THE GAZETTE. I LEWISTOWN, PA. Thursday, May 6, 1858. Notices of New Advertiscmeiits. The lovers of the weed will And an extensive assortment of tobacco and cigars to select from at E. Fryslnscr's store, next door to the Post Office. The late lirm of McCoy A Ellis being dissolved by the death of Mr. McCoy, the dry goods and grocery business will be continued by the surviving partner, K. F. Ellis. A lot of potatoes Just received at Hoffman's. W. I.ind advertises a runaway apprentice. Two Executors' notices also appear. Proceedings of Congress* As we frequently feared, the villainous .scheme coucocted at Washington by the political swindlers, has at last been consum mated by the passage of the Kansas confer ence bill. llow this was effected, the re wards of office to the parties themselves or immediate friends, as bribes for their course, time may yet develop. The bill came up in the Senate on Thursday. Mr. Douglas objected to the substitute be cause it did not submit the Lecompton Con stitution fairly to a vote of the people, but the admission virtually contingent upon the ac eeptance or rejection of the land grant. He objected too to the offer of a bribe to Kansas to come into the Union with 40.000 population under one kind of constitution, and not unless vise have 00,000 population under another. What is this but Congressional intervention, offering a bounty on one hand and a penalty on the other tin control the result. This left no freedom f election. For five months past he (Mr. Douglas) has stood as he now stands, with the democracy of his State, on the principle of submitting the con stitution under which the people of Kansas shall come into the Union to a direct vote of the people. That glorious band of democrats ! who acted with him in Congress and out of Congress have achieved a triumph. He sought no personal triumph, and would not therefore enter into the question of what party has backed down from their original pretensions, although the government did say at the com mencement of the session that Kansas must come in unconditionally under the Lecompton Constitution. The Administration has receded from that proposition, and he and his party are asked to recede from the position they have taken, , because the other party had made so many concessions. But that is no reason why ha ! should concede principle. From that he can not recede. Strike out the land grant and i strike out the limitation of population and he j would vote for the conference proposal at ouce. In other words, if you wish to make the pro posal fair you must give equal terms to Kan sas under whatever constitution she elects. llow, he asked, would his friend from Vir ginia (Mr. Hunter) as a Southern man, like to have Congressional intervention brought to j influence the admission of new States. The times may be reversed. These may become an anti slavery majority in Congress, and would he like to see a grant of millions of acres as a bounty for new free States to come in with 40,000 population. Mr. Toamhs warmly defended the Confer- ! •vnce substitute, denying that any bribe f land was offered; on the contrary the Coin- j mittee refused to give Kansas the seventeen : millions of acres she asked. Mr. Wilson replied to Mr. Toombs in ref- i erenee to the 17,000,000 acres. A direct bribe ' is offered of hundreds of thousands of acres and of dollars. Two millions of acres of public lands are advertised to be sold on the Ist of July, and here is a direct bribe of 5 per cent, on the sales amounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars offered, if she will come into the Union before the first of July. On the other hand the direct penalty is that she shall be kept out of the Union, although every one acquainted with Kansas knows that the feeling in that Territory is almost unani mous in favor of admission. Mr. Wilson then went into a lengthened discussion of the hostility of Kansas to the Lecompton Constitution, and charged that it was now being attempted to bribe and threat en ber into the Union under a project gotten up by a Conference Committee, and intended to be imposed by deceit and fraud. The Chair was suggesting that the expres sion was unadvisable, when Mr. Green rose and said he was one of those referred to, and lie felt no hurt. Mr. Wilson said he had made the charge of fraud and could prove it, and would take the responsibility, lie then went over the record of the Kansas elections to show that the Ad ministration assented to and approved of them by continuing its countenance to theirauthors. lie thought the peeple of Kansas weuld re ject the bribes, scorn the threats, and could wot he got under this Conference scheme into die Union except by stupendous and gigantic trauds of fraudulent votes. The people of Kansas will make a new free Constitution and bring it before Congress. If she has eneugh population to come in now as a slave State, you roust admit her as a free State or keep her out at your peril. There is no truce in this substitute although there would have been peace in Mr. Crittenden's. Mr. Green took occasion to refer to Mr. Wilson's charge of fraud, and said that out of the fullness of the heart the uiouth speak eth. lie would like to put him under oath and cress question hiin whether there ever were frauds in Kansas till Mr. Wilson went there, and whether he did not send for "Jim Lane" and concoct the matter with him. Mr. Wilson utterly repudiated the charge and reminded Mr. Green that the frauds were committed by his constituent Missourians. Mr. Bell explained the reasons which would govern his vote. He also compared the Crit *en den and the Conference substitutes, shew ing their relative worth and effect. •>-Mr. Broderick said that after the matter had bees so ably d'ueussed he would not make a lengthened speech. Jle would vote against *be Conference bill for several reasons, the snout piitsnt of which la that Kansas cannot come intn the Union as a free state during the continuance of the power of this administra tion. It has but 35,000 population now, and if it swallow the Lecompton Consti tution it must be five or six years before she will have the requisite population to entitle her to representation. The original bill was less objectionable to him than this Conference substitute. Mr. Goolittle read from the Secretary of Governor Kearney's history of Kansas to show in reply to the remark el Mr. Pugh yesterday, that the population of the Territory has di minished on account of the deeds of violence committed. Mr. Pugh replied, after which Mr. Seward took the floor, saying the debate hod mani festly lest interest although a yet undetermined eoue'.ueion This deouv of in- terest was partly accounted for by the great length of the past discussion, but something too was owing to the change of the subject matter left for debate. It commenced by a consideration of the high principles of State sovereignty. It has gone into Conference and came out an artifice —a trick of legislative legerdemain. Both ends of the capitol are engaged to-day in at tempting to take to pieces and put together this legislative puzzle, lie had little talent and no taste for this sort of legislation. He illustrated his position by reference to the perpetual motion machine and automaton chess-player, which like the Conference pro ject, were gotten up for the purpose of not being explained by one side or tbo other. He objected to the Conference because it presen ted a false issue to the people—the true ques tion at issue is, the submission of the Consti tution direct to the people. Til# question of public lands has nothing to do with that, inasmuch as the lands are the | dowry of all new .States. The land question ; does not occupy one line of the 1,800 quarto ' pages of the Kansas debate and is therefore a feigned issue—a Jas. Jackson and John Styles issue of the old black letter lawyers. He (Mr. Seward) although of good natured and kindly disposition, felt like the chivalric Virginian who wuuted to challenge the James Jackson who was alwavs disturbing and ex citing liis neighbors. Besides, the question of numbers is equally new, dating only from the conference. That Kansas has enough population for a slave State and just half enough for a free State. Mr. Seward then replied severely to Mr. Pugh, saying that he (Mr. Seward) in 1850 stood fof the admission of Kansas as a free 1 State and stands there now. HE cared not ! for numbers, ten hundred or the hundred thousand, or if it ever reached the population of China, he would not aid by one vote her admission as a slave State. As to his esti mate formerly made of her gaining populous ness, he predicated it on the fact of her being a free State, lie never promised rapid progress for a slave State. Ho never was so young that when he first saw Desdemona, the gentle daughter of a Senator of Venice,married to a Moor in the first act, not to know that discord would follow in the second, and death and dissolution in the last. Further, be objec ted to the bill because it bears equivocation on its face. It purports to be a submission of her dowry, but it submits the Lecompton Constitution. It is so regarded by the Demo cratie presses. lie quoted lrom a New Hamp shire paper. In this he found a paradox as irreconciieable as free will and Jute , which so puzzles the theologians. Here he read from the speech of Mr. Cox, of Ohio, that the souse of the people was to be taken on the Lecompton measure, although it was not directly submitted. It was like voting by black and white balls in Masonic ledges, without saying anything about the candidate who is waiting. No State but Ohio could have got at the outside, so lucid an ex planation. Thus indirectness and equivoea \ tion arc on the bill. Moreover, he said, if you j make a slave barrier across this latitude of 45° you interpose a barrier to progress more in surmountable than the Rocky mountains or the Sierra Nevada. It amuses him when he hears patriotic men talk of removing the capital. If you confine slavery within its legitimate limits, the capital of this nation may remain where it is, and the empire may grasp the pole and the equator, but no such destiny awaits it if you separate by a slave barrier the Atlantic free from the Pacific free ! Further—This bill is nothing but Lecompton. Lecompton with a variation. You toss a coin and bid Kansas cry, " Eagle or Liberty," If " Eagle" you give her slavery. If the effigy of " Liberty" you give her slavery still. • What thinks the senator from Pennsylvania, j representing the first free State? The senator | fron llhode Island, of Roger Williams? The i senator from lowa ? The senator from Cali- I forma, whose State was saved from slavery j by efforts other than his? The senator from ! Indiana? But they have another question to j settle with their people at home. What an- j swer will they give to this proposal which . leaves only the semblance and not the choice i of liberty. My friend here asks, what says j the senator of New Jersey? He would him self answer, because the blood of the men who hazarded life and means for her liberty flowed j thiough his veins. He knew the blue hills of New Jersey, and will answer that the votes hero given for Lecompton will be her la*t slave vote given for the next ten years. Addressing himself next to the subject of the Election Board, he said the ghosts on the Styx are not more thick and cloudy than are the spirits of thedepartedGovernorsof Kansas who attempted to give correct returns. He j had no confidence in the President as an ele- 1 tneut of that board. He has had experience that some wouldcry "shame" if hodisparaged or defamed the President, but he would con solo himself that once men in Virginia cried "shame" on Patrick Henry. Men were not wanting in Rome to cry " sharne" on Ca to, and they were no friends of liberty who in Senates fear to oppose Kings or Presidents. The report wax adopted in the Senate by a vote of .'sl to 22, and in the House by 112 to 103. This infamous bill proposes to give to I Kansas Lands for Schools, Seminaries and Railroads, worth several millions of dollars. It provides, however, that the People of Kansas must decide by a vote whether they will accept these lands. If they agree to accept, they will have voted millions of dollars into the Treasury. So far the pro position, whether fair or not, is somewhat ; intelligible—it is a proposition to take a vote of the people—to allow the will of the majority to rule. True, standing alone, the question has but one side—there being no reason why the People of Kansas should not accept the Public Lands. But in vo : ting to accept the donation, they also accept the Lecompton Constitution! Such are ! the terms of the law—such is its object. It is well known the People want the Lands, but hate the Constitution; but they are liuked together—they cannot have the ben efit of the one without the curse of the other. r J o such straits has modem de maeracy come at last. J he May number of flodey's Lady's Book presents a handsome face in the way of embellishment, both ornamental and use ful. Notwithstanding the hard times, the ladies cannot do without it. storekeepers are beginning to hang out hooped skirts for signs, PENNSYLVANIA SCHOOL SYSTEM. The Washington correspondent of the Pennsylvania Inquirer is quite enthusias tic on the subject of our Common School system. He writes as follows : I see that the authorities of Kansas have ap plied to the Superintendent of Commen Schools of Pennsylvaniafor a complete history of the eperations of the system in your State, and all the forms, &e., used by that depart nieut, with a view to adopting the entire sys tern in their own Territory. This is not only highly complimentary to you, but shows their ! discrimination and wisdom. There can he no doubt of the fact, as it is everywhere ad- j mittcd, that the Common School system of j Pennsylvania has been brought into a condi tion that renders it superior to all others in this country, thereby constituting ene of the fundamental elements of your future great- ! ness as a distinet people. Such is the ex- ! pression 1 often hear in this city, from repre sentatives of every section of the I nion. Without wishing to appear invidious, it is but proper and just to state, that much of j its present excellence is due to the indefati gablo labors of its present Superintendent, who entered upon his duties originally when the Department was a perfect chaos, hut who has, with an industry, energy, and single heartedness too rare not to he commended in a public officer, reduced its confused elements to a Bystent of order as beautiful as it is util itarian; and made it the model for imitation by the other States of the sisterhood. There need bo no fear of the future of Kan sas if she rears her youth under sueh a sys tem. They will learn nothing hut good, and, among their acquisitions, they will learn j how much they are iudepted to the good old Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. Routed on Tuesday: the duuycrats of Phila. j weather ooutiuues wet and cool. fruit continues plenty at 0 cents per dozen. B?sk_George Blymyer is stacking in a new arrival of goods, cheap as dirt. reply to a correspondent, we state that according to our recollection Dr. Dower voted for the §7OO legislative pay. Jeorge W. Knox, Esq., of Harrisburg, formerly of this place, has been appointed i Clerk to the Attorney General by Judge Knox. \ southern clergyman it is said has at last arrived at the conclusion that the descen dants of Ilaui and Shem " enjoy no promise of persuasion or conversion of faith and con- , fessit n as races." JgyThe Cambria Iron Works have resumed operations, and several bands and two mer chants of Johnstown have been arrested for conspiracy to injure the business of that con cern. BSUOur slave Senator Bigler was in such hot haste to announce the passage of Eng- j lish's hill by the house that lie interrupted j Senater Seward while speaking, den. Cam- j eron subsequently got up and gave a well merited rebuke to this toadyism on Bigler's part. ®atjrThc Oxygenated Bitters have no equal as a tonie medicine. They cure nervous de bility, sick headache, acid stomach, water brash, loss of appetite, &c., all of which pro ceed from a weakened or deranged state of the stumacli. ®a?L.Over one hundred hands in the ma chine shop at Altoona were discharged last week in consequeuce of its leaking out that they had formed a combination for a strike, j In this case the Superintendent was right, as : on the first of this month their wages were j increased, and men who would in the face of; such increase deliberately plan to put their employers iuto difficulties by ceasing work at | a time when their services were most needed, j ought to be discharged. All such combina tions are hut an injury to good workmen, by putting them down on a level with botches. LOCAL AFFAIRS. RAISING SIIEKP. —Benjamin Hyler, of Kishacoquillas Valley, ha* a number of sheep, five of which have 'iad lambs during the past year. This, although an occasion al occurrence, is we believe rather unusual ; with such a number. Water renters do not appear gene rally to understand the design of the com pany in charging less for those who pro cure water at other premises than their own. The design is to enable owners of hydrants to charge something for their use. Thus, where §5 is charged for the hydrant on the premises, and S4 to tly; neighbor { who procures water there, it is calculated that the latter shall make an arrangement, with the owner for its use. If he chooses to give such use for nothing, it is his own doings, not the company's. The same rule holds good with all other rates. ffcyThe Union Prayer Meetings contin ue to be held in the Town Hall daily, from 12 until 1 o'clock. Although well atten ded, a friend of the cause desires us to pub lish the following appeal. For the Gazette. While the Union Prayer Meetings contin ue to be attended by a goodly number, yet it appears plain on examination that many are absent that ought to ha there : that many ■eats that might he tilled by our friends and neighbors, yet out of Christ, are still empty. Why is this so? Have all of us who should i have an interest in these meetings been as prompt in attendance and faithful in discharge of our duties as we ought to be ? Have we urged our neighbors and friends to attend ? Have we prayed earnestly in secret for the 1 outpouring of Clod's spirit in our midst? Have we talked with and borne to a throne of grace | those in whom we are most interested ? ' These are important inquiries for professing 1 christians, in these stirring times in the re ligious world. We should all remember that we are guilty in God's sight for sins of omis sion as well as commission. May the spirit •f the liviug God infiuence each one reading ! these lines to greater zeal and diligence in : the cause of Christ, is the praye/ of an HrvfßT.E Servant. ffiayMessrs. J. T. Quigg & Co. have com- i menced the publication of a large paper cal- j led the Sunday Topic, tilled with news, light i literature, &c. It is published at §2 per an- i num, or $1 for six months. B®uSargent's School Monthly for May fil led with its usual store of choice reading, is upon our table. Published by Epes Sargent, Bostoh, at §1 per annum. Oxygenated Bitters. The following letter is from C. W. Denison: BOSTON, June G, 1854. Gentlemen—Having suffered considerably from dyspepsia, in consequence of close con finement to my duties on shipboard during a recent voyage to and from the Pacific coast, I was induced by the -advice of a friend to try a bottle of your Oxygenated Bitters, I must frankly say that the effect thus far has beeh highly favorable, Mrs. Denison has also been an invalid from a chronic pleurisy, j arising from dyspepsia, and has experienced great relief from the use of the Bitters. I feel a real pleasure in recommending them to the public. C. W. DENISON. SF.TH W. FOWI.E & Co., 138 Washington street, Boston, Proprietors. Sold by Charles Ritz, Lewistown, and their agents every where. Holloway's Fills. —Happily for mankind, mercury, iron and quinine are falling into disuse. Wherever these marvel working Pills are introduced, they supersede all the old remedies. Heretofore diseases of the stomach, the liver and the lungs have been treated in away that may he designated as murderous. The medicines administered, even where they have smothered the disorder for a time, have done so at the expense of the constitution. These Pills, on the contrary, expel the seeds of the maladies instead of merely choking down the symptoms for a (irae, and renovate the constitution and the whole vital organization. In cases of dys pepsia, liver complaint, bilious fever, lung fever, diarrhoea, dysentery, constipation and bilious or nervous headache, the relief they afford is immediate, and the cures they ac complish perfect. THE MARKETS. LEWISTOWN, May G, 1858 • Batter, good, lb. 15 Eggs, dozen, 9 Philadelphia Market. Reef Cattle sell in the city at sß(d 10; Sheep 84 00(5$ 6 per head—Cows, fresh, 835 to 60, dry 812 to 18—Hogs 87 to 7? net. Flour is quoted at 84 50@6 50 —Wheat, prime white, 125, red I05(a^ll2 —Rye 70 —Barley 00—Oats 41—Corn 67(5-69. Married. On the 18th March, by Rev. J. P. Shindel, DANIEL W. HARTLEY to Miss SOPHIA PETERS, both tf this county. On the 22ti ult., by Rev. 11. Baker, GEO. STRUNK, of Granville township, to Mrs. S. C. ALEXANDER, of this county. On Thursday evening, 29th April, by Rev. J. A. Ross, JAMES P. lIAMAKER and .Miss SARAH M. lII.MES, all of Lewistown. Died. On Thursday afternoon, April 29th, FRAN CIS McCOY, aged 71 years. His remains, attended by a large concourse of relatives and friends, were interred in the Presbyterian burying ground on Saturday afternoon—there to slumber in repose in the arms of mother j earth until the Giver of all Good shall again call them into animation. Few die who are nut tneurned by some, because however low they may be, that human being must be truly sad and lonely who can not find in the wide world an eye that will kindle with kindly beams, or a hand that will welcome him or her to a home, even of the humblest kind. Such are soon forgotten and buried in oblivion's grave. But when those die who were ever greeted by the smiles and affections of a happy home—by out door friends, who were wont to see and greet them daily—by the poor, who knew that in their ! hour of need a heart was at hand with the will and ability to relieve them; when such a man is called upon to enter on that journey from which no traveler returns, kindred aud friends are net alone either the sufferers ' r mourners, because a whole community feels the blow. Here, nay in a wide circle around us, where Mr. McCoy was knswn and appre : ciated, it is not necessary to say that he was, i through a long life, one of God's noblest works, an honest ytan, or that he possessed ! all the sterling qualities of heart and tnind | calculated to endear him to his children, his | personal friends, and the community at large. 1 His course however on earth is run—the fiat | has gone forth—and he sleeps in the narrow i house appointed for all living. Whoever has felt the loss oi a kind and j affectionate parent, has seen a hearth made desolate, and a lung-occupied room made va- j cant, can sorrow with the sorrowing, can feel I with the bereaved. Well mnv they mourn, | for a tie of the heart has beeu severed that. ! though time may in a measure assuage, can never be replaced. Like his life, his end was one of peace. He knew that the hand of the Destroyer was i upon him ; aud having little to regret in life 1 he turned his thoughts to Him who can make a dying bed feel soft as downy pillows, aud yielded to the stern decree without a murmur. A lew moments beforo the closing scene, with the ties of earth on one side and eternity on the other, hie heart seemed cheered by his children at his bedside, and he told them not to mourn for him—that all was well. These were his last words. Such was the end of , one whose memory will be cherished while memory remains, and whose departure, though he had reached more than the period allotted to man, will be more severely felt than almost any other, for it can be truly said we might have better spared another man. "Thou art goue to the grave—ami Its mansions forsaking. Perhaps thy tired spirit in doubt lingered long; But the sunshine of heaven beamed bright on thy waking, And the song that thou heard'st was the seraph I ms' song/' T. In this place on Friday last, Mrs. JANE CAMERON, aged about 28 years. The de ceased leaves a husband and three or four small children to deplore her early death. Her remains were internal on Sunday last in the Methodist Cemetery, in the presence of an unsuual number of persons who sympa thized in the bereavement of the husband and father. In West Beaver, Snyder county, on the 13th ! March, DEWALD STEIN INGER, aged 85 j years, 5 mouths p.qd 15 days. In Granville township, on the 7th April, JOSEPH O.; on the 26th April, JOHN 11., j and on the 4th inst., FESTUS, all children of 1 Abram and Amelia Knittle, aged respective i ly> 1 yoar and T months; 2 years, 11 months and 13 days ; and 6 years, 11 months and 0 ! days. S®~A white perch weighing 15 lbs. was seined out of Dunlap's creek, Brownsville, on Friday a week. _ Destruction of fish seems to be the order of the day on both sides of the Allegheny. We still hope to see the day when net fishing of all kinds will be prohibi ted in spawning seasons, and enforced by popular opinion. ffiay-The "Elixir" prepared by I)r. James Williams, for the cure of Dyspepsy, and nothing but Dyspepsy, (as advertised in anoth er column,) lias by its own merits obtained for itself s® high a reputation in Philadelphia, that physicians acquainted with its properties are using it themselves and prescribing it to their patients, convinced by observation of its great efficacy in restoring the disordered di- i gestive organs to a healthy function. Nu- ! raerotjs cases of dyspepsy of the most aggra- ; vated character, which were abandoned as incurable by some of the medical faculty, have by the use of this Elixir been restored to perfect health, as attested certificates testi fy. For sale by Charles Ritz, Lewistown. A CARD TO THE I.ADIES. Dr. DUPOJTCO'S GOLDEN FEMALE PILLS are ! infallible in removing stoppages or irregularities of the ; menses. Tlmse pills are nothing new, but have been used , by the Doctor for many years, both in France arid Amen- i ca, with unparalleled success in eve. .• cose, and he is ! urged hy many ladies who have used ttie in o make these I pills public for the alleviation <-f those sufie, ioz from any ; Irregularities whatever, as well as a preventive to those i In ..-s whose health will not permit an increase of family. : l'regnant females,or those supposing themselves so, are j cautioned against using these pills, as the proprietor as- , somes no responsibility after the above admonition, al though I heir mildness would prevent any injury to health; otherwise th.-se pills are recommended. Directions ac- [ company each bo*. Price £!. Sold wholesale and retail ! by F. A. HARDT 4c CO., General Agents for Lewislown, Mifflin county. Fa., and also agents for Belleville, Milroy, Reedsviile, Atlenville, Ate. They will supply dealers at ihii proprietor's prices, and stnu the pills to ladies (conji denliatly ] by retu- i mail to any part of ity or country, on receipt of $1 .1 .It itie !.ewistcnvn post office. For particular* - of .gents. K-See that each box i has my .I. _ J DI'PONCO, jl3O Broadway post office, New York. POTATOES! VLOT of tine Potatoes, expected from Pittsburg this day, and will be sold low. my 6 F. J. HOFFMAN. BOOKS FOR SALE. V LARGE LOT OF HOOKS, comprising the late Circulating Library, are offered for sale low in one lot. If not shortly dispos sed of in this mode, they will he divided in- J to two classes and distributed—the bound books at 25 and paper covers 12J cents per volume. NOTICE nnilE partnership heretofore existing under j the firm of McCoy & Ellis, in the Produce and Mercantile business, is dissolved by the death of Frantis McCoy, the senior partner i of said firm. " R. F. ELLIS, Surviving Partner. The DRY GOODS and GROCERY BUSI NESS will be continued at the old stand by the undersigned, who will endeavor to give i every satisfaction to the former customers of , the late firm. R. F. ELLIS. Lewistown, May 0, 1858. Estate of Francis McCoy, deceased. N OTICE is hereby given that letters testa- j mentary on the estate of FRANCIS Mc I COY, late of the borough of Lewistown, Mif j flin county, deceased, have been granted to ! the undersigned, residing in said borough. ' All persons indebted to said estate are re quested to make immediate payment, and i those having claims to present them duly au thenticated lor settlement. R. F. ELLIS. ) C. S. McCOY. > Executors. MARY McCOY,] Lewistown, May G, 1858. Bay-Thc PURCHASING. STORING, and FORWARDING of GRAIN will be continued by the Executors until further notice. [Bellefonte papers copy to amount of $1.50 each and charge this office.] Estate of David Coplio, deceased. is hereby given that letters testa It mentary on the estate of DAVID COP LIN, late of Wayne township, Miftiin county, deceased, have been granted to the under signed, residing in said township. All per sons indebted to said estate are requested tu make immediate payment, and those having claims to present them duly authenticated for settlement. JOHN T. CALDWELL, myG Executor. Six Cents Reward. I) AN AWAY frem the subscriber on the X, 29th April, an indentured apprentice to the Tailoring Business named ABRAHAM CASH. He is of small stature, boyish look, and has good clothing. The above reward, but no other charges, will be paid for his ap prehension and return to me. All persons are hereby forbid, at the peril of the law, from harboring, aiding or abetting said ap prentice, as 1 will not be responsible for any debts he may contract. WM. LIND. Lewistown, May G, 1858—3t. Central Pennsylvania Wholesale anil Retail Cigar Manufactory AND One door went of the Post Office, Lewistown, Pa. XW7IIERE may be found the best, largest T ? and cheapest assortment of Smoking | and Chewing Tobacco and Cigars in this part of the State. TOItACCOS. The puro Old Virginia Diadem Twist Atkin's genuine Smyrna Fig " Goedwin's Fine Cut, in tin foil Anderson's best Honey Dew, fine cut Bidgood's Juicy Fig Pounds | Competitor Pounds Pectin's Original Honey Dew, half pounds James Thompson's Celebrated Eldorado Spun Tobacco—Childrey's Coagress Fives Penn's C >n Fives, S2B per 100 weight I Oscar's v i. T tin, 27 " " Epp's •• Fives, 25 " " CIUARS. Esmeraldo Regalia Baltiiuores La Real Estrcllns Gift Opera Tulipans $5.50 per in. Concha Opera Fancy Fortunes Eagle Principe " Laguagra I Justo Sanz do " Concha La Napoleaus Imperiadora A lem an as Exuis Tirabeque Omer Pascha Washingtons Half Spanish Virginias $G per m. <&e (fee &c Which I can sell at from $3.50 to S2O per , thousand. uiyC E. FRYSINGKR. HEM ESTATE Houses axd lots i„ t v * ; V ty * a " d Farn,s aml ea oi for a reasonable V Inform at, on g, ven respectin- n Lands, and I axes paid if a utl, 0r ; 7 , owners. 17 -' l h tj, _ _ MFERESCES. Gkn. R. C. 11 A I.E. Peter |> om . John A. Wbiuht, Freedom Iron fl,n county. or w,3j: ; M.j.D,v,„ W , ilip , Ut6 S-Sffi SAiim. l * I large BRICK HOUSE k c > gln . „ „ HOUSES on the lot at theeornt and West Market streets Lewi-., 4 BRICK HOUSES and 2ER Z a \ SES AND LOTS, on ll a le V,, %• 1 FRAME HOUSE on the Zl ' uf „ and Charles street. ' "ti, 1 BRICK HOUSE, near tin- r ,,; t Judge Parker. Ai.su, a WOOD LOT on the Soutl •* the Juniata Liver, about U " , SM M Lewistown, containing about 5G •" S fr °* watered, adjoining the PennsvlSv!? road, with a two story Frame" H . — not occupied. Inquire of U? ' 0I1 H JNO. R. WEEKES Justice of the P- ace Smttnur s Surt,,L ( T F 7 ICE W ," l MarkM sited, \ J door to Irwin's grocery. Wl ' —— . _ 'piS NEW GOODS! NEW Prices, 'TMIE undersigned respectfullv inf., rn , public that he has opened a ~e.T >,' the room lately occupied by Jacob S between Mutthersbough's and Maves |' ■ East Market street. Lewistown, triends and the public are invited to y: examine a large, neat, and well which is now being sold f„ r cash or produce at very low pi.ces. It consists* Rich Dress Silks & Dress Go® of every variety, Shawls of every description, Fin* Emiruiin. ies and ileal Laces, Dress TrinumL" Ribbons, dr., and Domestic of every known style and make CLOTHS, CASTORS AJD SATINEITS, and all other articles usually class stores. Also, aeh i;-e assortta nt •' iF.nmio ffirocrrirj The store will lie under the manage# ? r .trf B. K. Firoved, well known as anatttmm and obliging salesman, who will sparer pains to pleas all who may favor him via their custom. W.M. KL'TLEiL Lewistown. April 29, 1858. f u 4 , COME AND SEE! AT Kennedy, Junkin & Co ! s SHEAF CASH S2CR2, they have just received ari V T and splendid stock of Sf RING & SUMMER GOODS, which they offer lower than ever. Th?t& vite all to call at their store any and to? day, as they are always ready and willing! wait on customers. We enumerate a fc*i our goods, as follows : Black 18iiko 50c to 81 37 j per yard Fancy do 50eto I 374 " Fancy Delaines 12 to 280 Ohalla 15 to 31c " Lavilla and I>u Calls 124 to 25e nervjrf Lawns and Ginghams Gj to 25c All kinds White Goods for (1 reuses S Cloths and Cassimers 50c to 5 5n pertiri Mantillas and Shawls, Dress '/*. Cot ton ad r. Hosiery and Glens, Calicoes G] to 12je, best quality Itead) made Clothing. Lower Than Em, Brown and A\ liite Sugars, Bto 12jc per lb. Coffees 124 to 14c per lb. Best Teas and Spices Syrups 124 to IS.} cents per qu:irt Qneensrcare and Willow Ware very low Boots and -Shoes cheaper than ever We have everything that people want,tK will sell cheaper than any other bouse ii town, for Cash or Country i'roduee. Gites a call. Ib,n't forget, at ap29 KENNEDY, J INK IX & CO'S. Fashionable Dress Making. MRS. E. F. BAIK, (fron, Baltimore,) Ms street, nest door to Town Hall, wills> tend to Dressmaking on an entire dot 2M improved system. Ladies in town and coun try are invited to give her a trial. Lewistown, April 29, 1>58.-3m DIVIDEND. — Notice i* hereby given# the Stockholders of the Lewistown :Gs Company that a dividend of THREE rW CENT, has been declared for the Ia: months, payable on and after May Bth, IW. on all stock on which the full amount of >•" instalments called in has been pai l- SAMUEL COMFORT. ap22 [ni r] Treasurer. The Dally Telegraph, Published h, Harrisburg, Pa., hy Geo. Berpcr | publishes the I.ist of Letters hy authority,sssrtr* ■ of it having the l irgest circulation. Terms—#3 per year; the weekly and sew.-*'" ( also published ai #2 per year. _ THE BALTIMORE AIEkKASj Published daily, trioveekly and weekly, b) ' Fulton, 12S Baltimore street, Italtiiwore, - Daily {to per annum, •? 1 for S months. s■' >'' r rvM fi for 4 months. Tri weekly $4 per annum, months, $1 for sis months, and #! for thr i '' e J"'', jntW , The Weekly American is published ai ' w % arlrt , eight months 91. four copies f.% eight copier J . I for 15, -20 for 20—all payable in advance. Philadelphia Dally *••* Published by J. R. Flanigen, 13S South Thinls' rt four dollars [wr annum i: |ipt The Dollar Weekly .\\vs, by same ! ,uWu ' ' f . annum. 6 copies for si>, 13 for 10.30 for *N — ' THE DAIL¥ HERALD, rented t by i Published every morninp, Sunday# cxc , • • NATIONAL POLICE GAZE^ THIS Great Journal of Crimean^ inals is in its Twtlflh War t andi' ' throughout the country. It contains al d*" Criminal Cast s, ai.d appropriate rictt* 1 ® together v. ith information on Criminn found in any other newt-paper. ~ Sii OSubscripiltons. S'2 per .hnnntntS* ' w nK be remitted by Subscribers, (who s n , (^tr they re * names and the town, county and sw| • ' plainly,) to R ' p,.lie's Dditor A Proprietor of the National V<^CC , r^r^'' CIORN SHELLERS-band and t for sale by F G A>U^
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers