Whole K0.2587. Jib. J, ISJ IS! "£2? IS S£3 o OFFICE on East Market street, Lewistoiyn, adjoining K G. Franciseus' Hardware Store. 8. l'r. Locke will he at bis office the first Monday of each month to spend the week. my 31 DR. A. J. ATKINSON, UAVIXG permanently located in Lewis town, otters his professional services to the citizens of town and country. Office We-t Market St., opposite Eisenhise's lintel. Residence one door east of George lilymver. Lewistown, July 12, 1860-tf Dr. Samuel L. Alexander. r) Has permanently located uc Miiny, Yr and is prepared to practice all thebram-li ££ es of nis Profession. Office at Swine jiurt's Hotel. my3—ly EDWARD FRYSINGER, WHOLESALE DEALER & 31AIYT F.UTI EE£ OF (WAR TOBACCO, MP, &c., &e., Orders promptly attended to. jel6 SEC. W. SLD2B,, Attorney at Daw, Office Market Square, Lewistown, wiil at tend to hu-ioess in Mltilin.Centre awl Hunting don counties. ty26 Scigrist's Cld Stand, .Year the Canal llridyr, L< wistoien, Pa. Strong lie.-r. Lager ih-er, Lindenberger and Switzer Cheese—all of the best quality constantly* oil band, for sale wholesale or re tail. \ . a-t to la had daily during su miner. n.\ 24-v r McALISTERVILLE ACADEMY Juniata fount*. Pa, ('•HO F. McF.JPI..4.VI), I'iiacipal A," Propritlor. J.ICUIS JMUA.L.R, I'yi'f. 1/ .Mathematics, 6,' c. APvt .7.V.V/E S. CRIST, Teuclur of .Vuslc, &>c. The next session of this Institution com mences on the 2Gth of July, to continue 22 netks. Students admitted at any time. A Normal Department ,vi!l be formed which will "afford Teachers the best opportunity of preparing for fall examina tions. A NEW APPARATUS has been purchased, Lecturers engaged, &c.. Ttr.Ms—Boarding. Kooin und Tuition, per -e-iiuii, sost> jitiU. Tuition alone at usual rates. sent fret on application. SILVER PLATED WARE ; BY KAKIKI HILLY, No. Hit! Market Strrtt, IMiiladelj hiu, MAN i - factcUKß OF Fin- Xiekel Ft leer, and Silver Plater <>J' Folks, Spoons, Ladles, Puller Knives, Castors, Tea iS 'ls, Cms, Kettles, Waiters, But ter Dishes, lee Ditchers, Cake Baskets, Ctuhaiuiiott M are, Cu- <. Mwjs, Caputs, dc. W .1 general assortment, comprising none hut the - .• 1 litis, made • the a 'maUfmtt and heavily pin -1 1 muting ;em a serviceable and durable article :r ii Is, Steamboats m l Private Families. *'!. Ware s -plated iirttro hist manner. febJ3-!y WILLIAM LiND, has now open A NEW STOCK OF Cloths, Oassimeres AND VESTINGS, whi,'h will be made up to order in'the neat est and most fashionable styles. apl'd •)I and 3 bushel Grain Dags, at Zerle's mm 2 Grocery and Variety Store. r pABLE and Fluor Oil Cloths, at 1 ZERBE'S. VJDAIX S patent Churn, Barrel Churn ; J IC and \ bushel measures', at Zerbe's Gro cery. PAINTED and Cedar Buckets, Tubs, Brooms, Fancy Baskets, Market and Clothea Baskets, Sugar Boxes with handles, and Fiour Boxes, at ® : *B ZERBE'S. r PABLE Cutlery, Table and Tea Spoons, aU -L kinds, Butter Bowls,' Butter Fuddles, and Butter Prints, at ZerbeVGrocery and Va riety Store. ' novß £OTTON Laps, Carpet Chain, Cotton and Woollen Yarns, Net Yarns, ifce., at ZERBE'S. EE Mills, Washing Machines, Clothea fins, by the box or gross, comriion and Tung, at 11. Zerbe's Grocery. D AISINS, Dried Apples, Peaches, Cher -Al ries and Currants, at Zcr'be's Grocery. r jPAU by the gallon or keg, at ZEHBE'S. SIT) IHE largest and best assortment of Queensware ever offered in this place', v . f L f a " Tea Sets, Toy Tea Sets. Dinner f-\ khina and Stone Toilet Sets, Tureens, fered Dishes, Sauce Boats, Steak Plates, -frier Plates, Cups and Saucers, stone and - 'tatnon, tu sell separate from sets, for sale at novS ZERBE'S. JHMKTIHHB £sja> mra&sssßHa si? ®a®2B®js iKswsssKsrorsra amßwwMtg ®misws IPA. iOMM MMGIOHS How They Fall. It w seldom that a young man sets out in life with the determination of living vi ciously. His intentions arc correct enough, but he is weak. He mingles with men old er than himself, with whom it is gratifying to hl3 vauii,y associate. lie finds among them habits of thought, expression, and ac tion. which in his very soul he loathes; but lie < weak —how can he resist-the evil ? Nay, how can he avoid taking part in it, unless he wishes to make himself appear singular, and becomes the subject of his companions' ridicule i jly degrees the un feeling or obscene conversation of his com panions becomes less disgusting and more palatable, till at length, words that would tit first have made his cheek tingle with shame or stung ins conscience with re morse, become the woof of his conversa tion. The licentious thought, the coarse expression, the blasphemous oath are wel comed with a smile, and he is ready to sneer at others, whose moral nature is still too sensitive to allow them |o do the same. J From being an unwilling hearer he soon j becomes a willing partaker, and the ad vance is rapid to gloryfying in it, and him : sell becoming tire tempter, to lead them in the same path lie has himself trodden. It is by this weakness—this moral cow. rd iee—that we are led into sin, despite the promptings of our better nature. It may be that in cur hearts we despise the man by whom we are led, but we come at last to applaud his sentiments and adopt his I tone. Demeanor at Home. First and foremost (says u modern Ches terfield, don't try to be polite. It will spoil all. It you - keep overwhelming your gue.-ts with entreaties to make {hem feel at hujiic, they will very soon wish they were there. Let them find out that you ate happy to see them by your actions, and not by'your words. Always remember to let bashful people alone at first. It is the only way to get them at their case. Trying to draw them out has sometimes the contrary effect—of driving them out of the house. Leading the conversation is a dangerous experiment, lietter 'lollow its wake, and if you want to endear yourse.f to talkers, learn to listen well. Never make a fuss about anything, nev er talk about yourself, and always preserve perfect composure, no matter what sc le cisui or Wunders others may commit. Remember that it is a very foolish pro- : ceeding to lament that you cannot offer to your guests, a better house, furniture or viands: It is fair to presume that lite vis it is to yo i, not to the surroundings. Cive people a pleasant expression ol^'them- 1 selves, and they will be pretty sure to go I away with a pleasapt expression of your qualities. On just sueli slender wheels as these the whole fabric of society turns. It is our | business, then, to keep them in perfect re- j volving order. Extraordinary Story. i The last number of the French Psyche has a stury of a love affair which hasdeep -1 !y moved the whole population of Mar seilles, but will hardly be credited bv per sons who do not believe in supernatural ap paritions. However, hero is the story in as few words as possible : Charles 11 was born in a wealthy family of merchants, and an orphan from his childhood, had been brought up at his j uncle's with a cousin whose beauty, sweet ness and graces never failed to produce a j lasting impression on all persons ot her ac quaintance. It is consequently not at all j surprising that Charles IF, who had grown up in her intimate society, should have fal len deeply in love with such a fascinating cousin. Nor was his love unrequited; for, when the proper time came, she decided with the consent of her family, that tlieir marriage should take place as soon as he was twenty years of age. Just about that time, his uncie, having received from Cal cutta the news of the failure of a house with which he was doing an extensive busi ness, sent the young Charles to that dist ant pert to effect a liquidation. The mar riage was necessarily postponed, and the young lover left Marseilles, promising to -write as often as God and the ocean would allow, and to return as soon as bis business was settled. Four months passed on and no news came from the young traveler. His rela tions, and more particularly his cousin, be gan to feel uneasy, and were already accu sing him of neglect, when one day they read in the papers of the total loss of ihe steamer on which they knew that ChYrles had gone. The young Marseillaise was almost mad with grief; and alter a long and dangerous illness, the poor girl, d;?- heartened, and seeing before her nothing but a complete blank, resolved to s, enu the remainder of her life in a convent, to mourn, far from the world, for the only one she had ever loved. It was in vain her pa rents tried to dissuade her from that reso THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 29, 1860, lution. Ail their entreaties, their uiisers*. their tears, could not induce her to change her mind, and she scon entered a convent of Marseilles as a ' postulant.' Six months after that fatal day, iust as the time tor her to take her vows was ap proaching. her family were pleasantly start led by a letter from their daughter, inform ing them that she had altered her mind, and wished to go back to them, to the world, to pleasures, to happiness. For the last three nights, she said, she had seen in her dreams her beloved Charles, entreating her, with tears in his eyes and the sweet est voice, not to fulfill her terrible resolu tion, not to complete a sacrifice which would be the death of them both. For Charles was yet alive and would be soon back, to keep his sacred promise and end all her griefs. The nuns of the convent had good hunioredly laughed at her, and tried to persuade her to stay amongst them, in that quiet retreat, where she might, un disturbed, lament all her life the dear com ; panion oi her youth. For he was dcaJ, said they, and it was foolish to believe in those supernatural apparitions. Hut she was utshaken iu her faith, and to all their entreaties she would answer (hat her be trothed would soon be b:; v k, and, of course, she must be at home to receive him. Although the parents of' the young 'pos tulant' did not