TH E GAZE TT E. J.EU'tSToWN, FA. FltlDAt ETESISG, September iw. is'.O. T r. R M st OBI; DOLEAK PER AAAi n, IN For six months •> eents. ?r> \li VK'.V subscriptions must be paid in i if the uincr i- continued, and not *.lvanee. 11 tne pap.r . paid within the first month, sl.~> H ill U ■£> ■ if not paid in three r.ionths JI.jO, .! not Zi'd in six months, iI.T.A; and it not ,aid in ; if ,e months. >?.W WHIG NOMINATIONS. For ("anal Commissioner. JOsHll DIAGIA, of Burks Count}. For Auditor General, HEVftl' W. SAADER, of Inlon Count). For Surveyor General, JOSEPH lIEADERSO.A, of Washington Co. CONGRESS, Or. JOHA BtrLL6CB, of Huntingdon ro. ASSEMBLY, AADREAF H'FARLAAD, of Aroiftgb township. I'RO rHONGT ART, JOHA BILSBIt H, of \ewton Hamilton. COUNTY SURVEYOR, WILLIAB LATTLE, of Levistown. COMMISSIONER. WILLIAB f ITI BIAS, of Armagh tow uhlp. AUDITOR, ATtISTI S B. I.AGR 18. of Beeator tow n-hlp. PROSECUTING ATTORNEY, JOHA AT. SHAW, of Lewi-town. DIRECTORS or Tlir. fOOR, Hr.tirn, J3sm/itrh, r|j and .Vctio, J IBES B. BROW A. of Armagh. 3 year*. Dvc.tfur, Jhrry, G-anrille y Oltrtr. Urattan. A>/.'* Hamilton and Me i'tufam, At crsTIAE WAREFIELD, of Oliver, 2 years. Borough of J\rwig?ovcn % GEORGE W. STEWART, 1 year. Notices of Afherliscmenls. Messrs. POLLOCK & Co., Philadelphia, insite purchasers of Shawls to call and examine the super.or article manufactured bv the Bav State Mills. A. SIGI ER & Co.. who purchased the exten sive stock of C. L. Jonc*, arc determined to sell out before the Ist Dicember. ZoLLix'CKR has got up the nc-wet fashion" of Hats and Caps, and can now improve the upper •tory of the ixped race by a handsame addition to their look". Beaux clad in one of his hea vers cannot fail to gain favor in the eyes of the fair sex. ihe ii.Mi.Koxn has tuade tome important changes in arriving and departing from this place. -v 5 * The whigs of this county have a good ticket, composed of honest and capa ble men, who are bound to no cliques, no factions, and no particular men, but nomi nated solely with reference to their integ rity and worth, and as such are eminently worthy the support of the people. To work, then, one and all. There is every incentive before us to do so, and if such nn eifort is made as duty calls for, the Carne rouiun ticket w ill not succeed in this coun ty, even if the w hole power of the Middle town Bank be brought to its aid. - * The Democrat is ♦ trumping" up Mr. Parker a good ileal above his calibre, and would no doubt wish to mislead manv into a belief that he would be a great man in Congress ! This is all fudge. Parker is nothing more than a second rate law y er, who bullyrags witnesses, as manv a man in this county will remind hiin at the elec tion, and when driven to the wall in law points, consumes the time of the court and the patience and money of the people by mating a sort of political harangue to the judges and jury. This he has done here, and should the people send this sprout of aristocracy to Congress, i; i? all J lt; will do there. J er Kphraim Banks, Esq., was lately down at Miillintown where he delivered himself of a quantity of political bile which had accumulated for some time, in consequence -of no chance having been given here to let it off-—the party in Mif llin not being in fit condition for holding public meetings. Among other things we learn that he was much dissatisfied with President F illmore for an;";':;-,;! U( . Tom ' orwiri, the Ohio wagoner boy, as Secre tary of the Treasury. The President will no doubt learn with much regret that his appointments do not meet the approbation of llu lecofoco candidate for Auditor Gen eral of Pemisv Iviinia. M 1 item IN lloi.i.in WSHIRO. — A color ed man named Ahxander fhlmondson, of V|cVeytown, was killed at Holiida vslnirg on Tuesday last, by Alexander Hutchin son, a boatman. Thev got info some dif nculty, w hen the latter seized n loaded mus ket and shot Edmondson through the bodv . Hutchinson is now in jail. KF* A small railroad bridge at Bell's Furnace, between Huntingdon and Holli daysburg, broke down on Tuesday eve tung, eijter tlie evening train bad passed over it. No injury was sustained. The bridge it is said, was put up iu a " hurry " by a contractor who wanted u,g,. t through With his work. In consequence of this were out of lime for few ■ . right again. The Democrat's Answer to the Charges of Fraud, Trickery. &.f. The Dr-inoeiat talks around, about, above and hriiiw the charges nu.Je against if leaders of having tricked and cheated Gibboney, Kittenhouse, and others, and ets all ilown as ~ ami origi • nated merely to attempt to excite dis | •' trust in the minds of the democratic mas- j " ses 1" Well, that's cool at least, ii nodi- j nig else. \\ e knew full well the 1 ieinocral i I would not give an ufiequivocal denial to ; ! the charges that have been made, unless it ; I i were within a week or so of the eb-ction, ; because there was too much evidence of the fact m existence, ani if the defeated and cheated can only persuade themselves that the whole thing is imaginary, why no one will have much reason to com plain ! Gibboney, for instance can " ima- I gine" that Host, I>u 11 vV 10. acted' fairly and honorably towards hint, that he is now before the people as a candidate lor • the legislature, and when the election j comes round " imagine " himself to be j elected, imagine that he is at Harrisburg j receiving a day and daily answering j ave or no, as the cause may be ! Mr. ' Hittenhouse can " imagine " that he is stiil Prothonotary, Clerk of the Courts of j General Quarter Sessions and (Iyer and ! Terminer for three years to come from ' the first day of December next, and if lie does not feel the dimes and dollars in his j palms as fast as before, imagination can j supply the rest. Two or three candidate- j for Commissioner in the valley who have ■ time and again earned the oilier by per- | forming the drudgery of the party, can im- i agine themselves to be the nominee in j place of their particular friend Thomas I Stroup. and if he should sit in judgment over the county funds, reaping the emolu ments and honors, they can imagine them selves to he in his place, and, according to the Democrat, all's well! Hut to the gi-l of the matter. That paper w iuds up its article by say- ing : " As thr allegations have been made, how - ' ever, we put ourselves on the country, and sub- 1 111 jt the indictment to the adjudication of a jury j of the people, at the ballot boxes in October." This appeal would be very well had the Democrat ever informed its readers what those allegations were, so that they might he enabled to make up their minds on the question at issue. This it has never done, and probably neter will do. The editor knows full well that in politics as in pri vate life, there is a common courtesy due - i to public servants which cannot consistent i ly be departed from unless sufficient cause exists. By the usages of the partv Mr. Gibboncy, as our neighbor we presume will not deny, was entitled to a renotn- j inalion, and the question then arises whv \ was he set aside ? There must hate I been some cause, some motive, for doing ; . so, or every honorable man w ill nrknow- j iedge tliat if was an act of gross injustice. and insulting as it was mean. Had the party come to Mr. Gibbonev a.11! said*- Sir. ! i " you have not carried out the views of " the democracy of Mifßin county , and we , i " cannot re-nominalc you," that gentle-1 I man, or any other man, would have tin- f * | derstuod his position—hut there was nolh- ! | ing of the kind said ; no intimation given : of dissatisfaction, hut on the contrary one of the now firm of Boss, Dull A. Co., • openly proclaimed 011 the day of the dele gate election that he was "aGibhonev inan first and last !" That declaration j might have been inade in sincerity, but if! it was a change came over the spirit of his ! dreair.s, for in twenty-four hours after- j j wards a Sunday delegation of ministers : I plenipotentiary left with railroad speed for ! M.Yey town, and on Mondav, without a ! j vv oril of explanation, John Boss was pro claimed the nominee for Assembly ! That I is a statement of the facts; and now will 1 the Democrat make it, and then go before j ' the Jury of voters and leave them to de- ! ■ i eidc. It surely does not expect a Jury to make up its verdict without hearing both sides, for such a verdict would be in law- ' vers phrase ex parte, and of course un just. But there is a point in the above to which we wish to draw public attention, because it involves a great deal more than i meets thr eye. I'hc Democrat refers the all< gallons to the people for decision, and | it is clear from the purport of its language that it the people elect the ticket headed by Boss, it mill be used ers an approval of (he eourse pursued la wards Mr. Giblm ucy. " As the allegations have been made," ' says that paper, " we put ourselves on the country, ami submit the indictment to the ' adjudication of a jury of the people at the 1 ballot boxes in October." Be it so—the allegations have been ma/le, and are, ! among others, rial Mr. Gibboncy was de frauded out of a nomination to which he was entitled, and on this, according to the Democrat, the people will decide at the ensuing election. If a majority vote in favor of John Uw**, it j* a condemnation , ol Ir Oibboney and his cour-e ; if, on the contrary, a majority decide ag.iiust Ross, the verdict will he THAT MR. GIB BONE V OL'OLLT TO HAVS BEEN RE-NOMLW TED. We hope now that all w ill under stand the matter properly, and the position thev occupy as respects the next election. Mark the LlbeJer. A correspondent of the Juniata Sentinel charges Parker, the loeofoeo candidate lor Congress, with having declared in-<4fect at a meeting in Mifflintown a few years ago, 44 that the Whigs of the present day were the anti-war party, because they were opposed to the Mexican war ; that they were, therefore, the lovers of the lcderal anti-war party of 1812, that the federal anti-war partv of 1812, was the lovers of the ami-war party of 177tJ ; that the anti war party of 1770 were lories, and ene mies to their country," and therefore the Whites oj the present day were TO- It IKS, and enemies to their country. This charge is made in the paper pub lished w here .Mr. Parker resides, and from the well-known character of the man, is no doubt true. He also made the same dec laration at Huntingdon. This then is the kind of man who is held up as national in his feelings—who loves self less and his country more ! One who would be willing nevertheless to bow the kuee to slavery, and as strongly advocate its exten sion as he now does the pauper labor of Europe. Ye*, ibis is the man who soli cits irhiif votes to elect him to Congress, though he but lately esteemed them no better than toriea ! TIIE STOP TIIIKI CRV. —The Democrat gets up a tide that MeCulloch's friends are bargaining with Ross for votes ! That story won't go down—if there's any bar gaining to be done we'll guarantee it that those who bargained for and bought a ma joritv of the loeofoeo county convention will have a hand in the matter. It's their •• natur," as Sam Slirk would sav. Trouble In I.oeoforodoni. In more than one half of the counties in this State there seems to he a boiling eauhiron of political hate among our loco loco brethren, which ever and anon breaks out into open and furious dissensions. Hoth these tactions profess to dislike the vvliigs, yet it is unquestionably true that they hale each other much more cordiallv than thev do their opponents. The Dem ocratic I nion and a few other papers of that stamp, have at different times suggest ed that it would he belter to heal these breaches, as the votes of both classes might he wanted in the ensuing campaign, hut thus far the advice is entirely disre garded, and the battle daily w axes warmer. I'he truth is, the whole matter is a FIOHT FOR M SDKR. It is well known that the C'ameroniaus have not only been driven from all the principal offices along the State canals and railroads, but that under thr present regime of the canal hoard and its engineers, that faction cannot secure a contract of any kind. llcure has arisen a contest between the ins and outs, the of fice-holders and office-seekers, the con tractors and would lie-contractors, that has had no parallel in the history of politics: : they denounce each other as political ' scoundrels, and resort to all sorts of trick i cry, bribery, and corruption to have men ' nominated for oilier who will carry out | their political ami other views. If beaten : in convention, the other faction, whether j Catneronian or atiti, gets up another can ; didate, both being apparently determined J either to rule or ruin. In confirmation of ; this, we could till column upon column of ; extracts similar to the follow ing : I The Pennsylvania!! in speaking of the dilficul i ties in the Democratic ranks of this Senatorial j district, says that the hand of Simon Cameron is at the bottom of the whole dispute, ond warns ! the Democrats of the district to "he on the | alert if they would defeat his intrigues. Our ! friend Forney is right—-Gen. Cameron has I caused the whole difficulty, ami he has used the I name of Mr. Anderson to enable him to carry out his base purposes. Will the Democracy of this Sen ato i ial district suffer themselves to be . led by Simon Cameron, or will they, like free men, resUt his impudent dictation. Cattish 1 Volunteer. The western papers bring us a long letter from Alexander Mr Kinney, a loeofneo candidate for , Congress in Westmoreland, who was set aside : by the I.ocoforo conference in that district, and John Snodgrass nominated, in which lie openly I charges that the conferees were bribed, men tioning their names and the sums given—s.">oo in one case and Jl ,000 in another, lie declares, j therefore, that notv ithslanding the nomination i of Mr. Snodgrass, he shall continue a candidate, and a portion of the papers of his party in the district seem to countenance his determination, as they resolutely refuse to support the nominee of the conference. The Huntingdon Journal says that some fellows up there have been boasting that a ! few hundreds should not he wanting to se cure Parker's election, if necessary. From the way some hundreds have been talked about here, we should think somebody's pocket has been lightened. Who pays the piper—the people's funds, or ! The Governor of Pennsylvania lias offerd a re ward of for the apprehension and convic tion of the murderer of Charles Burd, jeweller, who was cruelly murdered in the street in Phil , iniHphiu some time since LETTERS FROM THE HILLS. To thi Editor of tkf (iizette * Well, the old in an made hi.s promised visit to town, but not a word did he say on returning about the money he was to have got. At last I jogged Ids memory about it. | • Dad,* says I one day, 4 1 shall soon j need that money you promised to get for i me, and, if convenient, the sooner the bet i ter.' - j 4 Why Sam,' says he, 4 the fact is I don't know exactly whether I can get it for vou. I mentioned the matter when I got to town, but they said you was such an all-fired tariff man that it was no use to lend vou j any money, for it would do no good. And besides, Sain, you know the democrats have turned their coats on that question, and Andy Parker now says we must go in j lor free trade, because we can buy iron ami other things cheaper in England than ! we can make them.' 4 So, then,* says 1, 4 you and Andy Parker and the rest of the locofoeos, have all turned Britishers. To my mind that's ; a new idea in JefTersonian democracy, ami I 1 suppose if you'll goon in your progress, ! it won't be long before Jefferson will he , voted a fool, Simon Snyder a goose, Mad | ison a jackass, .Monroe an ignoramus, and I Jackson a mule—for it is as plain as a, b, e, that you don't stick to any one tiling for more than six months at a time now adays, and as you have discovered that all the professions heretofore made of sustaining our own industry, so as not o be depen ; dent on British lords and ladies, in ease of j wars, was all gammon, it w ill not he long before you'll find out that it's more detno | cratie to make kings rich than to give em ployment to \our neighbors.' • But Sam, don't you see that we were all wrong before. I'm sure we were, for 1 can buy iron cheaper now than 1 did un ! der a tariff.' j • \ es, and what effect has it had already. \\ here is there a bill in old Mifllin that now resounds with the woodehoppers' axe \\ here are the miners, the coalmen, and j hundreds of others who in hv-gone vears found ready and profitable employ merit ? , i uu have driven them away, rnanv from the semes of their earlv da vs. and com pelled them to wander here and there in (search of employment, when nature has • furnished material enough under our feet I to give steady and " living" labor to hun i dreds. Hut for the vvoodehopper's axe, how would you ever have earned more than a precarious existence ? Yet vvith -1 out a dollar in your pocket at the outset, as you have yourself often boasted, in less than ten years you became the owner of more than a hundred acres, much of which is good land, and although tnv chance was not so good as yours, yet 1 also bv dint of • industry at the axe, got together enough to | give myself a homestead. We were then | protected from heavy foreign importations by a proper tariff, and had it been let alone, competition would have brought down the , price as low as it ought to be brought. | Hut the tune changed—such wiseacres like Andy Parker and others who make their | money by *sos and sloos, by giving ad j vice on laws they themselves don't under j stand, got it into tiieir heads that we .must buy cheap, and so they arc now at work j to break down the little employment yet left to the poor man. They come and j tell him that he eun gel British cotton goods at two or three cents less a yard than American—cloth at 50 cents or a dollar less, and iron ware at similar low prices, but they don't tell liim where fie is to get ! the money. \\ hat matters it, 1 should 1 like to know, to the poor man how cheap things are il lie has not the means to pur i chase them ? Do you not see that thead ! vantage to them is nothing at all, while to the Andy Parkers it is everything? And besides, if iron can he manufactured pro fitably at the prevailing prices, why don't some ol these lot speculating nabobs buy up the forges and furnaces now lying idle, and get rich, as they allege the iron mas j ters can ? Let them face the same music they want the laboring men to face, and Il'll give them more credit fur honesty and sincerity than 1 now can. So you see, dad. that I'm still an all-fired tariff man, ; as your particular friends in town think, | and to tell you the truth I wouldn't touch ! their money with a ten-foot pole, if there by 1 should trammel my self into voting j for any of their clan. They arc out on a j fox hunt of some kind you may rely upon ; it, or Ross wouldn't have been put up for | Assembly, and St roup for Commissioner, and if it wasn't to gloss the thing over, M'C 'i>\ might have whistled Yankee Doo ! die to Mexican gals for two or three eatn j paigns more before he'd got the nomina tion for Prothonotary. Take mv word lor it dad, there is something wrong : they gave you a small loan ol money for the j purpose of asking you a greater favo be : tween tins and the election, and if they ! don't do it, there are no niusketers in the Narrows.' Dad stood musingly for a while, when he averred that I always could see some thing in certain matters that he couldn't. ♦ Sain,' says he, 4 I don't see anything wrong in one man lending another some money, and I think it was very kind in them town folks to offer it.' 4 Well,' says I, 4 I don't. If you'd wanted the money, it would have been another thing, but to tell you the plain truth, my opinion is that, having heard you were not satisfied altogether with the ticket the leaders hail hatched out, they've loaned you the money lor the purpose of setting you straight.' 44 Setlin' me straight, Sam—what da you mean by that ?' 4 Why that between this and the elec tion one of your good friends will give you a call, and after a sermon on the wea ther and things in general, he'll hand you a half dozen tickets of the settled stamp, and request you to have them votrd by the faithftil. And if you won't do that, I'll bet )ou the best sack of wheat we've got you'll have to fork over the money again in less than no time.' 4 Well, .Sain, you're sometimes right, and sometimes wrong, but to prevent mis takes I'll not spend any of this money un til 1 see the bargain in black and white, and then 1 can choose for myself. And though 1 won't say I'll vote for the ticket or agin it at this time, may I be dot rotted if I'll ever be bought or sold like a sheep by the drovers in politics.* 4 Slick to that, dad,' says I, 4 its a good resolution—ami the cleaner you keep your lingers from them chaps in lending or bor rowing, the more likely you'll be to keep your farm.' SAM WOO DC HOPPER. LOCAL AFFAIRS. Census Returns. The following table, furnished by H. Maclay, Esq., Deputy Marshal, exhibits some of the results of the recent census in the four townships iu Ktshacoquillas Val ley in this county: Townships. Inhabitants in I acre ait in ten 1850. IS4W. y- art. Armagh, 1742 146s 274 Brown, lUIS 903 112 Union, 1284 1221 63 Me n no, 1020 974 4t Total 5061 4566 495 The village of Perryeille, including the Fac tory. contains 502 inhabitants. The following are the principal Agricul tural products for last year : -fere* of Bushels Bushels Bushels Township, cleared land. W heat. Corn. Hals. Armagh, 10,569 44.692 31,145 35,319 Brown, 7,882 33,765 25,455 23,2*0 Union, H. 345 40,035 28,490 26,600 .Monno, 7,080 32,586 18,625 24.30U Total, 33,876 151,078 106,715 109,499 The grain crops last year afford no cri terion of an average yield in this fertile reigion. 1850 would exhibit from one third w* one-half more than the product given above. nr The Telegraph is in work rug order to Huntingdon, and we are now enabled to talk with our neighbors up there almost as easily as if they resided within a stone's throw. n?" As indubitable evidence of a good ticket, we may state that every man upon our county ticket was a paying subscriber to the Gazette, long previous to his nomina tion—five of them since we have had the paper in our hands, and the others for two or three years. t*'" The folks up the river have it that Rohack, the celebrated Astrologer and Conjurer, has predicted a mo bkeak in the canal between this and the election, for the accommodation of Ross, Dull Jt Co. I®' A member of the Town Council iu f rins us that that body has already con tributed a considerable sum ($10U) to wards enclosing the old Grave Yard —a fact we were not previously aware of— and anxious as they are to see that reiter ated spot reJeomed from being the haunt of swine and cattle, they do not feel at liberty at this time to appropriate more of the borough funds to that purjrose. As individuals however they are willing to unite in any measures that will aceompli.-h the desired end. Hopt'Kß, we perceive, has turned his at tention for the present to a new inprove inent that promises to be of much benefit to the public, as we hope it will be to hint self He is putting up a substantial dam across the Kishacoquillas just above the new mill, and intends to convert the old stone mill into a general machine shop, in which he will have a plaster mill, saw mill, turning lath, and half a dozen other notions. This will give employment to a considerable number of bauds, aud we heartily wish him success. THE MARKETS. Lewifiiuwr, September *4O, 185(1. f'utd tiff J*c*lcrs titfuti Flour - £4 50 £5 (10 Wheat, white - 05 1 05 red - {R 1 00 Rye - - 50 (XI Oau, new, 00—old, 33 45 Corn, - - 50 56 Cloverseed old, 5 (X) l)o new, 3 50 Flaxseed 1 00 1 *25 Timothy seed 2 00 2 50 Butter, good - - 12 12 Fggs - - 8 10 bird - 6 8 Tallow - - 8 10 Potatoes 37 50 FHIUDELPHIA, September IS, I*so. Flaunt.— Fresh ground is freely offered at $5 per barrel. Sales for citv consumption st $535,1*21 ior common and good brands, mid §5,37J t0,75 for extra. Rye Flour and Corn Meal are stondy at $3 per bairel. GRAIN —There BUS been an increased de mand lor Wheat. Sales of 3a4000 bushels good and prime red al l04ul(15c per bushel. Corn continnes in demand for shipment, Sales of 3500 bushels yellow ai 65e afloat, and some of rather poor quality at 64c.. Oats are scarce ; sales of HH> hushelu good Southern at 37a.*18c per tuiehel, and some Pennsylvania at 42c. BAI.TIMOHI:. September 48, 1850. FUIVR. —Sales of 150 bble. Howard street Flour at $4,81$ (TRAIN.— VVe quote ordinary to good rods at 85al00 cts.; and good to prime at 160tl05cli. and occasionally 106 cts ; white wheat at 105 a 112 cts.; und family fl tr white at 112a 12U cts. Sales of Corn at SSiSO c">. for white, Htid 59i61 cts. lor yellow. Outs 28a3G cts. Zz' Thc Lewistown Ueincxrnt thinks that Dr. MH'i u.ocii> quriliiirations ron 3t*l in the lacl that he ha "good physi dan, can Meed and Mister, administer c~! oniel and salts, and treat a case of disease with considerable skill." Very well lie has a patient now on hands— rtn ,i| e . giiirnate, self styled descendant of Jeffer son democracy—one that is diseased from head to foot, internally and externally • and he purposes curing'it most effectually ol all aspirations to supremacy in the 17i'h <'ongressional district. We learn that his remedy is the Polls ?— Juniata -Sentinel. BAY STATE MILLS BAY STATIIfsHAWLS. 'jMII.SE celrtraM and Justly acknowledged stt-Eiu.a ooot, in i he lat. *l coloring* and in..si unproved Style*, wilt he furni*hed by the subscriber* in any quati . lily, at the very lowest pike.. Purchaser* will plea,* u U e t nl t .e genuine Biy State fabric* hear tickcl, rrre.| .d>nr with the above cut, and tin y will also be distinguished fro in all oilier Woolen Shawl, by tbeirsu perior £nih, feoenes* of texture at d brilliancy of color. Order* solnsied from all *e. turns of the country, and tb< -aun- wRI be promptly attended le. Purchaser* will also find in our Shawl department a large assortment of ay ihe other icosl approved make*, and lie west design* of American, French and Scotch Woolen She wis, en,brac ing a rr;.t variety of p:a n and medium *t> leg f„r {■ lend-, A I.SO, Bu;ierior Pari* Brocha lotig .nd square Shawl* in latest .tile* and best manufacture—High lustre Black and Col red Silk Sh< wis—Lupin 4 * Black and Mode Col ored Tbib-s a iaU. ith silk and woolen fringe*—Pari* Printed C.ishioere and Terkerri Shawls—PUm and Em broidered Crafte Shawls-New style Printed Pulrn Shawls Neat figured Paris Brocha Shawl*—fiij*i,', Black aud | M.le t.Jored Thibet -Long Shaw)*—Plain bound Seal I Skin Shaw!* —Plain Mode Colored French Terkerrl Shaw l*, fringed and bound -tight-quarter French Mode | Colored TLtbet CJofc, measuring full two yard* wide for Shawls, landing to match—While and Colored Barrett na and Cenoese Shawl., Sec., at II hole salt and Retail ROBERT BOLLOCK & CO., 18 South Second street, Philadelphia. Philadelphia, September 20,1850 —3m. • Pennsylvania Railroad. ON and after Monday. Sept. 17th, PASSE.V < Eft TR A INS will leave LE W ISTO WiV daily a* I'alcwsc FAST 14 XS. Eastward, at 1 o'clock. 49 minutes, P. M. Westward, at 4 o'clock, 46 minutes, P. M. SLOW LINE. Eastward, at 3 o'clock, 17 minutes, A. M. West ward, at 1 o'clock, 46 minutes, A. M. Passengers must secure tickets before en tering the cars. '1 icket? lor all stations sold by the agent. FREIGHT TRAINS daily, except Sun days, arriving from the east, at 1 o'clock, 49m. P. M., and going east, 11 o'clock, 31m. A. M. I IVK STOCK is charged at car load rates. pare to Philadelphia sf> 00. J AS. MILLIKEN, 3r. Agent Sept. "20. 1-oP—tf. HAT A CAP AIAM FACTORY. >V. G. ZOLLINGER, Market street, Letristoira, adjoining Ken nedy Porter's Store„ Informs W.ie cilieens of Mrißin and tbe adjoining counties, that he has just received the FALL prepareil to furnish all want of new HATS or CAPS with an article neat, durable and welt finished, comprising every style manufactured for this market. COUNTRY MERCHANTS will find it decidedly to their advantage to give him a call, for his arrangements are now such, as to cnible him to furnish any quantity that may be desired on the shortest notice. The care and attention he has ever given to the manufacture of the style of Hats preferred by his numerous Ornish customers, will be continued; and he feels warranted in givino the assurance that they will not be disip jioirted. Grateful for the encouragement he has thus far received, lie will continne to deserve it. bv continued assiduity to tlie wants of his friends, and strict attention to his business. Lewistown, Sept. 20,1850—tf II VUGAI.VS! BARGAINS!! BARGAINS!!! NO MISTAKE! rjtfll' undersigned, thankful for past favors, 1 would now inform the citizens of Milflin and adjoining counties, that they intend to close the business of the present linn by the first of De cember, and would most respectfully call the attention of those in search of BARGAINS, to call at the. stand formerly occupied by V. /-. Jtt.YES. ami examine their stock of Fall and Winter Goods, CONSISTING OF fASSIMEKES, SATINETS, ri.iintcle, Hiigliftli & Frcnt li nct'iuot'N, Alpacas, Hoiislin lie I. alius, Cashmeres, Ladies aud Children's MITTS, FIR CAPS, BLEAWKI AM) BRBWN MSLIXS, CALKOES from 2 Feats to Hi. KMT SHIRTS AM) DRAWERS, nm iiiiii vuaxm* HOOTS Si SHOES, 11 a R<| W a re, i\ tie ENS U a re , ITILS Kaskels, Ac. TUc&c goods ha> ing been purchased at a heavy discount on their first cost, are now ofltred at PHILADELPHIA COST PRICES. f"* MERCH.I*\~TS wishing to replenish their stock, would do well to call, as these goods will post tictlo br sold < low, if not lou s ec, than THEY ('.IN HE noniHT LY PMUIDELPHLI. C.U.L S'Uti.\\ as the Store wilt positively be closed by the lv< Dtctmber. A. SIGLKR A. CO, Lew Mown, Sept. 2d, ISSO. —tf
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers