Whole No. 2621. Jacob C, Blymyer & 0o >3 produce and Commission Mer chants, LEWISTOWN, PA. jsgrFlonr and Grain of all kinds pur- ' cba.-od at market rates, or received on storage I and shipped at usual freight rates, having ; storehouses and boats of their own, with care- j ful captains and hands. Stove Coal, Limeburners Coal, Plaster, Fish I and Salt always on hand. Grain can be insured at a small advance on co-t of storage. n022 AMBROTYPES The Gems of the Season. rnilis is no humbug, hut a practical truth j JL The pictures taken by Mr. Burkholder arc unsurpassed for BOLDNESS. TRUTH FULNESS. BEAUTY OF FINISH, and I DURABILITY. Prices varying according ! to size and quality of frames and Cases. Room over the Express Office. Lewistown, August 23, ISGO. The (in at' >t Discovery of the Aye is that John Kennedy & Co, Propietors, AXD JAMES FIROVED, Salesman, A RE selling goods at prices that defy eom ! . \ petition. They keep a large stock of ' all kinds of goods such as Sugars, at 7, 9, 10, I 11. Co If.'Os at IG, Teas <SS, Syrups at GO per ! gallon, 100 boxes of Mould Candles 1G oz to ! lit., (to dealers at 13 ets. by the box.) 14 cts. , per lb., Segars, very low, Sugar Cured Hams | at 12, Dried Beef 12, Calicos, Muslins, Ging hams, and all kinds of Dry Goods for sale at prices that can't be surpassed. Everybody and anybody are invited to conte and see the sights. Don't forget to bring along the ready cash, as you may be sure its that we're after; 1 and don't forget that we sell goods to suit the j hard times; we take produce c t ail kinds in i exchange for goods. JOHN KENNEDY & Co. feb!4 J. B. FIRCVED, Salesman. New Spring and Summer Goods. 1) F. ELLIS, of the late firm of McCoy Y & Ellis, has just returned from the city [ with a choice assortment of Dry Goods and Groceries, selected with care and purchased for cash, j which are offered to the public at a small ad- j vance on cost. The stock of Dry Goods cm- j braces all descriptions of Spring and Summer Goods suitable for Ladies, Gentlemen and Children, with many new patterns. His (Kuoccnc# comprise Choice Sugars, Molasses, Java, Rio ! and Laguyra Coffee, superior Teas, &. Also, i Roots and Shoes. Queensware, and all other ! articles usually found in stores—ali which i tlie customers of the bite firm and the public ! in general are invited to examine. R. F. ELLIS. Country Produce received as usual and the full market price allowed therefor. Lewistown, May IG, IBGI. EDWARD FRYSINGER, WHOLESALE DEALER it MA\I'FACTI'REK OF Clt.lßS, TOBACCO,SRIIPP, &.C., &C., IFiio Orders promptly attended to. jelG GEO. 7T. ELEEJt, Attorney at Law, Office Market Square, Lewistown, will at tend to bmincss in Mllilin, Centre and Hunting don counties. my 26 Seigrist's Old Stand, Near the Cuiud Bridge, Lewistown, Pa. Strong Beer, Lager Beer, Eixidenberger and Switzer Cheese —all of the best quality constantly on hand, for sale wholesale or re tail. Yeast to be had daily during summer. my24-yr Fish! Fish! Fish I MACKEREL, Ilering, Shad and all oth er kinds of Fish, just received and for sale at the lowest prices at Ilenry Zerite's Grocery. A EDITOR'S NOTICE.—The undersigned J\. Auditor, appointed by the Orphan's Court of Mifflin county, to distribute the fund •n the hands of George Sigler, administrator of Mary Sigler, late of Crawford county, Ohio, Jec'd, will attend to the duties of the ap pointment at his office, in Lewistown, on T HURSDAY, the 22d day of August, at 10 o'clock A. M. Those interested in s<jid estate are requested to attend. jy'24-4t C. IIOOVER, Auditor. 4 EDITOR'S NOTICE.—The undersigned fx. Auditor appointed by the Orphan's yourt of Mifflin county, to distribute the fund in the hands of Abraham Foltz, Executor of the estate of Jacob Foltz, late of Menno township, dee'd., will attend to the duties of the appointment at the Register's Office, in Lewistown, on FRIDAY the 9th day of Au gust next, at 10 o'clock A. M. Those inter ested in said estate are requested to attend. jy!7* w. P. ELLIOTT, Auditor. IHBIISranSES) ASJIB ffWE&HSiIinSIS JEST ©3®!£®l2 I?I£'2"SESS'®SIBa SJa"Wn3ffl®WSJg SIfHSIRLHSJ ffIiSWSTSWa IPAo THE MINITREL, THE PENNSYLVANIAN BAT TLE CRY. >:Y T. A'BKI'KF.T. TIN V. —*' (inij nutl 11'' Hark! the trumpet culls to duty. See! our gloi'i"iM*jklae's unfurled! the Stars and StripA unite in IH-UIIIV, The pride and envy of the world. " So let the world jojj along as it will, We are f..r the I'uion still; For the t'liion. t<>r the I'uion, We are for the I'uion still. If we wish that Flag respected. We must an.-wer honor's call; Ihitv must not he neglected. Though our dearest friends may fall. .So let the world jog, lie. Traitors have letray>-d the nation. But ict will hy the I Hi..n stand; I.et everv Patron seek his station. With the gallant warlike hand. .So let the World jog, Jte. Though tile rebels have exulted 111 their treason and their shame; Vet the Flag tliey have insulted, Still retains its honored name. So let the World jog, &e. bong its folds shall tioat iiUiVr us. While we *hotit our Kittle cry ; "We will tight for those who love us, Illlt let every traitor die." So let the World jog. iO. Peinisvlvaiiians. to your station. Boldly meet the traitor foe: Fight as bravely for the nation As you did in .Mexico. So let the World jog. Ac. Then your names shall live-in story. And echoed lie from strand to strand: Then tight for biherty and tilury, I'he I'uion and your Native band. So let t lie world jog along as it will. We are lor the I'uion still; For the I'uion. for the I'uion, We are for the Fuiot) still. NATURAL HISTORY, The Orchard Oriole. This bird has been described under a va riety of names; as the spurious oriole, bas tard oriole. It is a distinct species I'roiu the preceding, and differs from it in size, being less and more slender; in its colors, which are different; in the form of its bill and tail; in its notes, which are neither so lull nor so uicllow, and uttered with much more rapidity; in its mode of building, and the materials which it uses; in the shape and color of the eggs. Many • mistakes have been occasioned by the change of color which these birds undergo, as they do not receive their full and perfect plumage till the fourth year. The young birds are easily raised from the nest, and soon become agreeable domestics. One which was reared and kept through the winter, whistled with great clearness and , vivaci'y at two months old. It had an odd manner of moving its head and neck slow ly, regularly, and in various directions, when intent on o! serving anything, with out stirring its body. This motion was as j slow as that of a snake. When, at night. I a candle was placed near its cage, it seemed i extremely well pleased, fed and drank, j dressed, shook and arranged its plumage, '• sat as close to the light as possible, and j sometimes ehan I*l a lew irregular notes, as tho gentleman sat reading or writing beside it. The Crow Blackbird This noted depredator is well known to every farmer of the northern and middle states. In .March these birds come from the south, fly in loose flocks, frequent swamps and meadows, and follow in the furrows after the plow; their food at this season consists of worms, grubs and cater pillars, of which they destroy prodigious numbers, as if to recompense the husband man beforehand for the havoc they intend to make in his crops of Indian corn. They build in tall cedar and pine trees in com pany ; sometimes ten or fifteen being on the same tree. These are five fitches in diameter; composed outwardly of mud, with long stalks aud roots of grass, aud lined with horsehair. i The trees in which they build are near the farmhouses and plantations. From ; them they issue over the neighboring fields, and make their depredations. As soon as tlrn blade of corn begins to make its ap pearance, the crow blackbirds hail it with screams .of satisfaction, and doseend on the i fields, aud begin to pull up and regale themselves on the seeds, scattering the green blades around. While thus eagerly employed, the vengeance of the gun some times overtakes them ; but those '• who live to get away. Return to steal another Jay.'' In the early times of New England, if was customary, iu some towns, to require each inhabitant to kill a certain number of these birds yearly, a fine being imposed up on such as did not destroy and exhibit the requisite number. When the young ears are in a milky state, they are attacked with redoubled ea j gerness by the grakles and red-wings. They descend on the corn like a blackening and i sweeping tempest, dig off the external cov ering of the leaves, and having laid bare the ear, leave little behind for the farpipr but the cobs and shrivelled skins. Whole acres of corn have been thus more than half ruined. During the§e depredations, the gun makes great havoc among them, which has no other effect than to send the survivors to another field. This system of • plunder and retaliation continues till No vember, when they sheer off towards the south, where they collect and darken the 1 air with their numbers, which sometimes WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1861. amount to a hundred thousand. The) - rise from the fields with a noise like thunder, and descend on the roads and fences; and when they rise and cover the high timbered trees, then destitute of leaves, they pro duce a most striking effect; the whole trees seem as if hu.;g in mourning, their notes and screams, meanwhile, resembling the sound of a distant cataract, but in more musical cadence, swelling and dying away on the ear, acording to the fluctuation of the breeze. These birds are called by the farmers Crow Blackbirds, and are universal, y dreaded and detested. But if they do de- j stroy the corn, they do nearly as much good as evil, by devouring numbers of nox- ; ious worms, grubs and caterpillars that in fest the fields, which would, if not destroy ed, dhsolate the country! The purple grakle is easily tamed, and sings in confine ment. They have been taught to articu- ! late several words. These birds are allow ed by the fish-hawks to build in tho inter stices of his nest, where they all hatch their j yo.ung, and live together in perfect harmo- ' I t is twelve inches long; on a slight view it appears wholly black, but placed near, it appears of a rich, glossy steel blue, violet and green. The bill is more than an inch ; long, the upper mandible being very sharp. The female is of a sooty brown color. ffiSLELLAMEOLI A THRILLING SEA TALE. THE MAGIC TL'G OK I'll KKMK THE I'll ICICLE. An Kxeitiny Romance of Land and Water, j CHAPTER I. If vi.il love me a- I love you. No knife ean out our love L'N tivo. — BILL I'KNTO.V. Header, have you ever stood on the heel path side of the i'enna. Canal, on one of those mild January evenings peculiar to the early autumn, aud watched the sun rise from his gorgeous couch athwart the west ern sky, and listened to catch the warble of the distant coal heavers, mingled with cries of a ragged canal driver encouraging a pair of attenuated calico mules? (If you doufc remember at once whether you have or not, take time to consider and in form us through the post office enclosing a stamp.) It was at such a time and on such a spot that two solitary youths might have been seen walking arm in arm in that vicinity about that time. Need we tell you the one was a daughter of poor hut wealthy parents, and the other was her lov er ? After considerable time passed in re flection, it appears rather necessary that we should state the circumstances of the ease, because you wouldn't know it i( we | didn't. The young man had seen 19 springs, }ct did lm urge his suit with a j passion and ardor of one who attained the , ripe age of fourscore years and ten, and ; notwithstanding his weight did not exceed one hundred and ttt'eniy-five pounds, he couldn't have plead harder had he weighed a ton. The maiden was fair. Toothbrush handles could not compare with her beau tiful teeth made by Dr. i.ocke; the raven's wing had no more business by the side of ljer glossy curls than a stove brush. Can we wonder that the young man swore that he would cheerfully catch the mease Is for her sake and expressed a willingness to have the scarlet fever the second time to prove his devotion ? Alas! the perversity of women. Al though loving hiin devotedly, she replied to his ardent declaration by sitting down on a stone boat and writing him an iutroduc tiou to the marines, to whom she recom mended to repeat the narrative. Driven to frenzy, Caleb turned so red in the face he tore all the buttons off liis vest, and froth ed at his mouth to such an extent that he split a bran new vest down the back. — Then casting upon her a look of unutter able anguish, through a pocket telescope, he cried—' l-'alse one ! farewell for-r ever !' threw a double handspring, and disappear ed behind a high board fence. Pheebe Ann phainted. CHAPTER IJ. Whore are vou going Lord Lovel?" She said, i)h. where are you going?" Said -lie ; I'm going, my lady Nancy Belle, Strange countries for to see, see. see, Strange countries for to see."— FAXON'S ODES. We left Pheebe Ann in a swoon, or rather Calab did. As soon as conscious ness came Pheebe Ann came too,and thenshe remembered with a pang that she had driv en Caleb away. She called aloud —' C'a — leb ! Ca —leb !' but no Caleb answered. — However well other Calebs might answer for others, none but her Caleb could an swer for her, and he couldn't because he wasn't within hearing. Then she recalled his love for the briny deep which induced hinj, when a mere lad, to run away from home and drive on the canal. Afterwards his father humoring his passions for riding on the mountain wave and climbing tower ing masts, procured for him, through his influence with the President of the Uni ted States, the appointment of third assis tant lock tender. What more natural, thought Pheebe,, than for him to follow his youthful passions and go for a sailor' After deep reflection her face brightened up, and she hurried away to execute a sud denly formed design. What was it? We shall see. CHAPTER 111. ' >nj fur tin- in..a y. two for t!u> show, Tliroe to make ri ; IV. an. l four f..r to <o ..— WATTS. WHAT! !!! Before explaining the meaning of this thrilling ejaculation, let us take a review of things at the period of our story. Old Bourbon, who is now in Kentucky engaged in the whiskey business, swayed the scep tre of France. Gin ruled Holland, and Sweden was governed a good deal by the price of Swede's iron. Wales was just beginning to be celebrated for her ' Prints of Wales,' and Spain was getting up ex cursions to Put-in-bay. Glancing at the New World, Jerry Baldy was weighing candles on Staten Island and had not then dreamed of d iving the Pope in 'Home Swamp' in tho name of the Continental Congress; and Christopher Columbus, hav ing completed his labors by discovering Sandusky, had retired to the Hermitage at tho north bend of Ashland on Mount Ver non, and was writing for the New York Ledger. CHAPTER IV. Now comes ILIT- TUG. —JACK SMITH. When Caleb left the phickle Pheebe, it was with the determination never to see her again. He would be a wanderer, lie would land on other lands and climb for eign climes; he would go and be an an cient mariner. Filled with this desperate resolve he sought his boarding house, put a clean shirt and collar in a cotton valise, aud started for the liver. A gallant tig lay at the dock, which he hoarded and re quested to see the captain. • A sailor, whose voice was deeply bronzed by expos ure to the Tropic of Barleycorn, appeared at the top niizen gangway, and informed him that the captain was engaged in the cabin. He was being presented with a bosom pin and a gold headed emie by a ferryman who was about to retire from of fice. The presentation was wholly unc-x- pected. After a considerable delay Caleb was in vited to descend. When he entered the cabin he was struck with the youthful and delicate appearance of the captain. He was about to tell biiu he had come to ship before the—well, smokestack, when the supposed captain raised his cap, and a shower of corkscrew curls fell upon his shoulders. 'What!' exclaimed the lover in amaze ment. 'Pheebe Ann!' 'Caleb!' They rushed into each other's arms. — After an embrace which caused the ther mometer in the cabin to rise to ninety-nine degrees in the shade, mutual explanations followed. She had designed his purpose to g.: for i sailer, and resolved to thwart it. '1 he captain ofthe tug, being an aunt of hers, had allowed her to be captain for that day, and chance had done the rest. — pheebe Ann was penitent, Caleb forgiv ing, and that very day they agreed before a minister to share the tug of life togetli- But little more remains to be told. Ca leb couldn't be persuaded to .give up his passion for the raging main, notwithstand ing the entreaties of his wife, and so she compromised the matter by allowing him to tend a saw mill, and he still follows that daring and perilous profession. Incidents of the Battle at Bull's Run. In the thickest of the contest a seces sion Colonel of cavalry was knocked out of his saddle by a ball from one of our ri flemen. 'There goes Old Baker, of the Georgia First!' shouted one of our boys, in hearing of his Chaplain. 'Who?' queried the Parson. 'Colonel Baker, of the rebel ranks, has just gone to his long home !'— 'Ah! well,' replied the Chaplain quietly, 'the longer I live the less cause I have to find fault with the iuscrutable acts of Di vine Providence!' An unlucky private in one of the New York regiments was wounded in this fight, and his father arrived at the hospital just as tlie surgeon was removing the ball from the back of his shoulder. The boy lay with his face downward on the pallet.— 'Ah! my poor son,' said the father mourn fully, 'l'm very sorry for you, but it's a bad place to be hit in—thys in the bade. The sufferer turned over, bared his breast, and pointed to the opening above the armpit, exclaiming, 'Father, here's where th.e ball went in !' One of the Zouaves was struck by a cannon shot, which tore through his thigh close to his body, nearly severing the limb from the trunk. As he fell he drew his photograph from his breast and said to his nearest comrade, 'Take this to my wife. Tell her I died like a soldier, faithful to my country's cause and the good old flag. Good bye!' and he died where he fell. An artilleryman lay on the ground, near ly exhausted from loss of blood, and f-oo weak to get oat of the way of the tramp ing horses that flitted about him. A mounted horseman came towards him, when he raised up the bleeding stumps of both arms and cried out 'don't tread on me, Capt'n! See! both hands are gone.' The trooper leaped over him, a shell broke near by, and the crashing fragments put the sufferer quickly out of his misery. A rebel—one of the Georgia regiment — lay with a fearful shot wound in the side, which tore out several of his ribs. The life blood of the poor fellow was fast oozing out, when one of our troops dashed for ward from out of the melee and foil, sharply wounded, clo--e beside liim. The Georgian recognized his uniform, though he was fatally hurt, and feebly put out his hand. 'We came into this battle,' he said, 'enemies. Let us die friends. Farewell!' lie spoke no more, but his companion in disaster took the extended hand, and es caped to relate this touching fact. One of our riflemen had his piece car ried away by a ball which struck it out of his hands, just as his company was in the act of advancing to storm one of the smal ler rebel batteries Unarmed, he sprang forward and threw himself down on his iace, under the enemy's guns. A Zouave lay there, wounded tnd bleeding, out of the way ofthe murderous tire. 'Lay close, lay close, old boy,' said the latter to the new coiner. 'The boys'il take this old furnace 'n a minit, and then we'll git up an' give the rebels fits agin.' Three min utes afterwards the battery was carried, and the two soldiers were in the thickest of the fight again. A reporter for one of the New York pa pers lost his carriage, and when the stam pede occurred he ran about confused in search of the missing vehicle, without suc cess. He saw the dust increasing and the means of conveyance home rapidly de creasing. So lie jumped into a passing ambulance, which drove r. pidly off. He found his horse on the road above the battle field, and jumped out of the ambulance again just as a cannon bull passed through it., cutting a wounded man in halves! He declares, professionally, that 'he who fights and runs away, lives to fight another day.' Two of the New Hampshire Second were leaving the field through the woods when they were suddenly confronted by five rebels, who ordered them to ' halt,' or we fire.' The Granite Boys saw their di lemma, but the foremost of them present ed his musket and answered, ' halt you, or we fire!' and, at the word, both discharged their pieces. The rebel fell, his assailant was uninjured. Seizing his companion's musket, he brought it to his shoulder, and said to the other, 'fire!' both fired their guns at once, and two more rebels fell.— The others fled. The leader's name was Ilanfoid, from Dover, N. 11. An Argument against Economy in time of War. Why money should he put in circulation. —ltev. T. B. Thayer, of Boston, in a ser mon delivered last .Sunday, made the fol lowing timely suggestions: ' The state of the times demand liberality and a generous expenditure on the part of those who have the means, whose income is greater than their wants. Such as these should not study economy, should not aim to save as much and spend as little as pos sible. I hear many of this class talking ol retrenchment, of reducing their expenses, of denying themselves and families this and that to which they have been accus tomed. ' I say uo. This is a mistaken policy. Why should you save? You are in no danger of suffering. Why should you not spend this, you who have more than enough, while thousands around you are wanting em ployment and bread, and have nothing.— What is to come of this class if every rich man, every family whose income exceeds by much or little their current expenses, begins economising and diminishing ex penditures to the lowest point possible ? What is to become of these people without work or money ? They must live. They must have bread. Give them employment gnd they will earn it. If you don't they must stiii hav.e bread, that is certain, and somebody must furnish it.' BaaT'Several years ago, Mr. Kid well was preaching to a large audience in a wild part of Illinois, and announced for his text: 'ln my father's house there are many man sions.' He had scarcely read the words when an old coon stood up and said : ' I tell you folks, that's a lie' I know his father well; he lives fifteen miles from Lex ington, in old Kentuck, in au old log cab in, an there ain't but one room in the house.' ' Brethren let us Drill' —When the tiews of the repulse at Manassas reached the camp meeting at Desplaines, Ilev. Henry Cox, the large-hearted pastor of Wabash Avenue Methodist Episcopal ciiurch, who was preaching at the time the intelligence was received, remarked on closing his ser mon: ' Brethren, we had better adjourn this camp meeting and go home and drill.' Chicago Tribune. Lost his Bacon. —Hon. T. B. Clay, son of Ilenry Clay, while endeavoring to smug gle several wagon loads of bacon to West Tennessee, for the use of the rebels in that quarter, was intercepted by a company of Union troops, who not only seized the mer chandise as contraband, but obliged Mr. Clay and his wagoner to take the oatli of allegiance to the National Government. © SgkA gentleman crossing a very narrow bridge, said to a countryman whom he met: 'I tlfink this narrow causeway must be very dangerous, my honest friend ; pray arc not people sometimes lost here?' 'Lost! no, sir, I never knew anybody lost here in my life; there were several drowned, but they were found again.' New Series—Vol. XV, No. 3f. t®Michnel Klepper, a very iudustrious mechanic and laborer, who lived alone in tho second story of IX Kurtz's cabinet manufac tory, Aaronsburg, was missed for some days, and, search having been made by the family of the latter gentleman, was found prostruto upon the iloor, struck with apoplexy, in a helpless condition. lie is supposed to have lain in this condition for some days, and had crawled to the door, but was unable to open it. It is not expected that Ire will live any length of time. | General Jilshop Polk. —The Episcopal pa- I pers are very severe upon Bishop Polk, of Louisiana, for dofling his ecclesiastical robes ' and donning the helmet of war. He is now ! in actual command, having superseded Gen. Pillow. The lleoorder thus speaks on tho i subject: " The lit. Rev. Leonidas Polk, I). 1)., it is announced in the Richmond papeis, ' lias ac cepted the appointment of Brigadier General in the Confederate anay. and is to take charge of the Red River District.' There can be no greater proof of the wildness of the delirium by which tho Southern States arc infected, than that a prelate of the piety, the strict fidelity to duty, and the noble integrity of Bishop Polk, should desert Iris diocese, and postpone the solemn duties prescribed by bis consecration, to assume an office which will place him in the ranks of those military bish ops whom history has over covered with pe culiar obloquy, and who have been among the chief scandals of the Church." A Child Killed by Whiskey. —The Hamilton Times relates that a child named Daly, only three years of age, died at the houso of its guardians, on West avenue, a few days since, from the effects of whiskey. It appears that a couple of children got a bottle of whiskey and drank some out of it. The deceased was stupefied by the liquor, and fell into a deep sleep, from which it was awakeued with dif ficulty. Medical aid was called in, hut the poison had done its work, and the child soon died. BERNARD A, HOOPES, Successor to Jioopes d'* Davis, Manufacturer and Wholesale Dealer in HATS j PTTRS, AITT 3 Qlftrsr !i!) I) i) 3,, No. 509 Market Street, mh2B-ly Philadelphia. GLEN-ECHO MILLS, tEFUJAXTOUX, PA. ILI Hi (S> o Manufacturers, Importers and Wholesale Dealers in CARPETINGS, DRUGGETS, OIL CLOTHS, MATTINGS, &c. Warehouse, No. 500, Chestnut Street, Opposite the State House, inh 14—ly. Philadelphia, Pu. IE IS "Ny HI IE IB IE ©TFS3 Us a (LATE EAGLE HOTEL,) Third St., above Race, Philadelphia, Terms—sl 2. per day, RHOADS & SAILOR, Propriety TILGIIMAN V. RIIOADS, Formerly of the National Hotel. CHARLES SAILOR, f2B-ly Forpierlv of Schuylkill co. f Pa. msnem* I.ate AX'hite Swan, Race Street, above Third, Philadelphia. Terms—sl 25 per day. QUILLMAN & BOYER, Proprietor*. R|AO the old customers of this well known House we desire to say that we have ren ovated, improved, and newly furnished the same, and that we respectfully solicit a cotp tinuance of their patronage. Strangers, Travelers and Visitors wo cordi ally invfte to the hospitality of the " Nation al"—to come and see and judge for them selves of its advantages and merits. Our lo cation is central, and convenient for merchants and business men generally. We will always endeavor to study the wants and comforts of our guests, and with the as sistance of Mr. CHAS. A. STEIN, our affable and attentive Clerk, we feel well prepared to keep a good hotel, and hope to be able to give general satisfaction. HENRY QUILLMAN, feb2S-lyr JOHN BOYER. IN ALL ITS BRANCHES, Executed in the best style known in the art, at C, G. Crane's Gallery, ' 332 Arch St., east of Sixth, Philadelphia. Life Size in Oil aud Pastil, STEREOSCOPIC PORTRAITS, AMBROTYPJBS, J)A<JPJERREOTYPES, <ic, For Cases, Medallions, Pins, Rings &c. Philadelphia, November 15, 18b0-ly. Large Stock of Furniture on Hand. A FELIX is still manufacturing all kinda /\ of Furniture. Young married persons and others that wish to purchase Furniture will hnd a good assortment on hand, which i will be sold cheap for cash, or pountry pro duce taken in exchange for same. Give inu a call, on Valley street, uear Black Rear Ho tel. " £b2l
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