever and Ague patients, after being plied with quinine fcr months'ln vain, .until fislrly saturated with that dangerous alkaloid, are not oofrequently restored n. health within a few days ,by the use of HOSTETTRR’s BITTERS. The weak stomach U rapidly invigorated and the App. “t*- reetored by thia agrMable Tonic, and hence it worka wondera in caaee of prmvsiA and in leas confirmed form, oflroiounos. Acting as e gentle and painiew appertain as well at upon the Bmr, It also Invariably relieve. Dm Constipation anperipdocod by irregular action of the di gestlve and «ecrctir«organs. Persons of feeble habit, liable to JVenwns dttocfar. Uncnem 0/ Spirit! and Fit, of Languor, find prompt and perms nent relief from Uie Bltters. The testimony on thi. polm is most conclusive, and from both sexes. The agony of Bouous Couc is immediately assuaged by a single dose of the stimulant, and by occasiofially resort ing to It. the return of. the complaint may be prevented As a General Tonic, HOSTBTTEH’S BITTERS pro. ce effects which must :be experienced or wituesmtd fcSre they cau be fully appointed. In cases of CmutUutivmn Weakntu, Premature Decay and Debility and Decrepi tude arising from Old Aox, it exercises the electric inllu. encc. In the convalescent stages of all diseases it oper ates ttjj a delightful invigorant. When the powers of na ture are relaxed, it operates to re-entorre and rwatui. lisb it. Lust, but not least, It is The only Safe Stimulant, bein. manufactured from Sound and innocuous materials, and entirely tiff from tips acid elements present more or 1,,, in all the ordinary tonics and stomachic, of the day. N o family medicine has been so universally, and, it may bo truly added,' tUxervedly popular with the intelligent portion of the community, as HOSTETTBH’S BITTERS Prepared by HOSTETTRR i SMITH, Pittsburgh, Va. Sold by all Druggists, Grocers and Storekeeper, every where. HELMBOLD’S Genuine Preparations COMPOUND FLUID EXTRACT BUCIIU, a Positive pud Speed Remedy for diseases of the Bladder, Kidney. Gravel and Dropsical Swellings. This Medicine increases the power of Digestion, and ex citesthe Absorbents: into healthy action, by which the Watery or Csicereon* depositions, and ail Unnatural En largements are reduced, as well as Pain and Inflammation. HELMBOLD’S EXTRACT BUCHU. For Weakness arising from Excesses, Habits of Dissina tion. Learly Indiscretion of Abuse, attended with the fob lowing symptoms- Indisposition to Exertion, Loaa fc-asr 1 ' : tvi-sss , ~.wssS Universal Lassitude of the Muscular System, Hot Hands, Flushing of the Body, Dryness of the Skin Eruptions on the Face. Pallid Countenance. cin T e h if •**""**» K° which tbl. me.ll oine invariably removes, soon follows htipouncg, thtuitg, JCptleptic FUt; !n one of which the Patient may expire. thl” not followed by “ INSANITY AND CONSUMPTION.” Many are aware of the cause of their suffering. SOT MOSX WILL COKFESS THE BXOOXbS 0» TBS UllajlX ASILCKS. * aa ” etu *U DeaUuby Qmtumption beer ample wit nessto the Truth of the assertion. " Tlte Qmttitutum ones affeetedmih Organic Hkalwco. of M,dlclne "> lnvigorate tahM nEUTOouj I a EXTRACT BDCHC inrartabiy A Triai wul eoßvlDco thamoßt skeptical. FEMALES—IhEMALES^-FEMALES. /»many Affectiont peculiar to limaitt the Exrairv Boobu is by any other remedy, as in Chlorosis «*«hollon, lr regiilitfty, PalafUlnoaA, or Suppression of SSB22 SS « Ws.°SS«d« froni In DECLINBOB CHANGE OF UKK. Medicine. »»*»■ SECRET DISEASES Lltni ~ ™ L : ru At little Expense. Little or no change to Diet. No inconvenience, r* __ . ’ • Andnt* Exposure. **** ** VM strength to Uri- Be “°; lD K Obstructions, Preventing and ®*fs*" res the Urethra, allaying Pain and Inflam gte» I “.the class of dte«ses,«nd expelling ZKkoml findtwmoui Hotter. JJJJWM-'nw.'MnN :«ao rat* bxkmihbTks ?“ ® t nd w h° have paid Aeary fee. to be cored the « pnraov-f i. h * T v fi \ und the J were deceived, tind that been drhSno theUOTo^“ rowrarm,abtbisoehis.’ > P the system- to break out in an aggra vated fot m, and ptrhapt after Marriage. anS"* HxurtOLß-s Exjnucr Bttcnv for all affections and; MaTe o°/ppw i U , R J N i R Y OHO AN A whelhsr existing in whatever canse originating amt no matter of HOW LONo STANDING. ‘ IC of» diukkt mbSv;^ 8 extract bucbu is the great d “ ired ,n " u wif&^; h rb”^ct bl ‘ ttnd rwpoMibu: * h^ PRICE $1 PER BOTTLE, OB SIX FOR $5. Delivered to any Address, securely packed from observa- Utteribt Sympttmu in aU . Cures Guara steed 1 Advice Gratis ;; Addrws letters for Information to. H. B. HELMBOLD, Chemist. Wo«W 594 BROAWAY, NEW YOKK. *3BIS& “* “SidS'S”,' S^SUfSJlg^"^ nelmboM’s Genuine Preparations. • : - .. , “ Extract Boeho. , “ Sarsaparilla. “ Improved Rose Wash. aOLDST ASK KOatfKLMM^F 8 KVItEYWHIWe; Cat iSSSL. and AttD ATOfp. XMPOSITION AND EXPOSURE. 1 Creas *“7 *•& i DertY M wSho^.° TO .^* nW ““ 6 “ f pro ; afl^erJb«fe'J 1 ,MWWity or eowßt, f Wpbj waro i topuretM, any oftny Cowa/orottif p«r -' SSm S.Ti'rtS m l “W wlfa. Ootfielnuno authority, will AmniL* Rnrt t* lo *® who onrch&ae front A»«K,T«?J*S:' ABSAIOM SINGKR. lrihuw. " pniM * bmfrt* : ¥» fsutry Pnsfi" tR IBUNE power-press s>_ ■ s_, so PRINTING OFFICE. ilAfftitf«vithin the past two yean, miuW considerable iHthA tb oar eetabUehment iu the way of new fancy v £fer* v Cutter. Card Cutter, Ruling Ma rui* C*cd Power Prose, and large Newspaper Power, Pt-rt*. (• cat of wh|ph we give above) we are now prepared anything in the line of printing or ruling in lU |vle equal to any establishment iu the dtate, and at * *Jft equally low. Wo can execute, on short notice, all arleaof Weddlefli lavlUtion, Visiting, Balt A Business Cards, Civoulai-n, Progi’amiuen, MAMMOTH posters, sale sills, S3IUL.ASS® Bninrffgß-KllSA®® pamphlets. Pay and Check Bolls, BLANK BOOKS, MANIFESTS, and blanks of all kinds. . U we ask is a trial, feeling confident that we can give H ,Hfectiontf we have, the opportunity, difice In Lowlher’s building, corner of Virginia ami An ;,,treats, opposite Superintendent’s Office, local items. Railroad Speed. —Man; fatal accidents oc cur on railways by persons attempting to : drive Jc . cr o*g when a train is approaching. The dan ger.iies in miscalculating the rate at which 'a ,ar moves when under full headway, which ig said to be about seventy feet, -or twice its length in a •econd. ; At thi* velocity, a locomotive driving wheel, Ax feet in diameter, makes four rercdhtiona in a second, the piston rod thus traversing the cylinder eight time*. If a heme and carriage should ap proach and cross the track at the rapid rate of six miles an hoar, an express train appriiching at the same moment would move toward it two hun dred and flfty-ebven feet while it was in the act of crossing: if the horse moved no faster than a walk, the train would move towards it mure titan Are hundred feet, which fact accounts for the many accidents at such points. When the locomotive whistle is opened at the post, eight rods from the crossing, the train will advance near one hundred feet before the sound of the whistle traverses the distance to, and is heard at the crossing. Sad Accident— Qn Saturday afternoon, says the 7)prone Herald, while the Bellefonte train was leaving the station, a number of the boys jumped upon it for the purpose of getting a ride, a habit to which they seem very much wedded, notwithstand ing the repeated warnings and expostulation of many mothers. Upon the train getting beyond the engine house they jumped off, in the act of which, one, son of Dr. McVey, was injured by the passing of the wheel over his foot, causing a gash from the toe to the heel eight inches or more in length. Fortunately no bones were broken, yet the point of his heel is very much lacerated, caus ing intense pain and probably requiring weeks to lied. We would advise all boys in rho habit of mdnigingdn the practice of jumping on and off railroad core while in motion, to pay little James McVey a visit and while witnessing hfc suffering resolve never again to engage in so a practice. A Pleasant Arr.ua.—A few days ago our friend, Rev. A. IP Serabower, stopped at the clothing store of Tack & Etinger, to purchase -ome little article in . their line, and when about to retire was requested to cany home with faint one of the best overcoats in the establishment, which Mr. Few, the gentlemanly young salesman, informed him the members of his congregation bad paid for. Mr. S. says the surprise was com-, plete, bot he does not Seel annoyed, as the coat will he -.no encumbrance to him daring- the cold winter days which are fast approaching; He de sires ns ! to return thanks to the donors, and to assure them that their gift will be prized, not only for its real worth, bat also for the kindness mani fested by the givers. .* United States Hotel, Harris bubo.—-This convenient and popular honse has recently under gone extensive improvements, and has been thor oughly renovatedaud refitted in handsome style. The gentlemanly proprietors, Messrs. Coverly & llutcbenson, seem determined to do all in their power fey the comfort and entertainment of their guests. The table is furnished with every luxury the will afford, and prepared in theiiest styler Booms ate well furnished and ventilated, thin making it a first class hotel, and the home of the traveling public, and also of permanent hoarders. This house lias a peculiar: advantage in location,' contiguous to business, immediately letween the two' great depots, only ; a few steps trom each, and perfectly easy of access. The Catholic Fair,—The fair in aid o£, Sf. ■loho’s, Catholic church in this place, will, we im ucraland, commence on Tuesday next, the I Oth inst., in the beseroent of said chnrch, and contin ue, we doubt not, so tong as it meets with proper encouragement. The ladies interested in the get ting up of the Fair have met with the most liberal ; >id from, the citizens of this and neighboring towns, and in return are determined to make the festive one of the most attractive that has ever been held in this place. Many beautiful and val- I fable articles, useful as well as ornamental, be -1 -ides several curiosities heretofore unheard of amongst ns, will be on exhibition- and for sale.— I We bespeak for the Fair a liberal patronage from I all classes. • Charges.—S. B. Kennedy, Esq., for some time t •slTrain Master of Pittsburgh Division, P. K. l»ia resigned hie situation, and' our clever fncndj Dttvid Garrett, recently conductor on the has been appointed to Mr. Kennedy’s place.. We welcomeDavidto Altoona. *ad hope bis sqjonm with wf may prove agrees- ] to him. ' , ■ ' In this connection we are pleased to note that •Kedy. Gibson, recently Baggage Agent at this' has received the appointment of extra and reported at Philadelphia. Andy “* •hofe-souled, clever, merry fellow and will l#^8 popular conductor. Success attend him. Si-DDsw Death.—Joseph P, Trout, the Aac two«er, well known to most of. the citisena of this died suddenly. of cramp-colic, on Monday ' i ft. twi his Ho oft bee the viti Oil will reti was day mg and lab. una We and did dies gran to c ferei long and He