~— 1 Wgat " l ** iifc * Mii *^^ria-^miT^-iTr^BR.TTOTMT-.T^i~ -~R~I-~ „—. -iriri n\m HIM N I M ,I IM _ __ Whole No. 2555. BLYMYER & STANBARGER, HtlllltU & (liMISSIOX METLdZAITTS, Star Canal Basin, Lewistown, Pa, Will purchase every description of 1 Vein ce nt current prices. ALW AV S O N II ANI> , /•/ ISTEII. SALT, FISH. STONE COAL of aborted sizes, LIMEIII7KNEES' ' ,f JtLACKSMITIIS' COAL. GEO. BLYMYER, dec 2 0. 0. STANBARGER. W ALL AND WINDOW Pill'Sß.S. V LARGE assortment for sale Lv F. J. HOFFMAN. / 1 ROUND ALUM SALT.—A large lot * I new full sticks (!. A. Salt, just received, lor sale at a reduced price. my 17 F. J. HOFFMAN. % | ACKKRKC, Herring and Shad, Lest t 1 ipiality, at tow prices for stile by MY 17 " F. J. HOFFMAN. OCX DAY SCHWL BOOKS.—A large as 0 si.rtuicut of Sunday School Library, Glass and Reward Books, for sale at same prices as soM by S. S. Union in Philadelphia, at my 17 U. J. HOFFMAN'S. IYXTRA Rio "Cuflee, -at J-'f cenis. Also Su -1 A gars a*d other Groceries. low for cash at my.l7 T. J. HOFFMAN'S. / tONUECfiON ERi , Crackers, Nuts, Ac., \_y Ac., at low prices to wholesale dealers, my 16 F. -J. HOFFMAN. fPOBACGO and Segars—good qualities at I low prices to dealers, my 17 F. J. HOFFMAN. cGIuK FINDINGS. — A full assortment of IA Shoe Findings on hand, some articles much reduced in price, my 17 F. J. HOFFMAN. LiOLK LEATHER. — A good stock just re lA ceiied. of the Lest Bed and Oak Sole Leather. I have also a good assortment of Morocco, Linings, French G'alf Skin, 1 pper, Kir-s <lLe , all at low prices fur cash, i;iv 10 V. J. HOFFMAN. AILS.—F. J. HOFFMAN has always q wit hand a large stock of Le.-t Nails, und sold at low prices. STOItK.—i have on hand f Corn I'loughs, Colli Cultivators, iicady r a Siiellers, Hay I 'rags, and other Farming liiiphuu nts, fur sale at prices warranted to give -misfaetion. _inyl7 F. J. HOFFMAN. i (~ mkm LEWISTOWN, Pa. I)'>l.lSHKl> Icing Handie Steel Shovel- at G'il i ts: common long liandie Shovels at iruia 37 to 50 cts, for sale by F. G. FR A NCI SCI 3. / 10AL oil and Lamps: Merchants supplied \ with coal oi! and coal oil Lamps, at low <r rates than can be bought eastward. The nils are superior in quality and lower in pri "? than can be bought from eastern markets. I'iie quality of coal oil always guaiariteed free frjiu smell and smoke, for sale bv in vlO F. G. Fit A NCI SCCS. •) i l IHiZKN coal oil Lamps, varying in mm' ' prices from 75 cts t > 55.00 each, all with superior burners, for sale by my 10 F. G. FIIANCISCUS. nAKDWAKL. —We have on hand the . largest stock of Hardware which we have e\cr had, and will sell to merchants at as low rates as can be bought elsewhere (by the package.) F. G. FKANCISOUS. ')| |j i KKGS Harrisburg Nails, equal to OU'J the best in the market, for sale bv mylO F. G. Fit AXOI SO U S." 1/ j/ W t BUSHELS best Alleghauy 1" 'v'V® Broad Top Blacksmiths Coal, at 124 cts per bushel, for sale bv my 10 F. G. FRANC ISC US. 1/ W V SETS Thimble Skeins and Pipe JA_/V/ Boxes, assorted sizes, for sale by mylO F. G. FKANCISCUS. 1) El) Wagon 1 lames, at 45 cts per pair, V (usual price 024 cts), with almost every T ariety of Wagon, Carriage, Buggy and Dear bora Ilantes, at equally low prices. mvlO F. G. FRAXCISCTS. / * ItASS Scythes—guod articles at cts. VJ No. 1 strapped straw and hay Forks, at Lw rates. F. G. FRANCISCUS. ') j h NLOADING Hay Forks, wood head, steel prongs, patent springs, at $7 each, best article in the market, for sale by taylO F. G. FRANCISCUS. / f Itll'FlN X. DARLING & Co's broad ii £ ra,n an d grass Scythes—llay Rakes, 7 F(j rks, &c., for sale by 111 J10 F. G. FRANCISCUS. SWINGLE Pullies for unloading hay forks, -J at 90 cts each. Rope 6of all kinds and -izes at reduced prices, for sale by ni > 10 F. G. FRANCISCUS. iM&LfsriMsss &38W ipwosansaiaffi) nrs ©B®&®IS wmzsmmx? wmmns v?&> MOBikE MEMOES '•: S.\llltVTi I MKUI'IXU. Gladly ui_--.-tiiig, Kiudly greotinjf. On tlii< holy Sabbath .lay. •Sinful thoiiohts arc oil for.-jakoij; Kv.-ry -cat in quiet taken. Lot en h ht-nrt to tioj uwakoa. While we si no n-.nl jnny. Gladly nreetino. Kindly greeting, S hoohnates, tea-.-h-r-i. all are here; S )jik are Iht -ning. .s<nie- pre-i !::ig, S .me the l s< >n are providing, S >in- the iiu'ant mind are guiding, Killed with holy fear. Chilly meeting, Kindiy greeting, Let us ail unite in heart, hile the throne we're ail addressing, And our sinful ways coufe-suig. Let u- seek a heavenly blessing, Kre we hence depart. Gladly meeting; Kindly greeting, As each Sabbath shall return. May our minds l.y study brighten, May our aspirations heighten, And may grace our souls enlighten, While we strive to learn. Genuine F„ehgioii. How beautiful is that religion which teaches me to love Go J above all things and my neighbor as myself! Religion is benevolence, and benevolence includes ev ery virtue. The benevolent cannot be un charitable, cannot be unfaithful, cannot be j censorious, cannot be impure in act cr thought, cannot be selfish; they love God and their neighbors, and they do as they would be d one by. But who is religious ? who is benevolent? who is at all times pure i in thought or deed? who is at all Mines tree 1 from c-ensoriousiiess, from uncharitable -1 iic.-s ? None. No, not one. The pre i cepts taught us as those ou whisk ' hang all the law and the prophets,' the lore of j (it nl and the lore of t'nij neighbor, may be f iniMessed upon the heart and have the whole undivided assent of the understand ing; while the mind is in this state, the in dividual is religious. Hut the cares of the world and their jarring collisions most ait times occupy the thoughts, and divert the mind from this wholesome state. The pas sions which have been cherished by bad education —the indulgences that have be come habitual before the beauty ol wisdom was perceived by the thousand and ten thousand occurrences which tempt the rich to uncharitableness, and the poor to envy and malice, all by turns, banish the truth from the mind. This has led men to the desert and to the monastery; to become hermits and monks ; forgetting that religion requires to do as well as to suffer. Truth becomes effective by frequent contempla tion; and the habitual recurrence of its precepts induces practice. Read Good Books. Look at the influence on the mind, of books of a bad character; see how they taint and pollute it! A respectable lady, in fits of derangement, sang some indeli cate songs. When told of it afterwards, when in her right mind, she said she heard them when less than four years old.— What, then, would be the impression that an impure volume would make upon the young and tender mind ? Would it be one easily eradicated ? Would it not rather re main as if written with a pen of iron upon the susceptible heart, and exert its pollut ing influence to a greater or less extent through life? Many very pious people have had a sore trial in contending with the defiling influence occasioned by read ing improper books in former years. l>y reading books of a good character, such as exert a salutary and beneficial in fluence, the ground will be occupied, and there will be no room for the poison and trash which surfeit and kill. Give child- rcn good books, written in a lively and in teresting manner, and they will be so ta ken up with them as to have no desire for unwholesome reading. The ground will be occupied with something better. There is no room for the bad. Fill a measure with wheat, and there is no room to throw in chaff. The reading of good books exerts a con servative influence in after life. Not only is the ground pre occupied, and the young kept from the baneful eft'ects of improper reading while they are young, but the in fluence in the w hole course of life will be conservative. In many hours of fearful temptation, the truths which were instilled into the mind by early reading have prov ed a life-preserver to the struggler. Here is a man exposed, from the force of circum stances, to a very serious temptation, and he is just about to yield, but at that mo ment he remembers the history of a man similarly placed, which he read about in a good book when a child, and that only en ables him to resist and finally gain a con quest over the temptation. Reading of good books is the means of spiritual good in many cases. Can any one doubt that Bunyan's inimitable work has made impressions upon the tender mind of childhood which were never worn off, and which resulted in sincere, lasting con version to God ? The great William il berforce said, ' I had rather go to render my account at the last day, carrying off with me the little narrative of ' The Shep herd of Salisbury plain,' than bearing the load of the volumes of Soott, fid 1 as they arc of genius.' Why? Because the little volume was the means of the salvation of souls out bcott's novels never were.— Many now eminent in the religious world affirm that their first serious convictions arose from, reading goed becks-. 1 fa/</.•- man Reflector. 7 ot:</7y and Honor. —lie and continue poor, young man, while others around you grow rich by fraud and disloyalty; be with out place or power, while others beg their way upward; bet r the pain of disappointed iiopes, while others gain.the accomplish ment of theirs; by flattery; forego the grac ious pressure of the hand, for which others oringe and crawl. Wrap yourself in your own virtue, and seek a friend and your dai ly bread. If you have in such a course grown gray with unblemished honor, bless God and die.— Hcn::ehnait. ! MIEEEMMEOiQI, Barnes on the Sale of Intoxicating Liquors. [Below we publish, by request, a couple of ox-tracts iroin an arguiucnt put forth by licv. Barnes, of Philadelphia, on the traffic in ardent spirits.—Ktl.] 1. It is an employment which tends to counteract the desi/jn of the eery organi j -.ation <f noddy. Society is organized on j a benevolent principle. The structure of that organization is one of the best adapt ed instances of design, and of benevo lence, anywhere to be found. It is on this j piinctipla that a lawful employment—an employment fitted to produce subsistence for a tuan and his family, will not inter fere with the rights and happiness of oth ers. It may be pursued without violating an}' of their rights, or infringing their happiness in any way. Nay, it will not only, not interfere with their rights and hap piness, but it will tentl to promote directly their welfare, by promoting tlm happiness ot the whole. Or, for example, the em ployment of tire farmer may be pursued not only without interfering with the rights or privileges of the mechanic, the physician, or the merchant, but it will di rectly contribute to their welfare, and is hidispensible to it. The employment of the physician not only contributes to the support of himself and family, but to the welfare of the Community. It not only does not interfere with the rights and hap piness of the farmer and the mechanic, but it tends directly to their advantage.— The employment of the merchant in law ful traffic, not only contributes to his sup port but is directly beneficial to the whole agricultural community; for, as has been well said, 'the merchant is the friend of mankind.' lie injures no man, at the same time that he benefits himself; and he contributes to the welfare of the com munity by promoting a healthful and de sirable exchange of commodities in dif ferent parts of the land, and of various natures. The same is true of the mechan ic, the mariner, the schoolmaster, the leg islator, the book-maker, the day laborer, the lawyer and the clergyman,. Now, we maintain that the traffic in ar dent spirits, as a drink, is a violation of this wise arrangement. It tends to sap the foundation of the whole economy. It is solely to benefit the trafficker, and it tends to evil, evil only, evil continually. If ev ery man should act on this principle, soci ety could not exist. If every man should choose an employment that should neces sarily and always interfere with the peace, and happiness, and morals of others, it would at onec break up the organization. It every manufacturer should erect a man ufactory, as numerous as our distilleries and dram-shops, that should necessarily blight every farm, and produce sterility in its neighborhood, every farmer would re gard it as an unlawful employment; and if pursued, the business of agriculture would end. If a physician could live only by diffusing disease and death, who would regard his as a moral employment? If a mariner could pursue his business from this port to Calcutta or Canton, only by importing the plague in every return voy age, who would deem it an honorable em ployment? If an apothecary could pur sue his business only by killing nine per sons out of ten of those with whom he had dealings, who would deem it a lawful busi ness ? If a man can get a living in his • • employment only by fitting out a privateer and preying upon the peaceful commerce of the world, who will deem it a lawful employment? If a man lives only to make a descent on the peaceful abodes of Africa, and to tear away parents from their weeping children, and husbands from their wives and homes, where is the man that will deem it a moral business? And why not ? Does he not act on the same principle as the man who deals in ardent spirits —a desire to make money, and that only ? The truth is, that in all these ca ses there would be a violation of the great fundamental law on which men must agree to live together in society —a violation of j that great, noble, and benevolent law of . our organization, by which an honest em ployment interferes with no other, but may tend to diffuse blessings in the whole circle of human engagements. And the 1 THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1860. One of them was thrown beneath the locomotive and the train, which passed over her, doing, however, no apparent injury, although when picked up, and when our informant left, she appeared to be almost lifeless. The other was thrown with great force down the embankment, and was nut discovered until some minutes afterwards, the passengers supposing that there had been but one victim. This child was struck in the face from the right temple downwards, and was instantly killed. Some of the gentlemen passengers laid the bodies side by side on the grass. It was an affecting and terrible sight to see the little ones, who but a few moments be fore were walking hand in hand in life, now dead aud dying upon that sad spot. The parents of the children, attracted by the stopping of the train and the outpouring of the passengers, approached the ground slowly and in utter ignorance of what had happened. When the truth became apparent, it may easily be conceived how terrible were their feelings. The sudden shock of horror was almost too much for their reason, and the traffic in ardent spirits is just as much a violation oi tnis law. as in any of the ca ses specified. 2. llivery man is bound to pursue such a business- as to c//;./- n al:utile ro.isu!- cr/ition for that which lie receives from others. A man who receives in trade the avails of the industry of others, is under obligation 10 restore that which will be of real value. lie receives the fruit of toil ; he receives that which is of value to him self ; an.! common equity requires that he return a valuable consideration. Thus tha merchant renders to the fanner, in ex change for the growth of. his farm, the productions of other climes; the manufac turer, that which is needful for the cloth ing or comfort of the agriculturalist; the physician, the result of his professional skill. All thcs3 ara valuable considera tions, which are fair and honorable sub jects of exchange. They are mutual ac commodation ; they advance the interests of bodi parties. But it is not so with the dealer in ardent spirits. lie obtains tha property of his fellow men, and what docs lie return? That which will make him a happier man ? That which will benefit Ins family? That which diffuses learning and domestic comfort around liis family circle ? None of these things. He gives h:m that which is established and well known as the source of no good, but as tending to produce beggary and wretched ness. Sow if this- were practiced in a:iy other business, it would be open fraud. If in any way you could palm upon a farmer that which is not only worthless, but mis chievous—that which would certainly tend to ruin him and his family, could there be any doubt about the nature of his employ ment? It makes no difference here, that the man supposes that it is for his good ; or that he applies for it. You know that it is not for his benefit, and you know — what is the only material point under this head—that it will tend to his ruin. What ever lie may think about it, or whatever lie may desire, you are well advised that it is an article that will tend to sap the founda tion of his morals and happiness, and con duce to the ruin ol his estate, and his body, and his soul; and you know, there fore, that you arc not rendering him any valuable consideration for his property. — The dealer may look on bis gains in this matter —on his houses, or mortgages, or lands, obtained as the result of his busi ness—with something like these reflec tions r ' This property has been gained from other men. It was theirs, honestly acquir ed, and was necessary to promote their hap piness and the happiness of their families. It lies become mine by traffic which has not only taken it away from them, but which has ruined their peace, corrupted their morals, sent woe and discord into their families, and consigned them perhaps to an early and most loathsome grave. — This propelty lias euuie from the hard earn ings of other men; has passed into my hands without any valuable compensation render ed; but lias been obtained only while 1 have been diffusing want and woe, and death through their abodes.' Let the men engaged in this traffic look upon their property thus gained; let them survey the woe which lias attended it; and then ask, as honest men, whether it is mor al employment. Two Children Killed at East Newark, New Jersey. Affecting Scenes. —As the seven o'clock train from llahway, reached East Newark, on the loth, two little girls, aged about seven or eight years, were discovered by the engineer walking hand in hand across the track a short distance in advance of the approaching ears. With commendable alacrity he sounded the whistle for brcak ing up, and the utmost efforts were made to stop the train. 80 suddenly was the speed checked that it seems almost miraculous that some of the passengers were not injured, as they all felt the shock sensibly. The children had just come up an embankment, and attempted to cross the traek diagonally just as the loco motive reached them, and notwithstanding the warning given by the engineer, they kept on, and were both struck by the cow catcher. wildest exclamations and sobs were uttered ly them. The mother of one of the little ones could hardly he restrained from do ing violence to her-elf. .1 Lizard in a Alan s Stomach—Sin - <jul<y Circumstance.—On Saturday a week a live lizard, seven inches long, and two .Hid a naii in oiicunilnx-nos, was passed from the bowels u! Mr. Abuer 0. Yen-ill, son of Mr. Cyrus J. Verriil, oi West Au burn, Maine. The circumstances attend ing this expulsion are detailed by Mr. Ver riil, and his high charictar for veracity and probity removes- all doubts of its real ity, however- impossible it-may appear.— Mr. eiriil is about twenty-three years of age, and for the past six or seven years he lias been in declining health, although pre viously he had been healthy and robust. During all this tune he has been subject to fainting spells, sharp pains and weakness in the region of the stomach and bowels, and costiveness and stoppages, and, not withstanding he has at times had an inor dinate appetite, yet his weight has fallen oil from one hundred and fifty pounds, when he was sixteen or seventeen years of age, to one hundred and thirty pounds at the present time. I he lizard is of the common dark color ed and spotted species, but when it was first expelled it was much lighter colored. It ia probable that the reptile was drank from a brook which runs- near a meadow where Mr-. A srrill has been accustomed to work.— Lewiston Falls (Mc.) Journal, June 8. -1 Dead Man Tells his Friends Where he is Jfrwr-cd'. —The Madison* (Ind.) Cour ier, of May GO, relates the following very remarkable incident: ' Among the unfortunate flat boatmen wrecked in the late terrible hurricane on the Ohio, were two brothers oi the name of Gibbons from Pittsburg. When the boat they were on went down near Carroll tun, one of them was rescued from drown sng, but the other less fortunate sunk and perished beneath the waves. The surviv or, after waiting at Carrollton and search ing in vain for the body, returned to bis borne in Pittsburg. Saturday night lie dreamed his brother, whose name was Dan iel eame to his bedside and told him that his dead body might be found by the side of that of a relative who perished on the same day and in the like manner with him self. ('1 lie relative was on another boat when lost.) The brother immediately started down the river, and on reaching this city, calling on the sexton of Spring dale Cemetery, he found sure enough that his brother and relative were interred side by side in this city. This is a strange story, but it was related to us by Mr. Gibbons himself, who was in our office to-day, and we have no reason to question his veracity.' A Girl Killed While Tied To A Cow. A terrible accident occurred in the town oi Delhi, Delaware county, a few weeks ago, which resulted in the death of a little girl seven years old. The parties to the sad occurrence were William Scott, a boy seventeen years old, and his half-sister, Elizabeth Doby, the victim. The boy had been sent to take the cows to pasture, the little girl accompanying him. lie had with him a piece of rope, with which he was to bring back some hay. On his way he playfully tied one end of the rope around the body of his sister, and the oth er end to a cow's tail. When the cow had proceeded a short distance in this way, fol lowed by the girl, the latter stumbled and fell, which so frightened the cow that she ran off at a furious rate, dragging the poor girl after her. After running some dis tance the girl's head struck a solid rock, crushing in the skull, and at- the sagje time the cow's tail pulled out, so great was the force of the resistance. The girl was also badly cut around the face, neck and head. She was taken up by the boy and carried home, where she breathed but two or three times and expired. The boy is said to be rather deficient in intellect, and it is not supposed that he realized the im minent danger in which his sister was pla ced by his mischievous conduct. The Land of Contraries. —ln Australia the north wind is the hot wind, and the south the cool; the westerly the ruost un healthy, and the cast the must salubrious; it is summer with the colonist when it is winter at home, and the barometer is con sidered to rise before bad weather, and to fall before good ; the swans are black, and the eagles white; the mole lays eggs and has a duck's bill; the kangaroo (an animal between the deer and the squirrel) has five claws on his lore paws, three talons on his hind legs, like a bird, yet hops on its tail. There is a bird (mellipage) which has a broom in its mouth instead of a tongue; a fish, one half belonging to the genus rafia, and the other to that of squalus. The cod is found in the rivers, and the perch iu the sea ; the valleys are cold and the moun taiutops warm ; the nettle is a lofty tree and the poplar a dwarfish shrub; the pears are of wood, and the cherry grows with the stone outside, the fields are fenced with ma hogany ; the humblest house is fitted up with cedar, and the myrtle plant is burned for fuel; the trees are without fruit, the flowers are without scent, and the birds are without song. Such is the land of Austra lia. New Series—Vol, XIV, No. 33, C inoius C\tsc. —ln the Common Picas of Luzerne county, a few weeks ago, a somewhat singular case was tried. The ad ministrators of Klisha Harris had offered his effects at ) uldic sale. Among other things was an uncouth block of wood, sup posed by some to be part of a cheese press, but the true character and object of which was unknown. David M. Ilutehmaeher hid it off for fifteen cents, and laid it out against the fence until night, when he car ried it home. Subsequently he detenu u cd to gratify bis curiosity, and accordingly split the block open, when he discovered a queer secret drawer, opened by the pres sure o!. a. long rod, and containing bonds, notes, and ochor matters, besides about fc-,000 in gold and silver coin. It had long been conjectured that money a:idotli : or valuables were ccreted about the prem ises. An amicable suit was brought for the recovery of tlie contents of the block, to test the question of rightful ownership. \ crdict for the executors, §4,500. JGsits" lt may interest some of our readers to kiiyw what is included under the name ol the Kmjire of Japan, which now, fur the first time, sends an Embassy to a dis tant nation, and that notion, which is the mure remarkable, the youngest in the fam ily of nations. Japan proper consists of three large islands, Nipon, Ivie-siu, and Sikokoki. Of these, Nipon is the largest, and contains thecapital of the cmpira, M v-. do. These are surrounded by a vast num ber of islands, most of which little or nothing is known of; estimated by soil) at 7000. and again by others at 5000. Trio dimensions of the empire axe about 171,- 000 square miles—a little larger than tip six New England States, and New York, Pennsylvania, and New Jessey together. The population is variously estimated at from 1 ;>,000,000 to 50,000,000, and does not, probably, fall sbort of 30,000,000. BsjuThe Singapore Free Press mentions the astonishing fact that since January, 1850, fifteen hundred Chinese have been carried off by tigers in Johore, the end of the Malacca peninsula. The tigers show more than their usual cunning, and regu larly feed on human flesh. They lurk, close to the narrow jungle paths, and spring out from behind on the unfortunate pas ser-by. The Chinese have immigrated in to the peninsula in large numbers, and have entirely monopolized the cultivation of gambier and black pepper. The refute, leaves of the gambier (terra japoijieaj arc used as manure for the pepper plant. It is now difficult to induce coolies to work in Johore, so great is the danger. At the present rate of deaths the cultivation must decline. The quantity of gambier import ed into England annually, chiefly for dye ing purposes, is 0000 tons. ®as?*"Mr. Charles Trone, of Hanover, Pa., left that place in the cars, to go to Baltimore, to witness the reception of the Japanese. The train, however, had pro ceeded only about lour miles, when he ac cidentally fell from the platform, and was so badly injured as to cause his death on Tues day. lie was twenty-four years of age and much respected. JJii* Ja 'r j Q-- y? Lr, 9 OFFICE on East Market street, Lewietown, adjoining F. G. Franciscus' Hardware St.ire. I'. S. Dr. Locke will be at his office the lirst Monday of each mouth to spend the week. mySl Dr. Samuel L. Alexander, mrJl Has permanently located at Milroy, yff and is prepared to practice all thebranch es of his Profession. Office at Swine hart's Hotel. my3-ly DB. S A MARTTF through the solicitation of many friends, located in Nevton Hamilton i;: the room of Dr. Atkinson, who goes to Lewistown. lie hopes by a strict attention to business to receive the support and merit tho approbation of a generous community. He j has the experience of twelve years' regular practice, in which time he has had an oppor i tunity of treating diseases of almost every , species. Office in dwelling directly opposite the Presbyterian church, apl9-3m EDWARD FRYSINGER, j WHOLESALE DEALER & .UAUIFACTEREH HUKVniBUWSMHf, &c. dpo. 2PAo Orders promptly attended to. iK' GEO. VT ELDER, Attorney at Law, * * Office Market Square, Lewistown, will at tend to business in Mltllin,Centre and Hunting- • don counties. my2G A. LP kinds of Notions, Perfumery, Fancy _ZJL Soaps, Purses, Spool Thread) Paper, Pens, Combs, Brushes, with a large variety of articles too numerous to mention, you wilL find at reduced prices at A. FELIX'S WINE, Vinegar, and Cider, on v T hand and for sale by A. FELIX, |~V HANOI o AND LEMONS for sale at 1 V/ Zerbo's Grocery establishment,
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers