Whole No, 2&2§. Jacob C, Blymyer & Co., Produce and Commission Mer chants, LEWISTOWN, PA. and Grain of all kinds pur phased at market rates, or received on storage and shipped at usual freight rates, having storehouses and boats of their own, with care ful captains and hands. Stove Coal, Limeburner§ Coal, Piaster, Fish and Salt always on hand. Grain can be insured at a small advance on post of storage. t\o22 AMBROTYPES AND The Gems of the Season. fPIIfS is no humbug, but a practical truth X he pictures taken by Mr. Burkholder nre unsurpassed for BOLDNESS, TRUTH FULNESS. BEAUTY OF FINISH, and DURABILITY. Prices varying according to size and quality of frames and Cases. Room over the Express Office. Lewistown, August 23, 1860. J* j OD zm S2T H o OFFTCE on East Market street, Lewistown, adjoining F. G. Franciseus' Hardware Store. P. S. Dr. Locke will be at his office the first Monday of each month to spend the week. mv3l DR. A. J. ATKXXVSOjNT, HAYING permanently located in Lewis town, offers his professional services to the citizens of town and country. Office West Market St., opposite Eiseobise's Hotel. Residence one door east of George Blymver. Lewistown, July 12, 186tMf ~ Dr. Samuel L. Alexander, 2 Has permanently located at Mil'roy, Ty and is prepared to practice all thehranch uf es of his Profession. Office at Swine ..t s Hotel. iny3-ly EDWARD FRYSINGER, WHOLESALE DEALER & HAMFUTUHR OF CIKARS, TOBACCO, SKUPF, &c., &C., 2PJ\o Orders promptly attended to. jel6 pso. 7 r. ELrsn, Attorney at Law, Office Market Square, Lewistown, will at-, tend to business in Mltflin, Centre and Hunting don counties. iay2G \i:\V REMKDIIIS LOR SI'ER M A TO It R II <EA. HOWARD ASSOCIATION. PHILADELPHIA, A Hi ,h nt Institution established by special EihUmc- RAUfaf the Si*ta*&DU*rei* >/. agUeted with i. i.'-.tf riwl chronir Discuss. and especift J ,y fifth'. C"?e nt of th, Strati Organ*. MEDICAL A DVD :E given gratis, by the Acting Sur gftor. '> AIJ i Li.E REPORTS onSpermaturrinva. and otb liw'a>.>s .M tjie Sexual Organs, and the NEW REM ,.I'IKs employed in the Dispensary, sent in sealed • livi-lopes. ire-- ot" charge. Two or throe stamps for ; : a,- acceptable. Address. DP .T. StfILLIN ;• " CHTON. Howard ASsu. iotion'. No. 2 S. Nihth st , hiladelfihia, Pa. je6 i, i? in. a a, | f A\ IXG in connection with his Grocery XX and Notiou business, commenced the Manufacturing of Confection ery, •y various branches, and employed a prae tical workman, notifies the public that lie in t-_n>,ls tu keep a well assorted stock of the ; above goods on hand, which will he warrant j '■J to give satisfaction, and he e<qual to sny ] Confectioneries that can he bought from any . eastern eitv, which he offers tt wholesale mer i -i' ltts and retailers at city prices, with cust ! ot carriage. He therefore solicits the eus- ■ torn of the surrounding country, and re- j quests them to send in their orders or call r ''j examine his goods, which will satisfy all ffiat they can be accommodated with a sglee- \ tion which will recommend itself. , GYKES, BISCUITS, &C., constantly on j ! ' Also, Pound, Spunge, Bride, Silver ana jold Cakes, in the best etyle, baked to j -mer, on the shortest notice. mh2B Glassware. FdL'IT Stands with and without covers. Butter Dishes " " ' " Sugar Bowls, Goblets and Preserve Dishes. , , ers & nd Tumblers. All to he sold at "• lowest figure by H. ZERBE. J 000 Fruit Jars, best in use, iff a * P r * ces cheaper than has ever " ten offered, at Zerhe's Grocery and Stone- War e depot, J j y i o La rge Stock of Furniture on Hand. A still manufacturing all kinds i a "V* °t Furniture. Young married persons 1 will c j FS *° P urc tiase Furniture will hf a ?° 0< * aSßort n*ent on hand, which I due . e °ld °^ ea P for cash, or country pro- ' . 1 ta *en in exchange for same. Qive me j ' on "alley street, near Black Bear Ho- i -L- '* feb 21 TP FRANKLIN PRATT, Gun-barrel \¥el vwishes employment, please address , I Philadelphia Post Office, stating " rs he may be found. aug7-3t ißfcjismsß) Asj® ipimfflsaafea! Ms ©SQJBSIS wemssmmst BTOTOCTT issnswir,, b>A THE ffIISSTREt. THE TRAITOR'S CURSE. BY TH'M VS .MOORE, O, for a tongue to curse the slave Whose treason, like a deadly blight. Comes o'er the counsels of the brave. And blasts them in their hour of might. May life's unblessed cup for him. He drugged with treachery to the brim, With hopes that but a!litre to fly, With joys that vanish while he >ij>s. Like Dead Bea fruits that tempt the t ye, But turn to ashes on the hps. I His country's corse, his children's shame I Outcast of virtue, peace and hung, May he at last, with lips of flame. On the parched desert thir.-tiug die, While lakes that shone in mockery nigh Are fading off untouched, nnC-isted. Like the onee glorious hope she blasted. And when from earth his spirit flies. Just Frophet let the damned one dwell j Full in tho sight of Paradise, Beholding Heaven and feeling Hell. XAW&J& HISTORY, The Great Crested Flycatcher. j This bird is not so well known as the | king bird, being chiefly confined to the woods. There, his l.ar„h (for he ; > has no song,) is heard above most others, i .1 lie also visits the orchard, is equally fond of bees, but wants the courage and magna nimity of the king bird. Tie builds his ' nest in a hollow tree deserted b} ? the blue ' j bird or woodpecker. The materials of which : this is formed, are somewhat scantier. It ' is formed of a little loose hay, featliprs of the Guinea fo\7!s, hogs' bristles, pieces of cast snake skins, and dogs' hair. Wheth ; pr he surrounds his nest with the snake ; byway of terrorcttt- to prevent other ! birds and animals from entering,'or wheth j er it be that he finds its silky softness suit- j | able for bis young, is uncertain ; the fact, ; however, is notorious. He feeds on wlior | tleberries while they last. It is eight inches and a half long; the ; upper parts are dill greenish oljve, the i ' feathers on the head are pointed, and form i i a sort of crest; the threat and breast ash I j color; the rest of the lower parts a sulphur j yellow. ' The Pe.wit Flycatcher- This is one of our earliest spring visit- | I ants. Its notes, like those of the biye bird, ! are pleasing, not for any melody tlicy con- . tain, but for the idea of spring and return , ing verdure, with all the sweets of this ! lovely season, which are associated with bis simple but lively ditty, vvliiph is nothing 1 but price, pel];iftitee, l v r a whole ! . morning. It begins to build in March, on j . some projecting pa t under a bridge, hi a ! cave in a well, often under a Tied, in the ! i low eaves of a cottage, and in such places. 1 he nest is composed of mud mixed with j moss, lined with flax and horse hair, and is ! generally large a;;d solid. This bird is six inches and a half in length; the upper parts are dusky olive; whole lower parts a pale ; delicate yellow; the plumage of the head is loose and crested. IFMEmiIOHI TRIAL OF HENRY ZIMMERMAN, ■ For the Murder of Henri/ Aukcr, in Juniata I County, on March 9 th, 1861. It will be recollected by our readers that • at the April term of tlie Juniata cogoty ; court, the del't., in company with John i Lovering and Samuel Ilowder, were ar raigned and severally plead 'Not Guilty' to | the indictment. Lovering and Howd.er were tried at that term and severally found j guilty, Lovering of murder in the first de- j ■ gree, and Ilowder of murder in the second ! degree. Lovering's sentence was post- j poned until August term, in order to al- ] low him to be a witness against Zimnier man, while Ilowder was sentenced to 12 : years imprisonment in the Eastern Perji- ! tentiary. The trial of -/Jmmerman occu- . pied the greater portion of two days.— ! Verdict—'Guilty of murder in the second i degree.' Sentenced to undergo an impris onment in the Eastern Penitentiary for the \ term of 12 years, pay a fine of §lO and < the costs of prosecution. Christy and A. I 1 Parker for Commonwealth, Doty and Al- 1 < exander for defendant. These particu- 1 lars we glean from the Mifflintown Sen- ■ t tinel and Democrat of last week : ! < SENTENCE OF .TOIIN LOVERING. • 1 At about 10 o'clock on Friday morning, ] John Levering, who was convicted at the < April term of murder in the first degree, 1 and whose sentence was deferred at the in- ' ( stance cf the District attorney in order j * that he might be a competent witness in j the prosecution of Zimmerman, was bro't , i up on final sentence. AVith the exception < of a slight paleness, the prisoner displayed t no evidence whatever of inward emotion. He maintained the same stolid countenance j and careless manner that he has hitherto j manifested, and when asked by the Court f if he had any thing to say why final sen- < tence should not be pronounced upon him, i WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 186 L he took occasion to refer to some of the ev idence advanced against him, and said lie had not had a fair trial, and went into a strange argument to prove tl:e impropriety of capital punishment, in which he said he 'never believed.' Judge Graham, in a very solemn and impressive ipanupc, then prounccd the following sentence : After a trial before an impartial and in telligent jury ofyour own selection, defended • by Jearped and zealous counsel, whose ability and energy were exerted with the magnitude and solemnity of the issue pending, you have been found guilty of the crime of murder in the first degree—the moat aggravated offence known to the laws of our Commonwealth. It is seldom that the community is startled with such evidence of human depravity. The murder was deliberately planned, and exooii ted with a heartless cruelty, Which, after i wards, in relating to others the sickening de toils o;' the horrid tragedy, you could only attribute to the instigation of the devil. You approached the dwelling of your victim, with your companion in crime, in tho darkness of the night. Rv a rap at the door you induced ; the unsuspecting and hospitable old man to direct his little grand daughter, about fog;-- teen years ol age, to unbolt the door and per i mii you to enter, and, after arousing a feeble ! old man, who had passed his three score years and tep, from his bed, with a pistol i presented, you demanded his money, and on i his refusal to comply with your demand, you deliberately discharged your pistol at hi 3 head. Failing to inflict a mortal wound, and | discovering that your work was but partially performed, you rushed upon him with a hat chet, with which you were also armed, and by ; repeated blows on the head you terminated : the fearful work of dc-aib. And afterwards, ! when arrested and in the hands of the officer who was conveying you to the county jail, without solicitation or inducement, you cool !y stated, more byway of boasting than in penitence and remorse, that the arrangement between you and your companions in iniquity i was that you were to do the shooting and kil ling, and then you were to divide the money. We refer to these details of this cruel trage dy, not to lacerate your feelings or sensibili ty, for you must certainly feel the remorse j consequent upon your guilt apd crjme, if aught of feeling or sensibility exists in your nature, and the perceptions of right or wrong I are not altogether obliterated from your con science, but to impress you with the enormity of your crimy, the justness of your conviction, and the certainty ofyour punishmeni. Your own voluntary declarations, in the absence of all other evidence, establishes your guilt be yond the possibility of a doubt, and the oth er evidence, in the absence of your own statements, is just as satisfactory—in the two combined your guiit is doubly proved. •\k e therefore admonish j'ou to banish from your mind all hope ( f human deliverance.— By the laws of our Commonwealth the death of the wilful and deliberate murderer is t tlie penalty of his crime, and this death penalty ' hs sanctioned by the Supreme Lawgiver of the 1 oi verse, who hath declared ' that whosoever sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be -bed.' Your days upnp { errtb arc fust flitting away. A few moro bright suns will 'illume , your cell, followed by the gloomy shades of night, and then 'time to you will he no lun ger.' Standing as you now are, on the verge of life and thieshold of eternity, we earnestly entreat you to prepare fur that great and sol emn change yvhjcli soon awaits you. Al though sinful and guilty, the blood of Christ clean set h from sin, and* thpougL the ptoning efforts of a onee crucified bu; now glorified Intercessor and Redeemer, you can only hope for pardon and reconciliation with an offend ed God. You will soon appear before the Great Judge of all the earth, and be assigned your place throughout an endless eternity, in bliss or ejernal despair. That Qod by his grace may enable you to repent of your sins, and to seek and obtain his pardon and forgive ness, is our solemn and fervent hope at this, which will probably be, our last meeting in this world. The last solemn duty, which must now be performed by the Court, is to pronounce the sentence of the law upon you, which is, That you John Lovering, be taken hence by the Sheriff of Juniata county to the jail of said county from whence you came, and from thence to the place oi execution, within the walls or yard of the jail of the caid county of Juniata, and that you be there hanged by the neck until you are dead—And may God have giercy on your soul. EXECUTION OF WI. H. WEAVER, At New Bloom field, Perry County. We copy the following decays cf the ex- j edition of Weaver from the Perry county j papers: On Friday, 6th September, in obedience to j the sentence passed upon him, William 11. f Weaver, who was convicted of the murder of | his wife, by the adinlmstraiioc of strychnia, i in December last, suffered the extreme penalty of the law by yielding his life as the punish ment for the crime he had committed. From his own statemeut, Weaver was not : quite 37 years old, and was born in j town. Bucks county, at which place'his fath- j er died, lie resided at different places in this State, and for several years in Cecil county, Md. In April, 18-59, he removed to this county, from .Chester county, Pa., resid iding about two and a half miles from New Bloomfield, until ,the fall of 1860, when he came to reside in a house just beyond the borough limits, and at which place his wife died, very suddenly, having suffered little or no indisposition, on the evening of the 24th December last. As Weaver's family had been residing in our borough but a short time i before her death, very few Of our citizens be | came acquainted with them, and little is cer- ; tai'nly known of her character. The prisoner was a man of rather prepos sessing appearance, about 5 feet 8 inches in ! height, stoutly bulit, and not unpleasant in i his manners. During all the time of his con- , finement, the Sheriff, and all who were con- j cerned in attending upon him, unite in say ing his conduct was good, and that he seem- • Ed desirious to give as little trouble as possible to all around him. From the time of his arrest until the time of his execution, with very brief'exception, iic manifested calmness which few could exhibit under the circumstances; generally sleeping well at night, eating with a very good appetite, and if approached would con verse with those who were acquainted with him, in regard to his situation and charge against hjtr,. Weaver had given various contradictory accounts of the death of his wife, at times virtually admitting his guilt, then again stout ly denying it; and his whole conduct was so inexplicable that it confounded all who had an opportunity of witnessing it. To one minister lie confessed his guilt, to anothej denied it—and persisted ir, its denial during the last hours of his life, and yet at the same time calling his keeper aside and assuring him that he h;,d told him all. This singular con duct may he accounted for in part by his de clarcd affection for his living wife, and the issue expected by Iter, as he seems fo have selected the name for the unborn child bv marking a name in the Bible of each sex, coupled with the fact that his wife was to share >n the profits of the sale of his alleged confession, and Lis denials of guilt were pur posely made to help the sale of the printed confession. fL was possessed of some low cunning, which he boasted of, and must have bad a blunted moral sense which could induce him, for the sake of gain to his wife after his de cease, to utter falsehoods when on the very Verge of the grave, and yet criminate that wife in the very confession from which she was to derive a pecuniary benefit. At 11 o'clock 42 minutes, L eaver, accom panied by the Sheriff, followed by Messrs. Mendenhall and Focfit. and tlie Sheriff's as sistants, ascended the scaffold. The prisoner did not seem to filter. They then knelt down and Mr. Focht addressed God in a fer rent prayer on behalf of the unfortunate man. The ministers retired after bidding htm farewell. The rope was placed around his neck by the Sheriff, and at 11 otolopk 48 minutes the drop fell arid the culprit was landed into eternity, llis feet were' thrown apart slightly several times, and for a mo ment there was a tremulous motion of his right leg, but in the course of three or four minutes all apparent motion ceased. At 11 o'clock 52 minutes, Dr. Lefever step ped up to the scaffold and remained beside the tody until life was pronounced to be at an end. At that time the pulse beat 87 times in a minute. Three minutes later, it was 140, and beating irregularly, and also inter mittent. At 12 o'clock't beat 93, and 2 min utes past 12 no pulsation whatever could be distinguished, and the body was pronounced dead. At 24 minutes past 12 o'clock, after hav ing been suspended for 36 minutes, the body was lowered arid placed in the caffin. On examination it was found that tlie neck was dislocated by the shock of the fall, so that death must have been instantaneous. After the body was placed in tlie coffin the Sheriff opened the door leading into tlie jail-yard, and allowed tlie crowd which had collected around the jail to take a view thereof. There was very little change in the features—scarce ly any .distortion—some slight tumefaction and discoloration. The mouth was partially open, as also the eyes, hut there did not seem to be any evidence of much engorgement of blood about the head. The Great Rhinoceros Loose It will L recollected that on the 18th inst., the steamer Key City, hound down, collided with the steamer Luzerne, having | on board Dan Lice's Circus Troupe of j drained Animals, etc. The cage contain ing the trained rhinoceros, weighing over 4,000 lbs., which was on a barge alongside, j was knocked into the river. The door of i tlie cage was open, the animal being tied ito the front end cfit by a chain which was ! fastened to a ring in the monster's nose. | In hopes that the cage might in the acci | dent have been broken so as to allow the ! rhinoceros to escape, several of Lice's men were stationed Blong the bank of the ■ river, but when morning came no signs of j him could be seen, and after awaiting a few : days the men returned to the company. On Saturday morning two men living below here named Charles J. letter and I Conrad Ereson, saw from the bank of the ! river what they supposed to be a row boat bottom side up in the slough. They soon ; got a skiff and pulled it to the place, and when within, as they thought, about sis ; reds of the supposed boat, it sank and they j then returned. The pilot of the steamer Golden J-ira ; coming up on Saturday saw near the same place what he took to be a large brown I horse floating in the slough, several rods away, but as it sank soon, he paid no atten tion to it, but kept on with his boat. On Saturday afternoon Charles Wright j son, F. Brown and Lobert Bggleston, j while roasting green corn cn the bank of i the slough, were half scared to death by I hearing a heavy tramp, and in a few mo ments the rhinoceros, as he appeared here : on the occasion of his first visit in July, j minus the blanket and chain in his nose, ; rushed upon them with a terrible bellow, i catching Eggleston on his snout and throw | in S .fripb as he says, at least fifty feet over ; I the back of him, breaking an arm and two ' ribs by the fall. The monster plunged in- 1 to the rive*-, and the tve ether persons, ; | badly scared, but not hurt, procured a bug ! gy, took the seat out, filled the box with grass and a blanket, and brought Eggles ton to his home in this city, where he is now under the care of Dr. Cameron. The ribs were evidently broken by the snout of the animal, as the flesh was badly torn. The slough in which the animal doubt less is at present is about five miles below here, very deep, with a muddy bottom, and though it is just such a place as he was captured from in the East, there is no tol ling how long he may remain quiet with out taking a notion to prowl aroqpd the conn try iu search of bel ter fare. i'liis. afternoon several of our sportsmen went down to the spot to make arrange ments for his eapftire, when, if successful, they can start a show of their own. He was seer, this afternoon swimming in tpe waters of the slough, but sank after sport ing, if we may so call it, a few moments with hack and nose above water. About a hundred persons have gone down to help in his capture. —£a Ceosa Democrat, Au<j. 21. Politics of Ohio Colonels. There are forty-one Colonels at the bead of < |hio regiments, iu pamp or field, and ol these eighteen are ranked as democrats, i pighteen republicans, three Americans,and , two whose politics arc unknown. Of tlie forty-one, Gov. Dennison has appointed twenty-three, the War Department com- j missioned six, and the balas.ee were chosen by their own regiments. Gov. Dcnqison's appointments, made upon personal merit and without thoughts of party favoritism, i are twelve democrats, nine republicans, one j American, and one unknown. Vet, in the lace of such tacts as these, the Ohio Dent- I oeratic Convention denounced by resolu tion that 'unjust discrimination' against democrats which consigned them to fight j in the ranks under incompetent republipap ! leaders. That was the spirit and Intent of the resolution, and the same spirit has been manifested elsev/hprc than it; Phi , and with quite as little reason. Wp coppdcr i it very bad taste, if not a mercenary pa triotism, to count noses among either offi- j ces or men at a time like this, when old ! party lines should be obliterated. Hut if one side makes false charges, as the demo crats of Ohio have done, it is not ours to rejoin in the same ill temper. We are for peace in the North and a vigorous war in the South. A Brave Girl. —A heroic czploit is told of a beautiful young woman in the village of Spinelli, in Southern Italy. 'I lie houTe of her uncle, a liberal priest, was invaded by some twenty brigand ruffians. One of the leaders was amusing himself by stab bing the priest, who was old, when the girl rushed in, flung herself on him, and snatching in an instant the brace of revol vers lie had in Icis belt, shot him dead.— She. ran through all the- rooms, firing upon every brigand she found engaged in plun dering ;hg house. She shot down four cf them. Alarmed at this unexpected at tack, and not knowing what to make of* it, the ruffians in the other rooms ran out. She still pursued them and succeeded, be fore they could get a knowledge of the en emy they had to encounter, in closing the front dooy against them. The brigands at tempted to set fire to the house. From the balcony site put out an old musket, belong ing to ber uncle, and fired upon them again, and then, displaying from tlie win dow a tri colored flag, cried, with all her breath, ' \ iva Garibaldi !' The miscre ants fired au ineffectual shot or two and started off. A few moments after a cap tain of bersaglieri, who just came up, found the exhausted girl in a faint upon the dead body of her uncle. laventions, &c The oak jree lives in a otate of nature one thousand five hundred years. Hour glasses were invented at Alexan dria one hundred and fifty years before the birth of Christ. The sum of fifteen million dollars is ex pended each year in London for intoxica ting liquors. Y accination was first tried upon condem ned criminals in the year 1772. The interest of the national debt of Great Britian is over twenty-four million pound sterling. Looking glasses were first made in Ven ice in the year 1300. Iron was first discovered by the burning Mount Ida, one thousand four hundred years before Christ. Muslins wore first manufactured in Eng land during the year 990. * Air is eighteen hundred and sixty times lighter than yvater. Military uniforms were first adopted in France, by King Louis NIV. The plague in Europe, Asia, and Africa, commencing in the year 588 lasted 50 years. Linen was first discovered and made in England, in 1553. Fall of an Aerolite. —The London Tihies has an account by an eye witness of the fall of an aerolite of enormous size. A rushing sound, gradually increasing in intensity, made itself heard, until at last, with a terrific roar, a flaming mass plunged into the road. Laborers were called, and succeeded in disinterring what proved a most magnificent aerolite, the weight be ing 83 A pounds. It had buried itself near ly six feet in the ground and was red hot when reached. While cooling, the crys tals assumed, while constantly changing, the most beautiful prismatic hues. Its specific gravity was greater than that of iron. A strong smell of sulphur was dif fused immediately after the descent, and several crystals of that element were found in the cavities on the upper surface. New Series—VqL XV, No. 45. BERNARD A, HOOPES ; Successor to Jfoopes if- Davis, Manufartnrer and Wholesale Dealer iu HATS, Ftrp.s , AiTE 3ii in ■// a o No. 5Q9 Market Street, mh2B-ly Philadelphia. GLEN-ECHO MILLS, GF.RHIVTOWV, Pi, l O IL* lis "LLT LA & v£# o $ Manufacturers, Importers and Wholesale Dealers in CARPE'TINGS, DRUGGETS, ; OIL CLOTHS. MATTINGS. &c. \ arc-house, No. 509, Chesßrot Street, Opposite the State House, j mli 14 -Iy. Philadelphia, Pa. !IE \3? IE IS m ©\D'iSlsi^ (LATE EAGLE HOTEL.) Third St., above Race, Philadelphia. Terms—sl 25 per day. RHOADS & SAILOR, Propriet'ts TI Lit I.MAX V. Kilo ADS, Formerly of the' National' Hotel. CHARLES SAILOR, f2B-ly Formerly of Schuylkill co., I'a. ; srASiifKrAEs ©BraKi* T.ate iVliite Swan, Rare Street, a tune Third, Phihulchtliia. Terms-—sl 25 per day. QUILLMAN & BOyER, Proprietors. ; npQ the old customers of this knovvr. *- House we desire to say that we have real ovated, improved, nr.d newly furnislied the same, 'and that we respectfully solicit a con tinuance of their patronage. Strangers, Travelers and Visitors we cord i ally invite to the hospitality "of the'" Nation al"—to come and see and judge for them ! eelves of its advantages and merits. Our lo cation is central, and convenient for merchants and business men generally'. We will ijlwhys endeavor'to study the wants and comforts of"our ghosts, and with the as sistance of Mr. CHAS. A! Strin-, our affable and attentive Clerk, we feel well prepared to j keep a good hotel, and hope toloLbie to give general satisfaction. IIEXRY QL'ILLMAN, feb2B-lyr JOHN ROVER. . CHAIRS! CHAIRS! CHAIRS! Mahogany. Maple, Birch and Walnut OATSTE SEAT CH A.I n s , of every sfyle and finish, at W. D. REICIINE&.'S otshcsm ift&syarET ©siiim VPAOfflimEa 33# North Front St, Above iTinc„ Parlor and Dining Room Chairs, large and small Rocking Chairs, manufactured of the j best material and by experienced workmen. ! All orders idled with Promtitude and Care. | Remember the place, 3,19 North Front Street, i above Vine, Philadelphia. ~ 'jan24-ly lx aY,e ITS BRANCHES. Executed in the best style known in the arf, C. G. Crane's Gallery, | 532 Arch st., east of Sixth, Philadelphia. Lite Size in Oil and Fastß, ' STEREOSCOPIC PORTRAITS, AMHROTYPES, DACUERREOYYPES, Ac. For Cases, Medallions, Piris, &c. Philadelphia, November 15, 18G0-ly. 3NTOTICB! Great Reduction in Prices. f IMIE undersigned being desirous of clos- I ing out the stock of Pry Goods, would respectably invite the Ladies and Gentlemeh to give us a call as we are determined to sell goods lower than any other house in Lewis town IFOUrI CASH. For the Ladies we have Plain Figured and Plaid Silk Me rinoes, I>e Laines, Calicos, Lawns, Ginghams and Traveling Goods of all kinds. Also, Bonnet Ribbons, Ruches, Dress Trimmings, Fino Worked Collars, Mourning Collars, Hosiery, Gloves, ssitts, &c. iLe. Ladies Cloaking Cloths Striped and Plain, With various oth er articles too numerous to mention. For gents we have Cloths, Cassimeres, Satinets, and Vestings, Ready mado Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Knit Shirt 6, Drawers, Cravats, Shirt Collars, Sus penders—in fact everything for gentlemen. For Housekeepers, TlfklVLS. arSLITS, TOW EL IV Gs, Table, Diaper, 121 Sheetings, &.c. Also, a lot of good Stone, China and Glassware, for sale cheap. A fine lot of 2j> and 3 bushel Bags, all of which will be sold at a great reduction of pri ces. Please call and examine for yourselves. KENNEDY & JUKKIN. N. B. AH persons knowing themselves in debted to the above, will please call immedi ately and cave costs. K. & J. Lewistown, August 14, 18G1. CIANDIES at 13 cts to Dealers, at / HOFFMAN'S. % 3.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers