T.HE GAZETTE. LBWISTOWN, PA. Thursday, January 31, 1861. $1 per annum in adtance—sl.so at end of aix months—at end of year. Paper* sent out of (he County mu*t be paid for in advance. #"The subscription ~f "hcte out of this count.''towhom this paragraph contextualsed, hasei&pired, an ! unless re newed will be discorW.-ued. We have also sit a limit in Mlffltn county, beyond which we Intend co ma:sin future shall owe us for subscription. Those re-iwx.rfc- the paper with this paragraph iuarke.l, will therefore know that they have come under our rub-, and If pay.nent is not made within o*e *n>ntii thereafter we shall discontinue all such. John G. MoCord, Auctioneer, offers his ser vices to the public. F. J. Hoffman has received a lot of new Goods. Kennedy A Go's, advertisements of new Goods. They have also been appointed agents for Wolfe's Pure Wines and Liquors. Billy Johnson is selling off at cost. Bgu'fhe Legislature of this State has | got to work, and we notice a lhrge number of bills reported, though none of local in terest. A bilFis up compensating- owners of fugitive slaves when rescued by mobs, and also a partial, iwpttai of tLe peraai; codte relating to the arrest of colored persons by violence. The proposition to send Com missioners to meet those of the border States at Washington City we hope will be speedily adopted. The Treason at the South. The plans of the Southern conspirators still seem to be working smoothly, as the tel egraph briefly tells us that, on Saturday, "at ten minutes past one o'clock," the Conven tion of Louisiana aassed. an ordinance de claring that State to be no longer a member of the American Confederacy. The vote on the passage of the ordinance is larger than we had reason to expect from Louisiana, al though there is nothing in the result to create surprise. The conservative masses of that State, represented by such papers as the Pic ayuno and True Delta, have made a noble stand for the Union and Constitutional rights, but without avail. Louisiana is the sixth State which has been hurried out of the confederacy by the in trigues of desperate politicians, and the tem porary excitement of a partisan mob. Bound to the Union vitally by every interest of com merce her great metropolis drawing every element of its strength and prosperity from the Union and its resources—no State of the six will gain so little and lose so much by this wild act of separation. Controlling the mouth of the Mississippi, and almost inter cepting the line of the Pacific Railroad, with the certain prospect of commanding the vast trade which, in a few years, must come flow ing from China, Japan t and the undeveloped empires of the Last, Louisiana has contented herself with political and commercial suicide for a mere abstraction, and New Orlerns, which might have become the metropolis of the Western continent, bids fair to sink into the position of a fifth-class city, dependent for its support upon a weak and fluctuating trade with Mexico, Central America, and the agricultural States of the Mississippi and the Gulf of Mexico. Ihe people of Texas have also decided, as we see, in favor of secession, although the formal aet of separation remains to be con summated. The chronological order of the secession movements may be thus ranked: December 20, South Carolina; January 9, Mississippi; January 11, Florida and Ala bama : January 19, Georgia, and January 2G, Louisiana. Texas may be expected speedily to follow. In the meantime, along the Bor der States the friends of the Union and the Constitution are making a wonderful and gal lant fight. Madness seems to rule the hour, a madness which Mr. Buchanan's adminis tration could have easily stopped two months ago, but which in our opinion will now end in at least a temporary, perhaps a final sepa ration of the free and slave States. It is the firsv instance in history where treason, open and bawd'aced, was tolerated iu all the de partmems of government without meeting with rebuLf uzui it was too late. Our lAjxt Nationality. —" Never," Bays the London Times, in an article on the secession of South Carolina, -"Never, for many years can the United States be to the world what they have been. * * * The President has dissipated the idea that the States which elected him constitute one people. We had thought that the federation was of a nature ot nationality we find it nothing more than a partnership, if any State may, on grounds satisfactory to a local Convention, dissolve the Union between itself and its fellows ; if discontent vkh the election of a President, toe passing oi an obnoxious law by another State, or, it may be, a restrictive tariff, gives a State the right of revolution, and permits to withdraw itself from the community, then the position of the American people with respect to foreign powers is completely alter ed." re 'y th IX B?aL>>lessrs. L. Ciephane & Co. have commenced the publication of a new paper at Washington City called the Weekly National Republican. per annum—3 copies for 35, &c. "Advices from Vera Cruz to the 23d inst., state that the Constitutional Govern ment had gone into full operation. Passports bad bear sent to the Spanish Minister, and Papal Nuncio, and the Charges-from Guate mala and tquador, creating considerable ex citetnent aocg the Spaniards The Compromises. The Crittenden Compromise, as amend ! Ed by the .Senate reads as follows: " In all that Territory of the United States ; held, or hereafter acquired , situate north of 36 deg., 30 min., Slavery or involuntary ser vitude, ascept as a punishment for, crime, is prohibited wbilfc sucil Territory sila-U remain under 'Jierritorial Gjwemnent. In all the Territory south of said line of latitude, sla very of the African race is herehu recognized ' as existing-, and shall not be interfered with by Congress, but shall be PROTECTED AS PRO : PERT v by all the departnun's of the Territorial i Government during its continuance." The words hereafter acquired were put into it by the democracy of the Senate, and on this account more than any other is this proposition objectionable to the Re publicans. Whoever "will take a map of America and mark the line of 30 30, will see at a glance that all territory hereafter acquired must of necessity be converted into Slave States, and thus give control of the United States Senate, it not of the whole government, to those slave States a> long as the Confederacy would exist. It has a squinting too at conquest, and if adopted occasion would soon be found to lead us into an cmbroiltaeiib with Mexico, Central America, Ac. The border States proposition, reported by Jud< Hale, lias a different reading, and looks nio; 'ike an equitable distribution. It proposes— 1. Recommending the repeal of all the Per gonal Liberty bills. 2. That the Fugitive Slave law be auiendp . fur the preventing of kidnapping, and so as to provide for the equalization of the Com missioner's fees, Ac. 3. That the constitution be so amended as to prohibit any interference with slavery in any of the States where it now exists. 4. That Congress shall not abolish slavery in the Southern dockyards, arsenals, Ac., nor in the District without the consent of the in habitants of the District, nor without com pensation. 5. That Congress shall not interfere with the inner slave trade. 6. That there shall be a perpetual prohibi tion of the African slav trads. 7. That the line of 30 deg. 30 min., shall be ruu through ail the existing territory of the United States ; that in all north of that line slavery shall be prohibited, and that south of that line neither Congress nor the territorial Legislature shall hereafter pass any law abolishing, prohibiting or in any manner interfering with African slavery, and when any territory containing a sufficient pop ulation for one member of Congress in an area of 00,000 square miles, shall apply for admission as a State, it shall be admitted, with or without slavery, as its constitution may determine. At a serenade given to Gen. Ciuaeiou a; Philadelphia on Saturday evening, he made one of his effective speeches, from which we extract the following paragraphs: "But you ask me to speak of the Union. It is in danger. Misguided men in the South, acting under imaginary wrongs, have con trolled public opinion there against the Un ion, The calm, sensibly, thinking and patri otic men there are prevented from exercising the influence which is due to their positions for the public welfare. The mob spirit reigns triumphant. Six States have declared themselves out of the Union, and in several of them armies have been organized and put in the attitude of war. Our forts and our arsenals have been seized and the public property of the country has been fnre : M v ta ken possession of by men who set the Cuiisti tution and laws of the country at defiance. " To stay the progress of this rebellion, and to preserve the integrity of the Border Slave States, which have, as yet, maintained their fidelity to the Union, something is re quired to be done on our part to strengthen the power and the influence of the Union lov ing men of these States. In Maryland, such men as the heroic Ilieks, the fearless Davis, and the learned and patriotic Reverdy John son ; in Virginia, such spirits as W. C. Rives, Sherrard Clemens, John M. Botts, James Barbour, and others; in Kentucky, such pa triots as Crittenden, Guthrie, Powell, Pren tice, and their like ; in Tennessee, the lion hearted Andrew Johnson, John Bell, Ether idge, Nelson, and a host of others ; in North Carolina, such as Morehead, Graham, Bad ger, Gilmer, and many others like them iu all the Southern States, deserve and commend themselves to our kindliest sympathies. The conduct of these noble spirits appeals to us for emulation of their owo self sacrificing spirit. Shall we, my fallow citizens, be less generous than they prove thenrsel 'es to be ? Unless the Border Slave States adhere in their integrity, the Union will be at an end. If we but afford these men ground to stand upon, to maintain themselves in resisting the mad spirit of secession which surrounds them, the integrity of those States will be maintained and the Union be preserved.— Shall Pennsylvania, herself a border State, hesitate in this emergency to extend to them her sympathy and her support in their ef forts to save the Union? " I am one of those who supported the election, and mean to sustain the administra tion of Mr. Lincoln, cordially and faithfully, upon the principles set down in the Chicago platform. But I am willing to make any reasonable concession, not involving a vital principle, to save this great country from an archy and bloodshed, and to preserve the proud position which it occupies before the world. We may have material prosperity in a Northern Republic, hut a separation brings with it the loss of all inflm i upon the des tinies of the worid. It is u : necessary to take a step backwards in suj k ig the res olutions of Mr. Crittenden, which c meet the full approbation of the peop this city, if it be amended £t as not to ex to territory hereafter to be acquired, a to remove from it the feature which to incorporate into the Constitution the doctrine cf the Dred Scott decision. " I prefer to leave the Constitution on that subject as made by our fathers, until reason shall have again assumed proper sway over the public mind. In other words, 1 am ready -and willing that the Missouri Compro mise shall be restored. The repeal of that measure led to the organization of the Re publican party. Upon that question it gain ed ; ts strength and secured its victory. If now our Union loving brethren of the slave border States shall be willing to unite with us in its restoration, and accept that a3 the basis of settlement of existing difficulties, why should we hesitate thus to meet them? Weather cold and windy. le-Tho steamer Etna, arrived at New York, brings liiverpool dates tothelGtb inst. The court of (Queen's Bench had is sued a writ of habeas corpus in the ease of Anderson, the fugitive slave, of the Canadian authorities under the extra dition treaty, on the charge of murder in . Missouri. The Chief Justice decided that Anderson was a British citizen. We pre sume the fugitive will now, under this de cision, be taken to England, and the que&? tion of his extradition be determined by the Court of Queen's Bench. The French j fleet have been w.ithdf£ft>b Gaeiu ard hostilities have been suspended for the present. A Congress of the Great Powers, , to meet at Paris, for the settlement of the Italian question, is spoken of. The Eng lish papers state that several rifled cannon shave been shipped at Liverpool for Charle- ton. Cotton, lias* fwthec-advanced; bread stuffs were quiet but prices steady. California. The annual statisticLs of the State are prepared for publication and show remark able progress during the past year :—30,- *OO passengers arrived at San Francisco and 14,100 departed, a gain of population by immigration seaward of 10,000. The es timate overland immigration is 50,000 to 00,000, being small on account of Indian hostilities. The gold export falls off sev ■ al millions from last year, but this defi ciency is compensated by the greatly in creased exports of the State. Theamouut of treasure from the mines fully equals any other year. The value of the principal State Products exported from San Francis co in 1800, is as follows : Barley, 8150,- 000 ; Bread, 200,000; Fish, 48,000; Flour, 049,000; furs, 15,000; gold, 42,325,090; hides, 000,090; iUwW, 94,000; oats, 120,- 000; potatoes, 29,000; quercitron, 350,- 000; skins, 29,000; silver ore, 410,000; tallow, 55,000; wheat, 1,854,.000; wine, 30,000 ; wool, 392,000. The total exports of the State cAher thaa gold are valued at 88,732,000, against 85,533,000 in 1859, and 84,780,000, in 1858. The South Carolina War Tax. —The bur den of taxation which is to be imposed upt n the people of South Carolina, to provide means for carrying on its war against the Union, is sufficiently heavy. Here are some of the items: 385,089 negroes, at 1,00 8017,102 3,421 free negroes, at 3,25 11,118 Sales of goods, 20,000,000, at f>B eta (this item is reduced 0,388,881) 5G,0u0 Professions, 200,000, 20,000 Town lofci and houses, 31,383,873, at 27 cts 84,601 Lands valued at 10,199.440, at 82 203,988 Capital of Hanks, 13,278,225, at 35 cts Insurance premiums. 460,944, at H 7,004 Gas stock, 700,700, at 45 cts " 3,180 Total $1,053,450 To which add proposed taxation— Carriages, at 2,50, supposed 100.000 25,000 Buggies, iic., at f,25, syppoaed 100,- 000 12,500 Salaries and wages at least 500,000, at 81 5,000 Interest on bonds, 1,000,000, at If 1 ~ Charleston returns, 300.000 f to, A Watches, estimated at 20,000 20,000 Shipping, 700,000, at 35 cents 2,450 Interest of stocks owned by State and the ootid of tax collector of Union 13,400 Aggregate 81,140,800 The Conspiracy to Seize Washington. The plot to seize upon Washinton and pro claim a revolutionary government from the steps of the Capitol, was well matured and complete in every part. It rested upon the confident expectation of the secession of both Maryland and Virginia before the Ist of March, and the continuance in office of the traitors who have been ejected from the Cab inet. Floyd was the undoubted centre of the conspiracy, and expected to remain in office and superintend its consummation. This plan has long been the subject of general cfipver sation in Washington, and we are able to lay its details beforp our readers. Immediately after the secession of Virginia and Maryland, a concerted movement was to be made just previous to Lincoln's inaugura tion, by which a hostile force was to be sud denly thrown into Washington, to seize upon and garrison all the public buildings, expel Congress, and hojd the town. A declaration to the effect that the regular government bad been superseded was next to be issued, and a provisional President and Vice President to be proclaimed on the 4th of March. The Departments, containing all the archives of the government, were at once to be occupied by provisional heads, and orders promptly is sued therefrom to the army and navy, claim ing from the officers everywhere obedience to the authorities in possession of the govern ment de fatdo. At the same time the foreign ministers were to be called upon to recog nize the pew authorities, and to announce the success of a peaceable revolution in the Uni ted States to their several governments. wiiy politicians at Washington .circular 9 P9per in the IJouae of Represen tatives last week, for signatures, calling upon all members of Congress to resign and gq b,e fore the people again. Rest assured no Re publican will ever sign such a document, un less, the South will permit Republican speak ers and Republican documents to have free circulation at the South. In such a case we might not have serious objections to the pro ject. Advices from Rio Janeiro are to De cember 9th. Some poruouo :i Empire were suffering from drought, and a great deal of misery among the poor conntry people was the consequence—all no doubt owing to Lincoln's election as President. gfejjr A Southern editor, in attempting to compliment General Pillow as a" battle scar red veteran," was made by the types to call him a " battle-scared veteran. Jn the next issue tbe mistake was so far corrected as to style him a " bottle-scarred veteran." e are indebted to Hon. douses T. Hale for a number of Congressional, and to Mr, Gibboney for State Documents IATEST NEWS. WASHINGTON, Jan. 28. It is no cer tain that private letters have been received here from Mr. Lincoln, urging his friends to conciliation and compromise ; and, it is stated that he indicates the. Border State resolutions as the basis of an adjustment. The assurance is given that this inform ation is reliable. I Soon after the electoral vote shall be counted, in the presence of two Houses of Congress, on the second Wednesday in February, Mr. Lincoln will acquaint the public with his views on the pending crisis, i Heretofore he has not felt that it was pro per for him in advance of the official dec laration of his election, to take u promin ent part in the direction of political affairs. Ihe friends of the I. niou are much en couraged by the prompt responses to the invitation of \ irginia for commissioners from the several States to meet in conven tion here on the 4th of February, and it is believed that its action will command the support of a large majority of both branch j es of Congress. The repeal of the personal-liberty bill in llhode Island, and the late action of the Ohio Legislature on the same subject, arc hailed by the friends of the Union as har bingers of peace. The President has discontinued the work on all the public buildings now in course of erection at Charleston, New Orleans, and other parts of the seceding States, and also on all the southern fortifications ; and no money will be paid out of the public treasury to the contractors engaged on these works except in payment of services heretofore rendered. Secretary Dix has instructed the com manders of llevenue cutters, if attacked, to make the best defence in their power, and if they are assailed by a superior force, to run their vessels ashore and blow them up. He has also written a letter to the collector at the port of New Orleans to ap ply to the Governor of Louisiana to revoke the act of seizing the Government Hospi tal and ordering 3t}o patients to be remov ed, in order that the building might be oc cupied as barracks by the State troops. — He denounces it as an act of outrageous barbarity, disgraceful to any age or country. On Wednesday last another serious ac cident occurred among the garrison on Sul livan's Island in Charleston harbor. Pri vate Strawitiski, of a Columbia company, accidently shot a comrade, with whom he was playfully wrestling, in the stomach, inflicting, it is feared, a mortal wound.— On the succeeding day two members of the same company were badly mashed while working at the gun.-. CHARLESTON, Jan. 28. —The State Leg islature has adopted resolutions in reply to the overtures made by the legislature of \ irginia, declaring that the separation of South Carolina from the Federal Union is final, and she has no further interest in the Constitution of" the United States, and that the only appropriate Negotiations between her and the Federal Government are as to their mutual relations as loreign States. TUP Legislature was in executive session to-day on the correspondence of Commis sioner Hayne and Governor Pickens. It appears that the ultimatum of South Caro lina was the surrender of Fort Sumter, and the withdrawal of the Federal troops, and that South Carolina promised to pay for the forts, but that Mr. Hayne, in defer once to the wishes qf Southern Congress men, withheld the proposition- Gov. Pickens now tells llayne to make a final demand for the forts, and repudi ates the position of the President when he says he has no power to give them up, but must leave it to Congress. Gov. Pickens further tells Hayne to wait a reasonable time for an answer to this final demand of South Carolina, and then, if it is refused, Fort Sumter must be ta ken. The Legislature endorses the Governor's action. NEW YORK, Jan. 28. — A letter from Constantinople dated Dec. 81, to the New York World, records the utter route of the main wing of the Persian army, 60,000 strong, by the Turcomans. They were mostly killed or taken prisoners. This, perhaps will lead to the Qvprthrow of the Persian dynasty. The New Tariff Bill in the Senate. WASHINGTON, Jan. 28. The special committee in the Senate, to which was referred the Morill bill for revision, will report qn Wednesday. There will be no change recommended on iron, though some ; schedules will be simplified. Theye is an ef-1 fort making to rejaoe tfie duty on pig iron and steel, but it will fail. Woolens are fixed at twelvecents per pound, instead of sixteen, as had been intended by Morrill's bill. Many details have been altered in order to arrive at a smoother working of the new system. The law is to go into effect on the first of April, and payment of the duties will be required in thirty days. Merchandise for resbipment will be allowed six months warehousing.— The loan provided for by the bill is increased from twenty one to twenty-five million of dol lars. With imports up to the ordinary aver age, the new bill is expected to produce rev enue to the amount of fifty-eight million of dollers per aimum. Seizure of the New Orleans Marine Hos- 1 pital by Louisiana Troops. WASHINGTON. Jan. 20, 1861. Information was received by the govern- i ment this morning, from tho collector at New Orleans, stating that the barracks about two miles below New Orleans, now occupied as a Marine Hospital, were taken possession of on ♦be 11th inst., by Capt. Bradford of the State Infantry, in the name of the State of Louisiana. There were two hundred and sixteen inva- ! lids and convalescent patients in the hospital at the time it was seized. The .Collector of Customs was required to immediately remove the patients who were confined in their beds, as soon as practicable. This action on the part of tbe authorities ' ci that State is .regarded by the government as most outrageous and inhuman. The gov ernment have no authority or means to make provision for these poor creatures, who are thus thrown upon the cold charities of the peo ple of that State. The reason assigned for this transaction is, that the authorities there wanted the quarters for their own troops. Bqpk Notices. Atlantic Motiihly for February, opens its attractive pages before us. Its table of contents embraces articles entitled Our Ar tists in Italy, Knitting Sale Socks, Scuppaug, Cobbler Keezar's Vision, The First Atlantic Telegraph, Lady Byron, Getting Home Again, A Dry Goods Jobber in 1861, The Old Homestead, The Professor's Story, The Great Salt Lakes, E Pluribus fcm.pi, and Reviews and Literary Notices. Among the contributes of these articles tireau, Miss Preacott, E. P. Whipple, J. G. Wbittier, J. Russell Lowell, P. Akers,and O. W. Holmes. \\ ith such an array of talent this magazine of right occupies the front rank of our periodicals. We are enabled to furnish the Atlantic Monthly and the Ga zette, each one year, for three dollars. The February number of Peterson's zine is before us. Its elegant embellishments, embracing a steel plnte of the Birds' Nesters, colored Paris fashions, colored patterns, and numerous plain patterns, of great utility and beauty, render the work of the utmost value to the ladies. The pages are filled with cot - tr of our most skillful writers, and the tales, sketches poetry, &c. appearing from j time to time, add their share to the general of the work. Two dollars in closed % to"_CltarlcH J. Peterson, No. 306, Chestnut street, Philadelphia, will secure this periodical for one year. Arthur's Home Magazine for the month of February is a very beautiful number. It is embelished with an elegant steel plate enti tled friends in adversity, with giany other plates of undoubted interest and utility. The fashions may be regarded as one of the chief matters in such a work, and they are furnish ed in a very tine style. The two editors, Mr. Arthur and Miss Townsend, contribute their choiee efforts to the pages of this magazine, and of course -it is tilled a,^d entertaining matter. Terms, $2 a year. Ad dress Messrs. S. Arthur and Co,. No. 223 Walnut street, Philadelphia. Ha?"T en of the fifteen of Con gress from Virginia have united in an address to the people of that State expressing the opinion that it is vain to hope for any tneas ure of adjustment from Congress that the people of the South can accept, asserting that the Republicans design to bring about civil war, and urging prompt and decided action on the part of the State. It is by such acts of scoundrelism like the above that all the difficulties in the South are created. These men are body and soul with the traitors, and by their lying are trying to produce pre cisely what they charge on the republican party. A KUIVAKD IS OFt'Eltltl) ! For tliu detection f any person counterfeiting, im itating, or the vender of iinv sn.-li counterfeit or imi tation ufHfEKH WVS HOI.I.AXI) BITTERS. I i,.- gcnuine. highly concentrated IHtiirs is put up in half-pint tnittles only, having the name of the pro prietor. I>. PAOE. Jr. Mown m them, and his signature around the neck of each and every hot tie. This cans, with that favor wfi'ich'is only extended to tvally scientific preparations. Whrn'Ue cobsi.ler the mark ed success attending it administration, m tlie most stubborn eases of Fever and Ague. Weakness of anv kind. Dyspepsia, Hearihurn. Acidity of tin-Stoiini'di. Sick and .Nervous Headache. Indigestion, t'ostiveness and Piles, together with the complete control it exer cises over all Nervous. Rheumatic, and Neuralgic Af fections, we cannot wonder at its ponuh.rify " Well may the invalid value this remedy. * ■ COSTAR'S HAT EXTERMINATOR. —We had occasion a week or two ago to use this remedy, and sippe then have not a rat about the house. Its effect was like magic, and we therefore confidently recommend it to our readers who are iinnoyed with these pests as preferable to arsenic or anything else heretofore used. A box contains suf ficient to drive away or kill hundrds. For sale by Charles llitz—2s cents per box THE MARKETS. LEWISTOWN, January 31, 1861. CORRECTED BV UEORGK BI.YMYER. Butter, good, lb. 15 Lard, 11 Tallow, 00 a 10 Eggs, $ dozen, 15 Buckwheat Flour per IQjQ, 2 50 Beeswax, per poged, "25 Wool, washed, " 3-7 unwashed, 25 Dried Cherries, per bushel 1 75 Beans per bushel, 1 fK) Potatoes, 00 Country soap p,er lb., from 5 to ? cents. CORRXC7ED BY MARKS k WILLIS. Wheat, white jjji bushel, 1 07 " red 1 12 Corn, 00 to 50 Ry.e, 5G Buck wheal, 50 Oats, ' 25 Barley, 50 to 55 CloveTseed, Q 00 to 4 bfi Flaxseed, 1 25 Timothy, 1 50 Marks's steam mill is selling extra flour at 275 per hundred, Qranville at 2 25, su pertine at 2 50, and family at 3 00. Mill Fead, per hundred. 80 Chopped Oats and Corn per 100, 125 Chopped Rye-per 100, 14Q Salt,' * 1 40 " patent sacks, 150 " barrels, 280 lbs, 1 75 Philadelphia Market- Flour.—Good Western and Pennsylvania Extra at $5 50 per bbl; Family 5 75 ; Fancy Lots Ga6 75, aqcoijding to quality. Rye Flour 4 ; Penna. Corn Meal 3. Grain.—Prime Pennsylvania and Western at 128al30c.per bushel, and white at 140a145c. Rye, JPeniia., 75c. Corn, new yellow, 64c, old do at 7.0 c .Oats 33c per bu. for Delaware, and 34c for Penna. New Y r ork Barley 75c. Barley Malt from 85 to 95c. Cloverseed $5 25 per 64 lbs. Timothy from 225 to 250 per bushel. Flaxseed at 1 45. ~ * Cattle Market, Jan. 28.—N0 material change in the Cattle Market. Sales at from $7 to 0, as to quality. 4200 Sheep sold at to 6c. 1660 Ilogs at S74aBJ per 100 lbs. 80 Cows at 25 to 45 per head fta?*The present democratic papers a bad predicament just now. Thev ar , law, but don't want it executed: for the T V am* against the South—and ergep out ofT' matter by saddling everything on the Re,'/ licon*! One, not long ago asked •* not proud of being a democrat." u „ ' S i • • ' j'l*f'fjf the question might be appropriately v k by asking. " what democrat is not ash-in! of having aided Southern jobbers and trait in the vile scheme of disunion, devised?" Calhoun 27 years ago and hatched in IS, J by cabinet officers of James imjc; v , f| Married. At Honey Creek, on the 17th inst 1 Rev George Elliott, assisted bv the R,? Cochran, I>. !>., ROBERT COCIIUay , Locust Grove, Perrv county. t 0 A\\ \ ,' RY, second daughter of Andrew mVv * ' Esq., of the former place. In Patterson, by Rev, Mr. A!Ii SuI , ti,, AS Qt IGLEY, of Altoona, to Miss Mil i[" BROOM, of Uwistown. Llli Died. On Friday last, in this place, Mrs srsiv SNOWDEN (colored.) ' " JOHN C. McCORD, Strode's Mills, Oliver Township OFFERS his services to the public on rea, onahle terms. i,ui3Ul y DRUGS! DRUGS! spills branch of our business continues t, receive our close attention. As w e aw continually receiving new supplies, our stock is pure and reliable Physicians' preset tions carelully attended to. K J' ftn3l F. J. HOFFMAN. "W -A^TNTTEIX 18000 Person**, viz: 1000 Blacksmiths 1000 Coachuiakers 1000 Saddlers 5000 Tanners 5000 Housekeepers 5000 Shoemakers lo buy cheap Goods at j™ 3l F. J. HOFFMAN'S. "OEijF Rio Coffee, at -13 janol JOHN KE N i (;,,' s Ilk BOXES Dairy Cheese, at JA3 JOHN KENNEDY & Cos f piIE cheapest ,Svriips and Molasses. at 1 JOHN KENNEDY &'lVs. A N* one in want of q Coal Oil Lamp will .Z X goto JOHN KENNED VJk CV. NEW Soup Beans, new Dried Apples, new 1 tried Peaches, f r sale by jan3l JOHN KENNEDY SL Co. LOl It by the barrel or hundred—Fancr, Extra Family and Superfine Flour Lr sale hy JOHN KENNEDY A Co. CARBON OIL, For Brilliancy and Economy, 81 RPASSES ail other illuminating Oii.s now in market. It will burn in all stylee oi coal oil lamps, is perfectly safe, and im,' from offensive odor. For sale bv juii3l JUIIN KENNEDY & Co. SXJNPRIES. 5 Lbls Coal Oil from 75 to £1 per gal. 2 bids Portland Kerosine Oil, best in use. 4 bids Carbon Coui QJ, low to the trade, in store and fur sale by jar3l * JOHN KENNEDY & Co. SUGARS. It you want cheap Sugars go tu Kennedy & Co's. Sugars at G, 7, H, 9, 10, and 11 cents per lb, at JOHN KENNEDY £ C,,V THE PUBLISHERS HAVING BEEN APPOINTED BV 33B®mpa:® W®H2hsj OF YEH YORK. His Sole Agents in this Vicinity F Q it Wolfe's Sehiedam Aromatic Spiinnpps, " Pure Cognar Brandy, " Pure Madiera, Sherry, aud Port Wine, t( Pure Jamaica and St. Croix Rum, '• Pure Scotch and Irish Whiskey, ALL IX BOTTLES, Begs leave to call the attention of his fellow citizens to the above WINES and LIQUORS, imported by UDOLPHO WOLFE, of New York, whose name is familiar in every part of this country for the purity of his celebrated Schie dam . MR. W OLFE, in his letter, speaking of the purity of his WINES and LIQCORS, says: "I yrill stake my reputation as a man, my stand* ing as a merchant of thirty years' residence in the city of New York, that all the brandy and Wines which I bottle are pure as impos ed, and of the best quality, and can be relied upon by ayery purchaser. - Every bottle has the proprietor's name on the was, and a fac-simile of his signature on the certificate. £be pubjic are respectfully invited to call and examine for themselves. B^,For sale by the Case or Bottle by JOHN KENNEDY & Co. jan3l-3t Agents for Mifflin county. Boots and Shoes Selling off at Cost, The undersigned having a large stock of Eastern manufacture 1 on band, offers the same a. prices to" suit the timec from now to tM first of Apri] ; at .which"finae Jtegular Prices will be charged again. Those wanting Spring and Summer Work, will' save at least 20 pet cent, by making this purchase now. Socouie on boys and don't forget,to bring your nice ey along, as our terms are strictly for ta-" lie has a large lot of Home made Work hand which will be sold at reasouuf/lc pru.c*- Manufacturing of all kinds attended to a ugual, and repairing on the Shortest Notic- A Jargo lot of Trunks which will be ? , yery cheap. -- ~ IAN?I ' BILLY JOHN3O>
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers