THE GAZETTE. LEWISTOWN, PA. Thursday, June 17, 1858. Notices of New Advertisements. Merchants and others dealing in salt will notice the advertisement of Carr, Giese &, Co., Baltimore, who constantly keep on hand a large supply of that article. Dr. Cummings lost a gold pencil. An Executor's notice is also published. State Convention. The United American, Republican, and People's Committee of Superintendence for the City of Philadelphia, earnestly desirous to extend and perpetuate that union of the el ements of opposition to the present National Administration, which in this City has lately resalted in such brilliant success, do hereby respectfully suggest, and recommend to the State Committees representing those several elements of opposition, that they call upon the Citizens of Pennsylvania, who are oppo sed to the present National Administration ; •especially to its despotic and fraudulent Le 'compton policy, and its wilful neglect of the just claims of domestic industry ; and who are in favor of the Sovereignty of the People over their own local concerns; of American institutions as against the policy and intrigues of foreign Governments ; and of adequate pro tection to our home labor, to assemble in their respective Senatorial and Representa tive Districts to choose Delegates to a State Convention, to meet at Horrisburg, in the Hall of the House of Representives, at 2 o'clock, P. M., of Wednesday the 14th day of July, 1858, to nominate candidates forjudge of the Supreme Court and Canal Commission er. LEONARD R. FLETCHER, Pres't J. R. FLANIOAN, ) GEO. A. COFFEY, V Vice Presidents. W. J. P. WHITE, ) M. V. B. SUMMER, 1 0 , . J. R. LVXDAU., } Planes. Philadelphia, May 20, 1858. In view of the above recommendation, and its general acceptance, I hereby withdraw the call for a State Convention, issued by me, for the Bth of July next, and earnestly re quest the American Republicans of the State to accept it, and participate in the Election of Delegates to said Convention. By order of the State Committee. LE.M'L TODD, Chairman A. R. S. Com. Attest— EDWARD MCPHERSON, Sec. CARLISLE, May 31, 1858. To the Americans of Pennsylvania: The above recommendation having been submitted to me for my approval, after con sultation with the majority of the members of the American State Committee, and a large number of the prominent Americans of 1 the State, I cheerfully adopt it as our call for a State Convention, and urge the members of the American party throughout the State to participate in the election of delegates. 11. BUCHER SWOOPE, Chairman of American State Com. Clearfield, May 29, 1858. Inasmuch as the above recommendation and calls point out the plain road to practi cal, decisive, and enduring victory over the present National Administration and its ty rannical and sectional policy, I therefore re quest the Republicans of Pennsylvania to unite in the election of delegates to the above Convention. W*. B. THOMAS, Chairman of the Republican State Com. Philadelphia, June 1, 1858. In pursuance of the above recommenda tion of the several State Committees, the people of Mifflin County, "opposed to the present National Administration ; especial ly to its despotic and fraudulent Lecnmp •ton policy, and its wilful neglect of the just claims of domestic indnstry, and who are in favor of the sovereignty of the peo ple over their own local concerns; of Amer ican institutions as against the policy and intrigues of foreign Governments, and of I adequate protection to Home Labor"—are requested to asssemble at the Town Ilall, Lewistown on Monday Evening, July 12, 1858, j for the purpose of choosing Delegates to the above named State Convention, and transact such other business as may he deemed expedient. GEORGE FRYSINGER, Chairman County Committee. Farmer's High School. At the last stated meeting of the Phila delphia Agricultural Society, Judge Watts, of Carlisle, who was present by invitation, made an interesting and highly practical address, illustrative of the advantages of this institution, and its probable effects upon the agricultural interest of the State, in the course of which he stated that the reliable means for getting up this institu tion, are : Legacy by the will of Mr. Cresson of Philadelphia 55 qqq Paid by the citizens of Centre County IOOCO Appropriated by the State Agricul tural Society jq qqq Apprepriated by the Legislature, and paid ' £5 000 Appropriated and paid by the State 25,000 P on indlvldua, s paying a like sum 25,000 rw .u- 5100,000 \ iT , We have received and expended forty.fivc lhous / uJ do „ ars in the erection of a fanner', house, a large bam, and all the ont-hoones, cisr „' s , hc dl fencing and nn accoont of the school-buildlDg, so far as the same ban progressed. u It is the determined purpose of those who have this subject in charge, to have constantly in view the useful end to which this institution is intended j they desire to erect a monument to art, to science and to themselves, and therefore to incur no ex pense which is now absolutely indispen sable for the practical operation of a farm and the teaching of its farmers. WrMajor Buoy's daughter lost a gold bracelet in Market etreet the other day. A NEW CANDIDATE FOR LITERARY HONORS 1 Mifflin county has produced quite a num ber of citizens who have held important trusts, and at least forty candidates for Governor, but thus far has not made much stir in the literary line—particularly in the " Rochester" vein—but as this vacuum is likely to be supplied, we cannot resist the opportunity of aiding in his immortality by publishing some of the author's choice productions. The language used is natu ral to him, and being entirely original, he is of course entitled to a copy-right. Ihe iast production may be appropriately head ed — LUNATIC RAVINGS, BY ADAM JACKASS GREER, Reputed Editor of the Mifflintown Squill, alias Register, Known as a bad child from the day he could toddle along on his spindle shanks and say "damn;" afterwards as a bad boy and worse man ; a whig in 1853, a proscriptive know nothing in 1854 although his father is a foreigner ; a woolly head Republican in 1856; and now a red mouthed lccofoco after going through a DARKER METAMORPHOSIS in the fence corners of Brown and Armagh townships. From the Juniata Register, June 9. The scavenger of the Lewistowu Gazette indulges his cuttle-fish propensities last week, in a manner peculiar only to himself. Find ing himself defeated in his assaults upon this place, and wholly unable to return the galling fire upon the "fabulous golden village," he returns like a dog to his vomit, and belches forth any amount of falsehoods aud monstros ities. It has been wisely ordained by Provi dence that " monsters cannot propagate, nor the father of lies become the father of liars," hence the productions of the stupid brain of the low scavenger of the Gazette, becomes more insipid and foul than their progenitor. There is nothing in his ribald slang that mer its lengthy notice, save only that by his silence he confesses himself a political scoundrel of the first water, having betrayed all parties with which he has been connected ; simply because the GOLD of others made it a consid eration for his betrayal,— hence the odium he and his paper are held in, in Mifflin county ; the powerlessnees of both to accomplish any thing either morally or politically. The leather headed scavenger is perfectly exultant because our Republicanism teas not the price of gold; but HE is transcendantly glorious and jubilant that ins was thought worth pur chasing at a very moderate figure. lie then glories in his shame. Judas repented of the BRIBE he received, and under the goadings of a guilty conscience, terminated his career in a terrible manner; but the Judas of the Lew istown Gazette, has not yet repented, and the conclusion follows that HE is a more infamous scoundrel than his infamous prototype. The more the creature indites against us, the more we are led to believe that he is the offspring of some one of the Hessians of Revolutionary memory! We have only to say in conclusion, that this personal collision is not of our own seeking ; but was commenced by Judas Frysinger upon his own responsibility. Since 1851 he has manifested his impotent rage at us on every occasion, simply for exposing his rascality towards the Whig party of Mifflin countv, and carries his insane animosity into every party or organization where he can gain ad mittanco for his slimy carcass. As to his charge of our being compelled to sell printing offices elsewhere, we pronounce it the coinage of the scoundrel who invented it, and basely false. That exposure of his treachery ac counts for his lunacy, by it " His wretched brain gav* way. And be became a wreck, at random driven. Without one gHuipse of RKASON or of heaven!" Our readers we suspect will stare with astonishment to know what all this tirade of idiotism, for it cannot well he called by any other name, is about? What has the editor of the Gazette done to call for all this, and a column and a half in his pre vious paper, written in a similar strain ? \\ hy simply that he defended the citizens of Lewistown from low and scurrillous at tacks, made without the slightest provoca tion, duiing which we took occasion to re apply some of the choice terms made use of to Adam himself; and having it seems driven home a nail or two, stirred up more bile than ever did a double dose of calomel and jalap. No better evidence can be afforded of a bad cause than when such transcendant geniuses like him of the Register lose their temper and lay bare their putrid hearts; nor need anybody—not even his own readers, for we have a better opinion of their intelligence—be told that he is one of that class of base natures who mistake low blackguardism for wit, and defamation for argument. With all who have read the insane arti cles in that paper during the past few weeks, and noted how our statements and queries were met, but one question is ask ed, and that is, is the magnificent specimen of humanity who signs himself Adam J. Greer " drunk or crazy ?" A "sober man'' certainly would not write, much less pub lish, such a string of absurdities, blackguard ism, vulgar but pointless attempts at sar casm and falsehoods of every hue and shade, as he has done ; but as by report at least he has put the bottle aside (whether out of reach or not we don't know,) the conclusion must be formed that he is CRAZY, and in saying so we beg pardon of the lu natics in the Utica Asylum particularly, as from the matter in their Opal, we feel as sured there is not one in that establish ment who would not blush to have it said he was so insane as to indite such an arti as We P ublish to-day from the Regis ter. That our talented native of Mifflin coun ty is rather restive in the position he has placed himself is shown by the fact that he now accuses us cf having attacked Mif fiintown ! —says this controversy is none of his seeking—and then charges us with hav ing pursued him since 1851! When or where did we say a disrespectful word of the citizens of Mifflintown. Certainly not since a word has been said about the ma chine shops, or at any other time, unless Greer and the writer in the Sentinel are the citizens of that place. As to any con troversy, there is none. Well do we know that A. J. Greer will seek no controversy with us through a newspaper. He tried it once, and though he now tells the citizens of Juniata county that he "impaled" us, his conduct for seven years and public opin son then, demonstrate that somebody else was " impaled." We told him at the time that for once we would descend to his own LOW LEVEL and teach a scoundrel what could be done with his own weapons, and he knows and it seems still feels the re sult. When and where have we pursued him since ? Excepting on a single occa sion, when he attacked Col. Slifer with an article peculiarly " grcerish" in the Sen tinel, did we call him to account, and be sides this there has not been a single word published in the Gazette except noting his political somerset, at which he could have taken the slightest offence. Had we felt disposed to pursue him with the ma lignity that characterizes his own conduct, opportunity was not wanting, for no man reared in this county is more easily assaila ble, both politically and morally, than this same A. J. Greer. To the truth of this every reader of the Gazette will bear wit ness, for with the exceptions spoken of they will ransack the fount of memory in vain. Does he really believe it himself? If he does, we cannot account for it in any other way, than that in such moments of halluci nation he has imagined the Gazette to be after him with a sharp pen instead of snakes, toads, or the "man with the poker." If that is the case, he is certainly to be pitied, and it also accounts for some strange stories occasionally set afloat in this region in places where he used to frequent within the past seven years, namely, that we were about breaking up —that our sub scribers were leaving us at two post offices where there have not been ten actual dis continuances in as many years —and other ] similar nonsense. The people of Mifflin county, and par ticularly of Lewistown, must be a strange people if Adam Le Diable is to be believed. \\ e and our paper be alleges are held in odium here and without influence! Vet, strange to say, our list has gone on steadily increasing from year to year, and at the present day embraces patrons of whom any editor might well feel proud. We too can find friends wherever we go, among both rich and poor. The day laborers, the cart ers, the mechanics, and others stand by us on all occasions, as any one can fiud out by making inquiry among them; other classes do not hesitate to place important trusts in our hands, involving discretionary powers over what is almost exclusively their inter est; and the people of Lewistown have on several occasions against our wishes placed us in the principal borough office—the last time shortly after the publication of Swoopc's list, when they elected us over a highly respectable regularly nominated democrat; besides us there was we believe but one of the opposition candidates elec ted. This does not look as if we were held in particular odium. We have a few ene mies, it is true, but most of them are of about the same mental, moral, religious and political calibre as the polliwog of the Register. How far we valued his esj>o surcs, can be estimated by the fact that we republished them in the Gazette, just as we have the choice literary production above. With this we might close, but as Adam has also made some most miserable attempts at squibs aimed at us and the Democrat, we cannot forbear giving him a few speci mens, which he can paste in his hat for future use, mixed with a little more caustic than he seems capable of putting in his own, so that the next time he wants to shoot one off he will not be as much of a botch of an editor as he is of a man : jfedgrAd. thinks we arc a leather head. That's better than being a sap head. Well soaked—Tho ground and Ad's car cass. Conundrum. —Why is Ad. Greer like a cer tain scale fish? Because he's a sucker. " I'll be d—d" a part of the creed of Ad's church ? B*3k_A setter sot Ad. lately at Patterson, having mistaken him for a skunk. Wealhercock. —The citizens of Mifflintown have it in serious contemplation to put Ad. Greer on top of the court house to learn how the political wind blows, and which side pays best. Query? —Whsre did Ad. get so much money about tho time ho turned a woolly head? Ho told a man ho had a job on hand then of buy ing somebody 1 Who did ho buy ? Another Query ? —What does Greer intend to charge tho democratic candidate for Sena tor from this district? Will he come tho sumo game ho did over Col. Slifer—charge SSO, and then turn round and abuse him ? Dem. can didates had better keep a lookout for Greer, as they must either stand skinning or black guardism. HQb.Greer savagely denies that he was com pelled to well two or three printing offices. Perhaps KICKED out of them is more appro priate. fgftThe Brown township hyena, as Ad. used to be called, don't deny that he left Union county, publishing himself over his signature as a libeller. It is well for him he didn't, or he'd have seen it published again. boys at Mifflin need net walk to the river bank when they want to go fishing. All they have to do is to drop a line into the Register office, when, if the hook is baited rigid, they'll get a bite forthwith. BgL-Spooney Greer, it is reported, was last winter hunting some ono to continue a reli gious revival! We don't know whether he found his man, but if any one in Mifflin or Patterson will hide a whiskey jug, we'll bet Ad can find it quicker than anybody else. we see is fond of poetry, but makes selections in rather poor taste. We would recommend to him an old piece headed " An Ode to Ilum," from which he can make quotations that will hit somebody, if it don't us. flsjyGreer don't deny that he told the senior editor of the True Democrat that he was a "d—d fool" for having come out a Republi can so soon, as he might have made a couple of hundred dollars had he waited. How about the Sentinels, Adam ? Don't you think Get tysburg Sentinel is wrong on that list? ■QuSpooncy Greer thinks we must be a descendant of the Hessians. Wrong again, Adam, as usual. Our forefathers came to this country long before the Revolution, and were neither Hessians nor tories; and our father was fighting the British, as Ad. can ascertnin at the Pension Office, when his wns in Ireland. That was no disgrace to him, hut Ad. is. IP&AVe have given several of Ad's splen diferous productions to our readers to show what a fool he is. As he says we are a "scav enger," suppose he copy these items and re marks to let his readers see some of our work in that line. We are scraping you this week: should it he worth our while we'll skin you next, and if not too strongly saturated, get your hide tanned for a drum head for the new volunteer company. Having thus afforded some amusement for our readers, and given Greer, what he seemed to be fishing after, a mode rate REPLY, we hope he will endeavor hereafter to say something worth noticing, as we can assure him that all he has said so far has but created a feeling of contempt among our citizens of all classes, while in Juniata county be is the butt of boys, the laughing stock of men, and the " animal" to ladies whom they point at with the finger of scorn as a " living monument of infamy and shame." Remarks of Gen. Cameron On presenting a petition from laboring men of Pennsylvania. 1 am requested to present a petition, signed by a large number of laboring men engaged in the manufacture of iron in Pennsylvania. I receive a great man}' letters daily from per sons of this class, and i will say here, what will save me the trouble of writing a great many letters. They think the Congress of the United States can relieve them from their troubles. There never has been a time in the history of the iron business of Pennsylvania when there was so much real distress among the laboring men of my State—the men who do the work, the men who go to the forge before daylight, and return there long after the moon has risen—than there is at present. It is not a complaint now on the part of the capitalists. Men of capital, men of fortune, can take care of themselves. Capital can always take care of itself; labor, poverty, indi gence and want, always need sympathy and protection. These persons reside in the town of Norris town, on the Schuylkill river, some twenty miles above Philadelphia. The river Schuyl kill is traversed, on both sides by a railroad, one extending some twenty or thirty miles, another one hundred miles. On the one side of the river is a canal. All these works have been made for the purpose of conveying coal and iron to the place of manufacture and sale. The county of Schuylkill, the great coal deposit of Pennsylvania, has a population of some 80,000 or 90,000 people all of which has grown up within the last twenty-five years. At this time the whole laboriug population engaged in the iron and coal business, of the whole country extending from 1 hiladelphia to the mountains of Schuylkill county, are entirely idle; the boats are tied up ; the loco motives are, in a great measure, standing still, and the laborers are running about hunting employment and hunting food. These are the persons who complain ; they think that Congress can relieve them. 1 have told them, and I have written to them, that they have the power in their own hands. The laboring men of this county are power ful for good always. They do control when they think proper, aud I think the time is coming when they will control the politics of this country. I tell them that before they can get common protection they must change the majority in theSenate;they uiustchangethe majority of the other house of Congress; and above all, they must change the occupant of the White House, who is the dispenser of the power which controls the legislation of this country. In place of gentlemen who sneer when we talk about protection, they must send men hero who know something of the wants, something of the interests, something of the usefulness of the laboring men. Hitherto they have not acted as if they cared for their own interests; while they talked about a tariff which would guard their labor from competition with the pauper la bor of Europe, they would g® to the elections under some ward leader and vote for men to represent them here and elsewhere, who cared only for party drill, and who bad no interest above party success. This system they must dhange if they hope for success. I think the laboring men of Pennsylvania, at least, are now beginning to put their own shoulders to the wheel, and I believe they will make such a noise in the next October contest, as will alarm the gentlemen all over the country who laugh at them. The canals, railroads and mining operations of this region of country hare cost more than a hundred millions of dollars. The furnaces and other works connected with the manu facture of iron, cost an enormous sum, and the people interested in the iron and coal business, directly or indirectly, along the val ley of the Schuylkill amount to more than three hundred thousands souls. Since 1855 there has been a blight upon the business] growing out of the unwise legislation of Con gress, wlneh has really protected tho iron of Kngland, Kusssia and Sweden, and thus ta ken the labor and bread from our own work men. This iron interest of Pennsylvania, in which these men are employed, commenced in 1820, with a production of only 10,000 tons. In 1855, when it was up to its greatest extent, the production was a million of tons of pig metal. When this pig metal is worked into the v&rions uses in which iron is to be con sumed, it amounts to very many millions of dollars. The annual produce of coal in Schuylkill ceunty alone, in 1855. amounted in value to some $20,000,000. When it is known that it requires two tons of coal to make a ton of iron, you can imagine the number of persons who raly for their daily bread on the production of iron and coai. Iron, in its native mountains, is worth but 50 cents a ton ; when it is worked into pig metal it ranges in price from S2O to S3O, and sometimes to S4O a ton; and worked into various uses it frequently amounts to many hundreds of dollars a ton. I have said that these people have the power in their own hands. lam speaking to them now, and I wish them to exercise the power they have. I cannot help them, much as I desire to do so, nor can any of their friends here ; but when they go to work as men de termined to succeed should do, 1 have no doubt they will get protection. The people in this valley and on the slope of the Schuyl kill mountains have votes enough to change and control the politics of the linioa ; for as Pennsylvania goes, so goes the Union in all great elections; and their votes can at all times decide the politics of Pennsylvania. Let them exercise the power wisely, and they will no longer be without plenty of work and good prices. I move that this petition be referred to the Committee on Finance. FROM UTAH. A despatch was received at Washington last week from I tuh, by which it appears that the Mormons, notwithstanding their open rebellion, are to go unpunished, and thus suffered to gather strength for a fu • c o ture struggle when it will cost twenty lives to subdue them instead of one now. In his letter to Secretary Cass, Gov. Cumraing says he left the camp on the sth of April, en route to Salt Lake City, ac companied by Col. Kane as his guide, and two servants. In passing through the set tlements, he was greeted with such respect ful attentions as were due to the Represen tative of the Executive authority of the I nited States in a Territory. Xcar the Warm Springs, at a line dividing the Great Salt Lake from Davis county, he was hon ored with a formal and respectful reception by many gentlemen, including the Mayor and municipal officers of the city, and by them escorted to lodgings previously pre pared, the Mayor occupying a seat at his side in the carriage. Ex-Governor Young paid him a visit of ceremony as soon as he was sufficiently relieved from the fatigue of his journey to receive company. In a sub sequent interview, ex-Governor Young evinced a willingness to afford him every facility he might require for the efficient performance of his administrative duties. Brigham Young's course in this respect, Governor Cumming fancied, met wifchjlhe entire approval of a majority of the Salt Lake community. Having heard numerous complaints, Gov. Cumming caused public notice to he posted signifyiug his readiness to relieve those who deemed themselves aggrieved by being ilie g iliv restrained of their liberty, and assuring the protection of all persons. He kept his office open at all hours, night and day, and registered fifty-six men, thirty-three women, and seyenty-oDe children, as desirous of his protection, and evincing their disposition of proceeding to tho United States. A large majority of these people were of English birth, and were promised assistance to be re moved. Gov. Gumming says that his Tisit to the tabernacle will never be forgotten. There were between three and four thousand persons assembled for the purpose of public worship. There was the most profound silence when he appeared. Brigham Young introduced hira as the Governor of Utah, and Gov. Gumming addressed them for half an hour, telling them that it was his purpose to uphold the Consti tution, and that he would expect their obedi ence to all lawful authority, assuring them of bis determination to administer equal and exact justice, etc. He was listened to respect fully. He invited responses, and several spoke, referring in excited tones to the mur der of Joseph Smith, to the services rendered by the Mormon battalion in the Mexican war, and recapitulated a long chapter of their wrongs. The tumult fearfully iucreased, but an appeal from Brigham Young restored calmness. Several afterwards expressed re gret at their behavior. Gov. Cumming proceeds to describe the exedus of the Mormons. The people, inclu ding the inhabitants of Salt Lake, in the Northern part of the territory, are leaving the roads are everywhere filled with wagons loaded with provisions and household furni ture, the women and children following after without shoes or hats, driying their flocks they know not where. They seemed not only content but cheerful. It is the will of the Lord, they any, and thev rejoice to change the comforts of home for the trials of the wilderness. Their ultimate des tination was not fixed upon. Going south seemed to be sufficient to designato the place, but from the private remarks of Young in his tabernacle, Governor Cumming thinks that they are going to Sonora. Brigham Young, Kimball, and most of the influential men, had left their commodious mansions to swell the ranks of the emigrants. Ihe masses everywhere announced to Gover nor Cumming that the torch will be applied to every house indiscrimately, throughout the country, as soon as the troops attempt to cross the mountains. The people, though scattered, every means would be taken to rally them. Some of the Mormons are yet in arms, and the Governor speaks of the mischief they are capable of rendering as guerrillas. The way for the emigrants to the Pacifio is open. Gov. Cumming savs that he would leave for the south on the 3d of May. He says that he will restrain all the proceedings *©f the military for the present, and until he shall receive additional instructions from the Pres ident. ——• • - See advertisement of Dr. Sanford's LIVER INVIGORATOR in another column. WTJames McFarland a • cently attached to SpaldiL 4 p° U8 ** was killed in an | Liberty, Missouri. Ifr ' 8 his former wife's room * * The parties were divorced * Holloway's —- decay consequent upon ff? 1 ° f . ,he greatly retarded by t , "'2 *tt! ] and especially in the Spring S 1 * 11 *1 ; great vegetable tonic. Thf j the vital machinery in protr^fV l " s I cessanly shortens >'fe at like., :it robs existence of j t , Ji Saiße I therefore, who desire a ! on > Z}'- i ijourn on the earth, should ; bringing their disordered-y J 1,0 mity with the laws of hell t ?? Smtoc *i : this unequalled purifier, reeul.U | ative. No matter what or an ered myself a hopeless dvsoentil I Ms! ded to try the Oxygenate,] , I{ * conclusion it proved to be I ' ' all four hn!*s, and lam cured | rather a small man, my pre s . ul w ! pounds. Your Bitters need onlvt!/ to have a very extensive sale in tlii/ the country. Respectfully, & c ., *** J- B. MERWIX" Editor Tn, , | SKTH W. FOWLS & Co., 138 street, Boston, Proprietors. S ldtvfv ; Ritz, Lewistown, and their a ent j where. ° u ■ Williams, for the cure of DyLJ" nothing but Dyspepsy, (as adrertUed J,' er column,) has by its own merits ota for itself so high a reputation in Philadeln that physicians acquainted with are using it themselves and prescribingi! their patients, convinced by obsmaw great efficacy in restoring the disordered gestive organs to a healthy function \ merous cases of dyspepsy of the B W , b vated character, which were abanduJj incurable by some of the medical f aCE i have by the use of this Elixir been rwr to perfect health, as attested certificates is fy. For sale by Charles Ritz, Lewiston. A CARD TO THE JLADIES. l)r I) VP OXCO'S GOLD EX FEMUK fau, infallible in removing stoppers or irregulnnig, menses. These pillsarenolhing new,buttayefc,,, bv the Doctor for many years, bolt, in Franc* am „ ca, with unparalleled success in even CUP, j, i, urged by many ladies ho have u,ed the*,, t .,\ pills public for the alleviation iflh,,.* suiTcrinc n irregularities whatever, as wet! as aprew .lib'- > ladies whose health will not peririit an irscr .jsti,, i Pregnant females, or those supposing iber,'!,pj. , cautioned against using these pills, as the suines no responsibility afier the above ujwiiua, though their mildness would prevent anyiij-irr(o 3o Broadway post office. N-Tt Died. In Union township, on the Bth ir,sa JOHN ZOOK, aged 58 years and onuod The deceased was unmarried, and leave-1 estate worth between S4OOO and SSOOO, w inulated altogether bv day labor— an.-uttf to all without means of what industryu sobriety will do. On tli# 9th inst., in McYoytown. SAMCI MORGAN, only son of Joseph and SiJ Cochran, aged 4 months and 9 days. On the 26th Mav. in WavanJotte finnr Ohio, WILLIAM SIGLER, brother of J-i C. Sigler tif this place, aged 53 years, i merly of this county. Married. At Helena, Karnes county. Texas, on t! lith May, by Rev. Samuel M. Lowrir, fl JAS. M. SELLERS, of Miffiiatown, Joi'u county, to Miss RACIIEL RUCK MAN', the former place. THE MARKETS. LEWISTOWN, June 17. Butter, good, lb. '• Eggs, "p dozen. li Our millers are paying from 50 toS cts. tor Wheat; Rye 50; Corn 55; Oat;- Philadelphia Market. Beef Cattle sell in the city at S7j(*'| Shfp $2 50@44 per head —Cow?, 825 to 50, dry sls to IS—HogsStijtoi net Flour is quoted at 84 25(3+5 75 prime white, 110, red 95(3100—K)" f —Barley 00—Oats 40—Corn 70(3' 1 " SALTI'SALT!^ THE advertisers keep constantly on a a LARGE SUPPLY of Ground Alum Salt, Ashton's M doMarshall's & Deakm s Fine and Dairy which they are now selling at N ERA PRICES. CARR, GIESE 4 gL . Grain and Lumber Commission "^! 1 jel7-3t Estate of John Zook de**" 4, NOTICE is hsreby given mentary on the estate of JOB- , late of Union township, Mifflin CU V . ceased, have been granted to the unaeft g residing in Brown township, in sal All persons indebted to said est# . jr j quested to make immediate P ft N me ' , those having claims against the 88 ®® sent them duly authenticated for • ■ jel7 J 811 EM ZOOM^cut^ GOLD PENCIL L°ST,. THE undersigned lost a Gold his name on it. Any P murniog i. .0 me -ill U Lewistewn, June 17, 1858.