believe, any more than the nuns, that such a strange dream would ev er be realized, they were su much gladden ed by the letter of their daughter that they decided not to say one word to undeceive her. .She might go 011 trorn day to day, hoping all tlie time lor an arrival which would uev.r take place, and little by little they thought the deep wound of her heart might be healed. Accordingly, on that very day, they went to the convent, and in less than one hour their only child was crossing attain tlie threshold of the old family mansion. Her first thought was for her little room, here she hud gathered so many dear to kens and souvenirs from her cousin. She hastens up stairs, and she txoes so fast that her delighted parents can hardly follow lu r. But when she is 011 the landing, whom dees >he sec, standing in the door of that room so long shut up t Charles, her af fianced, who looks at her, smiling with hap piness, and opens his arms to clasp her to his bosom. It is no longer a dream. Charles holds her locked in bis ar.gs, kissing her and mingling bis tears with her own. But when he opens his arms again to receive the caresses of her parents, she sinks and drops heavily upon the floor. She was dead ! dead witli surprise and happiness! dead without uttering one cry, without heaving one sigh ! Dr Livingstone, the Fxplorer in Africa heard from. Livingstone is awaiting in south Africa the arrival of the new serviceable steamer which the lords of the admiralty have just sent out to replace the old worn out boat with which he has been steaming up and down the waters of the Zambesi and its tributaries. A concise and interest ing account of the geography and ethnolo gy of the valley watered by the most im portant of these tributaries, the Shire, was sent by him to the British association, at its last meeting. lie describes the whole region a* beautiful and healthy, and the soil as rich and productive. The natives are docile, and eager for trade. The river is navigable at all seasons for 150 miles, with the exception of a space of 30 miles, where the cataracts impeded the progress of the steamer. Livingstone dwells more emphatically than ever upon the cotton growing capabilities of this portion of Af rica. He scarcely excepts our own cotton belt, wheu he says that 110 part of the world is better adapted to the growth of (his plant which plays snch an important rob' in commerce and politics. He looks forward to the day when the valleys of the Shire and the Nyassa shall furnish the looms of Manchester a quantity of the raw material as great ao that now supplied by the Southern States of the American I'nion. He affirms that one tract in the neighborhood of the Shire is especially fit ted for the culture of sea island cotton. Progress of California. The following extract from a letter, da- j ted San Francisco, September 11, will be 1 read with interest by all who feel interest in the growth of the Pacific States: ' Our annual Mechanics' fair is now open ; at the pavilion, and full every day and ! evening. 1 saw on seventeen inches of a twig, cut from a tree of four years old, twenty large Bonnede Jersey pears, weigh ing together eleven pounds; also another twig having five Gloria Mundi apples 1 weighing eight pounds; 1 saw, also several fine looking white turnips all of nearly i the s ime size, one of which measured for- j ty-eight inches. It was nearly round, per- : fectly symmetrical, and weighed thirty six pounds. There is also on exhibition a California cheese, weighing twenty-two ' hundred pounds, it was made near San I Francisco. The great increase of manu- j f.ieture.- in California is truly wonderful. Her agricultural wealth is w;ii known, and rivals her minerals; but the dis played by her manufactures is oniy H u evr proof of the vitality of her people.' fOmiGAL. THE JUBILEE AT SPRINGFIELD. Speeclies by the President Elect anu Senator Trumbull. SpringFilll., Nov. 20, LSGO. Lite Republican local celebration came off to-day as per programme. The city was crowded with strangers from the surround- j ing States, all of whom made it a point to see and shake bauds with the President elect. The evening programme of Wide- j Awake procession, illuminations of the city, and display of fire works, was carried out with enthusiasm. The procession marched to the residence pf Mr. Lincoln, where it halted, and gave cheer"after cheer for £ Honest Old Abe.' Mr. Lincoln's appearance was the signal for the wildest demonstrations of enthus- j ias;n, which continued for several minutes. | After the enthusiasm had subsided, Mr. Lincoln spoke as follows ; Friends and Ft Par Citizens. —Please j , excuse me on this occasion of making a 1 speech. 1 thank you for the kindness and compliment of this call. 1 thank you, in i common with all others, who have thought tit by your votes, to endorse the Kepubli- i can cause. I rejoice with you in the sue- ' eess which has so Jar attended the cause. ! j Vet, in all our rejoicing, let ijs neither ex- ■ j press nor cherish any harsh feelings toward ' I any citizen who by his vote has differed j with us. [Loud cheering ] Let us at all I | times remember that all American citizens ! j are brothers of a common country, and i should dwell together in the bum!- oi •; j i ternal feeling. [lmmense applause.] Let ; | me again beg you to accept my thanks, and < to excuse me from further -peaking at this ! , time. The Wide-A wakes having cheered Mr. Lincoln to their hearts content, resumed their march to the Wigwam, where an im mense concourse of people had already as sembled. In rrspoiise to repeated and persistent calls for Senator Trumbull, that gentlemen came forward, and addressed the assemblage as follows; FcKoic- Citizens: —It is meet that Repub licans should make merry end he tdad, for the spirit of liberty, which, with our rulers, was dead, is alive again, and the ' Constitution, ordained to secure its bless- j ings which was lost sight of, is found. In : view of the recent political triumphs, lilin- j ois Republicans have especial reasons for , congratulation, in common with their po litical brethren throughout the I n ion, they rejoice in the general result which secures j to the country a Republican President, i who, we trust and believe, is to bring back the government to the policy of the fath ers, and thereby restore the fraternal feel ing which existed between the different sec tions of the country to the purer and bet ter days of the Republic. Iu addition, they have the satisfaction of having secur ed a Republican Legislature, and thereby a Republican I niled States Senator, and , the power to enact the necessary laws to j prevent illegal voting and to give to every part of the State, according to the popula tion, its proportionate share of legislation I of the State. And, more than this, we ll linoisians have especial reasons to rejoice : in the fact that the standard-bearer in this i great political contest who has led the Re publican hosts to victory, is our own fellow citizen, the pure, incorruptible, patriotic and talented Lincoln, than whom the Con- j stitution in all parts has not a more faith- i ful supporter, nor the Union an abler de-I fender. Rut, while we rejoice over a vie- I tory so complete, let it not be byway of! triumph over political opponents, for we I are all, by whatever name called, brethren ! ot a common country, and interested alike in so guiding the ship of State through • the boisterous waves of these tempestuous ' times, as to bring it to a haven of peace and safety. Rather let us rejoice over the success ot the principles we advocate, the i maintenance of which vvc believe essential j to the preservation of our free institutions and the perpetuity of constitutional liberty, j Mr. Lincoln, although the candidate of the ! Great Republican party, as Chief Magis- I trate, will neither belong to that or . any other part}'. When inaugurated he will be the President of the country and j the whole country, and I doubt not will be 1 as ready to defend and protect the State in ! which he has not received a solitaay vote against any encroachment upon its constitu- j tional rights, as the one in which he has I received the largest majority; while they by whose votes he has been designated as Chief Magistrate of the Republic, will ex- j pect him to maintain and carry forward the ; principles on which he was elected, they know that in doing so no encroachment will; be made cn the reserved rights of any of the States. They know that the Federal 1 Government is one of delegated pow- 1 ers; that it can d nothing except the au- I thority for the act can be found in the in strument which created it, and that all pow ers not conferred are reserved to the States, j or the people of the States. Hence when their political opponents have charged them with Abolitionism, or attributed to them a desire to with Slavery in 'be Btates, or some iuuuttc has they ought to do so, the reply has invariably been that the people who made the Feder al Government did not think proper to con- fi.r on it such authority, and it has, there fore, no uiore right to meddle with Slavery in a State than it has to interfere .vith serf dom in Russia. Nor are the people of the mm siaveholding States in any way responsi hee for Slavery in the States which tolerate it, because, as to that question, they are as foreign to each other as independent gov ernments. I have labored in and for the Republican organization with entire confi dence that whenever it should be in power, ! each and all ot the States would be left in as complete control of their own affairs res pectively, and at as perfect liberty to choose and employ their own means ot protecting property, and preserving peace and order with their respective limits, as they have ever been under any Administration.— Those who have voted for Mr. Lincoln have expected, and still expect this, and they would not have voted for h'uu had they ox pcctpd otherwise. 1 regard it as extreme ly fortunate for the peace of the whole country that this point upon which the Re publicans have been so long and so persis tently misrepresented, is now to be brought to a practical test, and placed beyond the possibility of doubt. It should be a mat ter of rejoicing to ail true Republicans that they will now have an opportunity of demonstrating to their political adversaries, and to the world, that they are not for in terfering with my of the domestic institu tions of any of tlie States, nor the advo cates of negro equality or amalgamation, with which political demagogues have so often charged them. When this is shown, a reaction will assuredly take place in fav or of Republicanism. The ntind, even, will be satisfied; the rights of Northern men will be respected; and the fraternal feelings existing in olden times, when men from all parts of the coun try went forth together to battle for a com mon cause against a common enemy, will be restored. Disunionists per se, of whom, unfortunately, there have been a few in the country for some years, understand this and arc now in hot haste to get out of the Union precisely because they perceive they cannot much longer maintain an apprehen sion among the Southern people that their homes and firesides and lives are to be en dangered by the action of the Federal Gov ernment. With such, now or never is the maxim. Hence they seek to inflame the public mind by misrepresenting the objects and purposes of the Republican party, with the hope of precipitating some of the South ern States into a position from which they car.not, without dishonor, afterward scecdc, well knowing if they delay till after the new Administration is inaugurated and tes ted, it will furnish no cause for their com plaints. Secession is an impractibility, or, rather, an impossibility. The Constitution provides no way by which a State may withdraw from the Union —no way for the dissolution of the Government it creates. The General Government interferes but little with the individual'rights of the cit- j izen, except for protection. It is chiefly felt in its benefits and its blessings—not in its exactions. If every Federal officer in South Carolina were to resign, their offi ces remain vacant, and its Legislature de clarc the State out of the Union, it would ! all amount to little except to inconveni ence the citizens of that State, so long as j the State did not inteifere with the eollec- ; tion of the revenue of the seaboard. The people in other portions of the Union j would not be in the least incommoded, j What has the South Carolina army to do j when raised? Who is it to fight? Mani- j festly, iff it commences a war on the Uni- i ted States' officers engaged in collecting | the revenue, it becomes the aggressor.— j This would be "evolution, and making war without a cause, for South Carolina makes no complaint against the present revenue laws. Is she prepared for this—to become the aggressor ? The only use I can see for | her minute men is that they will cna- i ble the. people the more readily to suppress j any uprising in their midst, which their i misrepresentations uf purpose may have [ encouraged. She complains that the Fu gative Slave law is not executed in some j States. This, if true, the whole country j knows to be a sham. So far as South Car- j olina is concerned, she is so situated that ( no slave can escape from her' into Free ! States, however much cause the border i Slave States may have to complain of the j escape of their negroes into the Free States, j It is clear that South Carolina can have no j such complaint. In her resolves she pro- | ffesses to be preparing to defend herself i against encroachments on her rights. Let j her adhere to this policy, and not attempt j to dictate to other States what they shall I do, and no collision will occur, for no en- < croachuients will be made. The disunion feeling in the South is, doubtless, greatly ; exaggerated. A sort of terrorism seems to j ■prevail in some places, which, for the time, j appears to have crushed out any manif'esta- ; tion of Union sentiment. But asthecaus- : cs for this excitement are all imaginary, j the election of a Republican President, in the constitutional mode, certainly affording no excuse for it, it is reasonable to suppose i that a reaction will soon take place among ; the Southern people themselves, which will t* v the disun'onists r.t h .KG. it i® a Teat mistake to class trie supporters oi Mr. Breckinridge as disunionLts. Some j few of them may be, but Mr.Breckinridge ; himself, and his supporter 5 zz a class, are, ' New Series—Vol. XV, No. 5, I doubt not, :.? sincerely attached to the. 1 ton as many ot those who, for political purposes, during the recent excited eont-st, sought to fasten on' the in the' " tguia of dis union. Should the cowervat.ve and ln ion men in any particular locality be una ble to cope with their adversaries, aud South Carolina, or any other State, under the lead of nullifiers aud disunionists who have years been seeking a pretext for breaking up tbe Government, plunge into rebellion, and without cause e.yait by force i a.ins the constituted authorities of the I Mit in, there will be but one sentiment among the great mass ot tbe people of aU parties, and in all parts of the country, and that will be that 'the Union —It yiustand shail be preserved,' and woe to the who are marshalled against it. Should any Republican inquire what has been gained by the triumph of Republicanism, 1 an ewer much. We have gained a dcetrton of the people in favor of a Pacific Kailfoad, a Homestead policy, a judicious Turilf, the admission in to the Union of Kansas as a free b'tate, a reform in the financial depart mcnt of the Government, and more import ant than all. the verdict ot the people— the soutce of power, and lrom whose de cision there is no appeal—that the Consti tution is not a slavery-extending instru ment. No more ltred Scott decisions will now be made. Freemen, both of the North :iml of the South, will herealter bo protect ed in all their constitutional rights. Th policy ol the Government, as of old, will now set in favor of freedom, and not fo; the supremacy of slavery, as has bpea thd ea.-e for the last six years. Freedom henco fcuth will be the law of the territories, be cause the people, in their majesty, have so ordered, and neither courts nor Congresses will Le alle to thwart their wili. When full effect shall have been given to all these great measures ot the Republican party, and the prejudices engendered against it in the uiinds of many, by the artful appeals of demagogues, who have misrepresented its objects, shall have been removed by ac tual knowledge of its objects, shall have been removed by actual knowledge of its acts, we may expect the bitterness of party spirit to subside, the cry of disunion to be flushed, and the principles cf Republican ism to become the permanent policy of the Government, under which it will flour ish and prosper, as 1 trust, forever. AmmiTM&L Save the Leaves. if Brother Jonathan were as saving of manures, as John Bull is, he would be a better farmer. No one knows until he has seen it, how careful English and Euro pean farmers and gardeners are of every thing which can be converted into manure". And this is on? ground of their superiority in agriculture. Now let us respeac what we have often said, that few things are more valuable for fertilizing purposes than decayed leaves. They are hardly inferior to barn yard ma nure. Gather them up, now this very month cf November, before they are cov ered by the snow. They are abundant everywhere, lying in heads and windrows in the forest and by the roadside, and by the fences in every yard. The wood-lot should net be stripped clean of them ; bu doubtless every farmer's land contains more of them here and there, than he can find time so cart home. Gather them up by raking, or by sweeping with a large birch broom. Stack them and pack them in tne large wagon, adding side-boards as high as convenient: you will hardly get too heavy a load. Cart them home, and use them as bedding for cattle and horses : use them lor compost in the stable yard ; use them to protect tender grape \ines and shrubs and plants in winter. Strawberry patches will fairly sing for joy under such a feath ery blanket. By all means save the leaves, aud use them. — American Agt itulturist Calves with Sheep It is well known, perhaps, to most of your agricultural readers, that late eaivea, when they come to the barn in the 1 all will, if confined in yards with older ani mals, frequently sicken and become debil iated—being weak and small, they are us ually shoved about, and deprived of their share of food, anil in consequence, ' fall away' rapidly. Now I never allow animals of this description to associate or be con fined with larger ones, but put them with my sheep, where there is no danger of their doing or receiving harm. Sick calves of ten pick up and devour with avidity the hay and straw from among the sheep dung It is medicinal, and I know of no article that has a more immediate and salutary ef fect in restoring calves to health, than sheep dung. I have practiced this nsi.'f. for many years, and have neve: lost en an'- iuial, though I have Had ui ir.y sick wher. they came to the barn. 4 UDITOR's NOTICE.—The undere k"C'J OLJL Auditor, appointed by th n 'Orphan*' Court of Miftiin county, to distribute the fund in the bands of Oeorge W. Crissnian. Ad ministrator of the estate of James T. Aitken. dee'd, will attend to the <i iri* of the ap .r. -:i: -it V.- •?•** O® • >, .. . inters, -m SATURDAY, the lod uav of i>e cember nest. Those interested are request ed to attend. n022-4v* W. P. ELLIOTT. Auditor
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers