whole No. 2645. }OOD NEWS! i STAY arrival of BOOTS k SHOES at \ Ihlly Johnson's, suitable for fall and vliter, and cheaper than lias ever been sold j (inn place ; no mistake. Pn'e cearse boots from $1 50 to 3 25 2 75 to 3 75 I T r' boots from 1 00 to 2 00 jiigfH ami children's shoes 18 to 75 Gums, $1 tX) Voiucn 5 " 75 VoBIOU gaiura, high heels 1 00 to 1 25 n.-h as have been sold from I 50 to 2 OU, ■J (jtarything >u iti■> line >erv low. Manufacturing of nil kinds attended to as p. i repairing done on the shortest n<- f . A sj. a large assortment Trunks kept : i,and which will be sold very low. Ilis . end- and customers will confer a great fu r in him if tiiey will stop asking him for :t. I r bis tonus are strictly Cah. He rea s 1 c. rich and poor a!ik, so those wisk i.j rr. fit will please call where tfiey sell at profits. So. come on, :f || y,u ca „h OUh . i :nT*. and provide for ynusclve.i good Boots br ti:o \V inter. oot2 BILLY JOHNSON. TEE RELIEF FUND, t'oi'lCL is herei.y given to all interested . t t'i it with the orders to i.c issued on the J tuuary, the reiicf heretofore extended - - with tli • fullowing classes : ■ I■> taiiiili. * whose "main support" Jatiy po-iti n in the artuy y'elding the ty ■! a sergeant, HI i upwards. -i lo all fain: ics who have claimed and •i J relief on the ground of "partial sup- A- various promotions have taken place t ur troops an- in the field, persons liav ; knowledge of any coining under the first btoe are requested to furnish information to Bo i'uh rsigiied, or anv member ol the Board : iblief. A rs s dution was aNo adopted that the pres p.: 11 -gulatioiis restiecting relief shall expire tii- Ist of .March next with all who shall have received relief for twelve weeks or t e. as the fund is now so limited in amount the Board feels impelled, after that date, fU' tid aid, under new regulations, only to • whose actual circumstances wili require By order of the Board. GEORGE FKYSIXGER. Secy. L.'wisfown, January 15, ING2-ltnhl. IMate of James Mrfllnfirk. drtea?d. V" • l'*B is hereby given that letter*of ad .l ir ~str.i ioii oti the r-state of JAMES f.l LIN Tl'' I\. l.itc of buion township, Mif- I itity, deceased, have be.-n granted to Lo iiTsigi.eJ, the first named residing in jm . ami tiie iattei'in I township. A I l'- :> s indebted T.i raid estate are requested , i k' iiiitii'-duite payment, and those ha . . ( a.s t> present them duly autin-ntican d r s'.:ticuic t UOKKKT B A RR, <• ATIiAiXK .MvCLIN ITCK, j ' Ad 111 IF. Estate of John Rager, deceased. YUli- K is hereby given that letters of ad iniiii.-li :iti i: M;I the estate of JOHN It A 1 ... ..i:r <>f L)cca:ur towusbip, Mifflin county, l-.-ased. have been granted to the undersign . :t-M hug in tin; borough of" Lewistown. ' ' 'T> indebted to said estate are re | ie>: --J ii in ike immediate payment, and oiving claims to present them duly au '' ii'.i -ateil lor settlement. J s,! * C. lloo\ ER, Admr. Instate of Reuben Myers, deceased. V Olh'H is hereby given that letters tes tamentary on the estate of REUBEN IIYEIiS. late of • ranville township, .Mifflin > 'y, deceased, have been granted to the 1 gned, residing in Oliver township. All ► • a- indebted to said estate are requested [•'Bike immediate payment, and those bav 'i ' t :ns to present them duly authenticated >ei;,. inent. I" i -Ot ABRAHAM MYERS, Ex'r. ■ 1 -'i TOR'S NOTICE. The undersigned, ■A appointed Auditor by the Orphans' ■u-t ! M ffli n countv, to distribute the bal ■<" ; .• ii i-uis >'t Wm. T II -11. Adminis- Vof Isaac Jones, late ~f Mifflin county, H* ' . will meet parties interested there ■at ins ffl -e. in Eewjstnwrj, on TUESDAY. ■ ; ay of March 1802 at 10 o'clock a. m. yJOS. W. BARKER, Aud. ft f'l TOR'S NOilt'E —The undersign BY trators of John Stine, late of said t'Uiitr, deo'd , will meet parties interested 'n-te.ti at his office, in Lewistown, on WED - n EBUAV, 12th day of March, I*G2, at 10 o clock a m. jn22 JOS. W. PARKER, And. \ L DITOR'S NOTICE—The undersigned, A appointed auditor by the court of Com | ni '■> Bieas of Mifflin county, to distribute the ••tunee in the bands of Sheriff Stanbarger. •-rising front the sale of the Real Estate of ennuis Reed, w ill attend C< the duties of his "np mtment, at his office, in Lewistown. on D'tSbAY the 4th day of March, 1K62, at ' • c-ltKik A. M., wheu and where all per " •"* having claim* are required to present b'rnj or he debarred front coming in for a said fund. J. W. SIIAW, Jan29-4t Auditor. NOTICE! A '-L pern ns knowing themselves indebted jtV. to the late firm of KENNEDY <£ JUN- V by N'.,te or Book Account, will please Ca ' ! on or before April Ist, 1863, and settle the same. By so doing fOSTS WILL BE SITED, "* tPr that time the accounts will be left in hands of an Attorney for eolleetkm. K. U. JUNKIX. Surviving Partner of the late fitm of KxnVEDV t JUNKIN. December 18, l0l. iissi© iFxsrifiaflafissrisfeia, s <,•* . ______ W - jilL^WSli s Edited by A. Sunn, County Supsrintsndent. For the Educational Column. A Hint to Helpful School Teachers. Aichdeacon Hare, in Guesses at Truth, says : 'We are not framed to be self suf ficient, but to derive our nourishment, in tellectual and spiritual, as well as bodily, fioui without, through the ministrations of others ; and hence Instruction must ever be a chief element of .Education, llence too we obtain a criterion to determine what sort of Instruction is right and beneficial, that which ministers to education, which tends to bring out,"to nourish and cultivate tiie faculties oi mind, not that which mere ly piles a mass ot information upon them.*' i his extract from a hook full of wise sug gestions, merits careful attention from teachers, —especially from those—and their name is Legion who imagine that the highest object of an instructor is to propel his pupils through the book with ail pos sible speed, without any assurance that they understand the principles set forth. It may also be advantageously digested by those teachers who, in the unlimited geu erosily ul their hearts, cannot refrain from helping scholars over every difficulty, how ever trifiing; who seem fearful their pupils Ri'/y recite a lew words correctly, so make ludicrous haste to tell them what they can not avoid knowing. Nearly every teacher aids his scholars too uracil, especially while reviling ; but some teachers carry this un wise practice to such an extent that it is ab solutclv paiiiiul to listen to them. They do not educate, or instruct; they do not in the siiglites: degree (ruin the inimis of their pupils, but dwarf them, deaden their ambition, crush their clastic energies, and make them very poor parrots instead of scholars. j Any teacher who really aims to promote j the intellectual growth of children, and who thinks of what lie is about, will stu ! diously guard against thispiactice sohurt- I Jul in its clltcts upon pupils, and so fa.igu- I lng and unjust to himself. S .effect Good School Directors. As the time uppioaches for the election ! of new .School Directors, it seems a suit ! aide occasion to urge voters to throw aside ail partisan considerations and select the ucst ineii tor this responsible position. Any candid man nil! chcetfully auuiit that the question of party, or oi politics, should never enter into the management of com ;uon schools. Whether a man is a Demo crat or a Republican, or anything else—ex cept a traitor —what has that to do with his fitness tor a Director, or Teacher? If he he an intelligent, honest, public spiritt d man, —one who w ill zealously labor to pro mote the prosperity ct schools, he is just the man for a Director and should be elect- Ed, unless one better than he can he found The idea of rewarding a man—however unlit tor the position—lor party services, by giving him the honorable, though poor ly paying office of School Director, is alto gether absurd and most injurious to the cause of general education. No real friend ot schools will allow himself to be govern ed by ideas so narrow, so utterly foreign to the spirit, and so thoroughly destructive ol the usefulness, of our excellent School System. It needs no argument to prove that good Directors will secure good schools; the his tory of the schools of the county furnish es abundant evidence of this. Those dis tricts which have choseu energetic, compe tent, interested men for Directors, IIUW stand foremost in the couuty lor excellence of schools and lor liberal views on the sub ject of education. If the people of Mifflin county really desire superior schools, if they wish to have an honorable reputation for public spirit, general intelligence and wise regard fur the future prosperity of their children and ot the State, they must and will select lor Directors their wisest and best men. A FKI END OF SCHOOLS A&RI6PLYP&AL; The Best Time for Cutting Timber, &c. Experience has proved that trees for timber, if cut at one season of the year, are far more durable than if cut at another.— Various reasons have been suggested why this is so, and it is not yet fully determin ed ; still, as the time which experience has pointed out as the best for durability is dur ing the autumn, it is generally supposed that this property is modified by the amount of sap in the trunk, and the maturity of the wood itself. In the spring, or at any early period of it, the trunks of most trees is pressed with the ascending sap. The leaves as yet are still folded in the bud, and the surfaces for exhalation are only sufficient to carry off very slowly the wa tery part of the sap. Even after the leaves have expanded, or until mid summer has arrived, the tree# abound in juices. \\ hen, however, the dry and sultry summer has arrived, and the new wood and buds have been matured and tormed. the watery part of the sap is mostly exhaled, and probably the circulation is less active as the leaves become sere. It is stated by Mr. Emerson, author of the valuable report on trees and shrubs of WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 5, 1862, ilasfiiciiasctt.s, th.it tijo soft maple cut in feeptcuioer is three times more lasting than ash or walnut cut in the winter; and from numerous inquiries which lie bus made in various quarters, and from information ob taincd from reliable .sources, it seems he has established the fact that autumn is the time for cutting timber. When it is de termined to cut timber, it is oi considera ble 1 inj.urtanee to strip off the bark in the spring, tiiat tlie body ol the tree may dry during the summer \\ hen, however it is au object to re produce forest irom the remaining stuiups, the winter, or the very first of spring, is much more favorable to the growth of sprouts. 'I here are two seasons for cutting wood : if it is expected to last, it must be cut the last of summer, or during the early part of autumn ; if it is wished to clothe the sur face with a new growth of* trees, the cut ting must be made late in winter. It is, however, possible to modify these arrange ments: if, for example, the woad is design ed tor timber, it is deprived of its bark'in the spring, it may be allowed to stuud the season till winter anives, which is a period when farmers have less to do than in the summer or autumn In seasoning, wood retains art amount of water which may be regarded as its consti tutional suppdy. This constitutional water is very important ; lor, upion its presence some of the most valuable properties of tlie wood depend. 1 refer to elasticity and strength. If wood, for example, is dried in a water bath at 212° till it ceases to lose weight, its elasticity and strength is very much diminished. Hickory, when dried in this way, becomes as brittle as pine.— In ordinary seasoniug, or in steaming, I believe the strength of wood is not dimin ished. I his observation may not be df much practical importance, as this plan of seasoning is rarely followed. The amount ot water varies, as will be observed, in dif ferent species of trees, as well as in herba ceous piants. In another point of view, the amount of wutor is important to be known, tor the diiierence between taking green and dry wood to market, as well as in its consum ing, is very great; and so also, as ample experience proves, there is a material dif ference in burning green a..d dry wood.— The quantity of water in the tfood varies from LiO to 50 per centum, and probably the average amount will not differ much tr mMsor 40 per centum. This water is not only of tiv use to the fire wood, but it is prejudicial, as if must be dissipated by hi at, in which act beat or calorie becomes latent and lost, especially it the wood is consumed upon a hearth or in a stove. In addition to the efleet of water in dimini hing the combustibility of wood, the alkalies have also considerable influence ol this kind Kim. which is a potash wood, bu. nsv,ith less freedom than hickory, which contains much lime. It is, however, pos sible that the s.ze of the pores o! wood may modify its combustibility. Black oak is a tio'i.bie instance ot a slow drizzling com hustion: the pores are large and numerous, irotu which the watery sap continually oozes— Statural History of J\' w York. IIMEEMMOUX Russian Discipline- Ilsving found a German Iricnd in the head physician of the military hospital at Riga, I accompanied him one morning on his visit thither. On the way he told me how difficult it was to elicit from the men the real seat of their complaints, as every ailing iu the upper part ol the body, wheth er in the head, back, or stomach, they call puin in the heart; *ud those in the lower part ol the body, puiu in the leg. Having arrived at the hospital, all the patients that were able to do so arrayed themselves in a row, dumb and stiff, as if on military parade. 'llow do you leel to day, old man?' asked the doctor ol the first. 'My heart pains,' was the expected timid reply. ' Tongue out,' said the doc tor, and out it was. Turning to the next, the same question, same answer, and same tongue operations. More than thirty iu the row underwent the same medical inqui ries and process. I was about leaving, when my friend told me to look around. To my utter as tonishment I saw the whole lot still stand ing iu military attitude, with their tongues wide out. We looked on lor a while, when the doctor loudly gave the word, ' Tongues in,' and all the articulating organs vauished in an iustant. My risible faculties were so excited by the ludicrous scene, that it was some mo ments after we were in the open street, ere I could, rather reproachfully, ak my friend how he could play such a trick on the poor fellows. 'You must not judge,'said he, 'by exceptions. I merely wanted to show you to what extent the blind spirit ot dis cipline prevails among the Russian troops. Nor are the fellows,' added be, ' the worse for the joke ; on the contrary, they believe that the cure is greatly promoted by keep ing the tongue out in the presence of the doctor, the longer the better — Once a Week. Jynumuc. —"I kuow well enough,' said a fellow, 'where Iresh fish comes from, but where these salt ones are catched, I'll he hanged it 1 can tell.' The Battle of Webb's Cress Roads. The place where Gen. Zoliicoffer was defeated and killed, is known through southern Kentucky as Webb's Cross Roads, and the battle should be called bv that name. Mill Springs is nearly ten'miies distant, and on the other side of the Cum berland riv. r. A part of the engagement took place in a field known in the neigh borhood as ' the Old Field," and hence the" suggestion that the battle should be called the battle of Old Fields. But there is no doubt that ' Webb's Cross Roads* is the place that .-hauid give name to the battle. The official statement made by Gen. 'I homas that one hundred and fourteen re bels had been buried, up to a certain hour, has lad the public, prone to expect exug -oeiution, to believe that the figure repres ented the extent of the loss of the enemy in killed. We are, however, assured from sources that we believe entirely reliable, that not less than three hundred rebels were leit dead on the ground. The official reports ot Gen. Sehoep's Brigade Surgeon states that one hundred ant ninety dead rebels were buried on Monday. A gentle man of this city writes that two Hundred and eighty-three dead bodies of rebels were found. Another who was on the ground, informs us that many dead were found on the old field, and that they were ly ing thick in the underbrush in every di rection. We are convinced that the rebel loss in killed was very nearly if not alto gether three hundred. Various statements are made of the number of horses and mnles taken. The evidence is that at least fifteen hundred fell into our hands.— Cin cinnati Commercial. An Interesting E Jsode. r lbe feature of the speaking at the Vol unteer Refreshment Haloon festival, on Wednesday night, at Sansoiu Street Hall, was a little epee h by Ilenry W. ltockafel low, a Lieutenant in the Federal army. Lieutenant It. lust an arm at the battle of Bull Run, was taken prisoner and carried to Richmond. He was introduce'] to the vast assemblage by ex-Governor Pollock, and after some urging he spoke thus: T am not a talker, ladies and gentlemen, but an actor. 1 started to go to Richmond, and I vent there. [Laughter] I lost mr arm but I didn t give up. My companions lay piled dead around me but I didn't dea pair; 1 was sent to Richmond and imprison ed in a tobaeoo warehouse, hut I still hoped. 'With twelve hundred of our captive soldiers 1 lay upon a floor unfit for swine to herd upon; suffered from cold, hunger and n.ikednc.-s. hut I shook oil despondency and determined to escape. This a mini her 0 ns succeeded in doing. Our brave boys lay in kcnels, unifortue 1 in old carpet, covering their shivering bones with dirty 1 ;tg& and only too happy to find a uioth eaten blanket upon which to sleep. 'Hut amid all the wretchedness in that tobacco warehouse, with its swarm of twelve hundred men, there was no desire to he sent home except with honor—no wish but that the L nion army may advance and pun ish ihe leaders of the rebellion.' Ihe Lieutenant only said these few words, hut his youthful appearance, impres sivo manners, and above *ll, the empty coat sleeve that hung by his left side spoke more eloquently than any words could have done.— North. American. The Pennsylvania Oil Region. The shipment from the Pennsylvania oil region, for the present month, over the Philadelphia and Erie railroad, is estima ted at 30,000 bbls , taxing the railway to its full capacity. The oil trade is becom ing a very important one, and the business of refining it and preparing it for use is al so profitable. It is a business that in Phil adclphiu can be carried on verv successful ly, and our manufacturers could not possi bly put their enterprise and capital in a channel more remunerative. The oil is af forded at a price which makes it the cheap est light now burned, and it is equal to gas in its illuminating qualities. The di rect railroad communication between this city and the oii region will give our man ufacturers advantages not possessed by those of other cities. These will be large ly increased when the Sunbury and Erie railroad is completed. B@_Mr. Barnuin has pounced upon a new cariosity. It is a shrimp of a Com modore, about the size of a man's hand His name—which will incite to puns—is Nutt —Commodore Nutt, of N'cw Hamp shire, or some of the stonier eastern dis tricta. Beside this curious little creature Tom Thumb is said to be a Brobdignagiao —a Colossus of Rhodes. ' How do you get on down there?' from Tom Thumb must be a salutation calculated to stun the recipient; but such is the greeting which he is understood to have offered this little morsel of humanity when they met. We have heard of the Kentuckian who was so tall that his neighbors had to get on stilts to wish him good morning; but the oddest discrepancy of stature on record is that be tween the famous General and the to be famous Commodore. make the following exclamation, on seeing one of our fashionable ladies:— 'Ugh! much wigwam!' Intelligent Action of a Dog- A gentleman connected with the New foundland fishery w-ts once possessed of a dog of singular fidelity and sagacity. On one occasion a boat and crew in his employ were in circumstances of*considerable peril, just outside a line of breakers, which, owing to some change in wind or weather, had, since the departure of the boat, ren dered the return passage through them most hazardous. Ihe spectators on shore were quite unable to render any assistance to their friends afloat Much time had been spent, and the danger seemed to in crease rather than diminish. Our friend, the dog, looked on for a length ot time, ev idently aware of there being great cause for anxieiy in those around. Presently, how ever, he took to the water, and made his way througn her to the boat. The crew supposed he wished to join them, and made various attempts to induce him to come on board ; but no ! he would not go within their reach, but continued swimming about a sh9it distance from them. Alter a while, and several com ments on the peculiar conduct of the dog, one of the hand* suddenly divined his ap paient meaning. 'Give him the end of a rope,' lie said ; ' that is what he wants.'— The rope was thrown—the dog seized the end in an instant, turned round and made straight for the shore, where a few min utes afterwards boat and crew—thanks to the intelligence of their four footed friend —were placed safe and undamaged. Was there reasoning here? No acting with a view to an end or for a gives motive ? Or was it nothing but ordinary instinct ? — Rev. C. J. Atkinson, ' The Zoologist whirlpool, some three hundred and sixty feet in diameter, has been formed in the sea near Torre del Greco, by the late eruption of Vesuvius. The sounding pave twenty-three fathoms of water, and the plum met brought up sulphur. From a part of the circumference, & tail, so to call it, about sixty feet in width, runs away in the direction of Sorrento, and is of a beautiful light green color. All the water here was tepid, had a strong sulphurous smell, and many fish have been destroyed. The erup tion of \ esuvius appears to be increasing at latest dates instead of subsiding. There are eleven craters above Terre del Greco, all emitting sulphurous va'-ors, and the largest is frutu seventy o eighty feet deep and •ne hundred feet wide From this point, after he ivy ruuibl ngsauid heaving cf the surface, the ground was split open and a fieiy fisure was made almost to the outskirts of the city, through which the dread unseen power passed, opening the streets and laying bare some parts of the former Luried town, and then running into the sea. Strangers are coming from all parts of Europe to Naples, to behold Ves uvius in its glorious burning and devasta ting auger. brilliant fashion has made its appearance in the progressive city of New York, which bids fair to outshine Paris in its lustre and extravagance. The Sun says that a short tiuie since a promi nent resident of that city of wealth and fashion, conceived the brilliant idea of having his front teeth set with diamonds. He conferred on the subject with two of his fr.ends, one of whom was a lady of literary celebrity, and ad were so pleased with the novel idea that they had large and valuable first water diamonds set into their front teeth, and on Sunday afternoon they at tended one of the most fashionable churches on Fifth avenue, where they attracted cou siderabie notice, and diverted the attention of a large portion of the congregation by the lustrous rays of their teeth. On their return home, they were followed by a crowd of persons, whose attention and curiosity were attracted by the dazzling radiance of the brilliant circle. If this fashion is adop ted, jewellers, lapidaries and dentists will reap an abundant harvest. Verily, the world moves. Taking the Pled ye Not to Sell Liquor to Soldiers. —Colonel Thotnas, whose regi nient is now in camp at Brattleboro', has performed an exploit worthj of notice. — lie has made all the rumsellers in the vil lage sign the temperance pledge. The way it happened waa as followa : Several of j the soldiers had been furnished with liquor. The Colonel remonstrated, but without ef fect Again the soldiers returned to camp intoxicated. Colonel Thomas, indignant in view of such lawlessness, ordered out an armed company, and, with pledge in hand, led them to the village. lie visited each hotel and grocery suspected, and demanded of the landlord to sign a pledge not to sell any more liquor to his Boldiers. A refusal to comply would make their liquor 4 con traband of war' and consign it to destruc tion. All the transgressors signed the pledge. Feeling. —Mary—'lt seems cruel to kill so many animals for their fur —thirty-six poor squirrels put to death to make a mufl for us !' Emily—'Yes, it is cruel. Vby didn t the monsters take their skins off without killing them?' right!' said an officer to his company. 'Bedad,' said an Irishman, who stood near by. sharpening his saw, 'it s me own property, and I'll be doin as I plaae with it ' New Series—Vol. XVI, No. 14. oj a Lilliputian. —Mrs lredt rick MaLie, ol Bergen county, N. J . died a tew days ago. This lady, who had reached the advanced age of 77 yeurs. was no tal'er than ordinary little girls oflburorfive sum mers, and although a Lilliput in size, her intellect was unimpaired to the time of her death, and until a short time past she was as sprightly as any other person at her age. W hen young she is said to have been possessed of extraordinary personal beauty, presenting the appearance more of a doll than a grown woman. Being of a lively temperament and a beautiful dancer, her company was sought for far aud wide, and not a ball or a party was given in the neigh borhood without her being present —the centre of *ll attraction. She had a brother who was but a few inches taller than her self. He had his third wife when he died- The Rebel Emissaries in England. The English seem to be apprehensive of trouble among themselves with the prize they drew in the settlement of the Trent affair.— Slidell and Mason were in their possession, and the question arose what to do with them. John Bull is in as embarassing a position as was the man who drew an elephant at a lot tery. In speaking of the reception due to Mason and Slidell, the Times says: "they are about the most worthless booty it would be possible to extract from the jaws of the American lion, having been long known aa blind and habitual haters and revilers of England." This is rather strong language for the leading journal that was in such a terrible state of mind a few weeks ago, be cause it thought the rebel emissaries would not be given up to England. The article, of which vre have thus far only a brief abstract, goes on to urge that no popular demonstra tion be made on the arrival of the surrender ed men. but that they may be allowed to pass quietly on their way. It wisely suggests that they would even now be "only too glad to en tangle England in a war with the North."— Byway of showing the personal insignifi cance of these two particular individuals, and giving especial point to his allusion to such ardent pro slavery men, it says, ''England) would have done just as much to rescue itco negroes." This, to a southerner, in downright insult, and to class Mason and Siideli with the race that is down trodden, despised and reviled at the South, would almost be a casus belli in that precious Confederacy, if it was in a condition to take care of itself. After such a sharp piece of admonition on the sub ject of the rebel ministers, the people of Eng land are not likely to make much of them, and they will not bo the lions they are hoping to be. It is very plain that England would* be glad to keep them off her shores, if it could be done decently. This is shown, not only by the Times' article, but by similar ones in the other prominent London journals. —l'hila. Bulletin. EDWARD FRYSINGER, WUOLESALE DEALER & niIIFAITIRER or CIIi.IRS,M.ICCO,SMfP, &c., &C., IPiio Orders promptly attended to. je!6 AMBROTYPES AND The Gems ol the Season. r is no humbug, but a practical truth. J. The pictures taken by Mr. Burkholder are unsurpassed for BOLDNESS TRUTH FULNESS. BEAUTY OF FINISH. a*.T DURABILITY. Prices varying according to size and quality of frames and Cases. Room over the Express Office. Lewistown, August 23, 1860. DIS S0 L U TICIT 7 r partnership heretofore existing be X tween the undersigned, in the Baking Business, was dissolved by mutual consent on the 27th instaut. The accounts are left in the hands of Conrad Ullrich, Jr., who is fully authorized to s'ttle the saasa-. CONRAD ULLRICH. JR., FREDERICK NEJBERT. business will be confined by the undersigned in West Market street, Lewis town, and no efforts spared to give satisfac tion to the old customers of the firm as well as any number of n w ones. CONRAD ULLRICH, Jr. Lewistown, Jan. 29, 1862-3t "wan t ed/ MORE MEN for Col Siegle's Ragim't. OV/ dow isrming at Ceup Curtin. sl3 per month, comfortable quarters, good clothing, rations, fuel and SIOO boostj will be given to all acceptable recruits. Pay to commence and subsistence furnished immediately after enrolling name. For further particulars In quire of E. W. EISENBISE Ist Lieut., Recruiting Offiee, at Red Lion Hotel, J an 29 Lewistown, Penna. JiMu 931 TO. SPECIAL NOTICE. At the Oak Frontj East Market Streetj Lewistown, Pa. I IIAVE returned from Philadelphia with a large assortment of FALL AND WINTER GOODS, which 1 will sell at a small profit for CASH, or pruduee, or marketing of all kind#. #rplß JAMES PARKEK.