THE GAZETTE, ! LEWISTOWN, PA. Marob 12, 1882. $1 ptr tasta la ftiiftßt*--|UO at (id of tlx moßtbs—! eid of year. Sp<n Mil ot of ttM County moot I* p*M ftn ia OOTO&OC ttTTS* rr.tmjr"e>( tb oat of tUiMtntf to wbcai tilt* wvttrt otorkoO. Vm *zptrd, uvt aiiloM ro howvi witi tof atotvnticacd. Wo kuT. oioo tet * limit Ia iitflte ootsoty. SraJ whtoi • • lfile*. J to a*ti In fotaro tWoll i so A* oobocrttitWo. ! Tbooo U popor wl-.k tbto pr#rph lUlrfwrt kituo th&t .1m J bo c.oe aair oar rale. rS If >*a,o t.'. to a,t w;b:u bm momli ;fcre*.lrr , v " .Motofatoca* >U Mob. rug of b ffoo heart's only horn?. fiv engel hand? to r&lor given! Thy stare haro lit tho welkin dom# And all thy hues were born m hearen; Forever float that otaadard sheet.' Where breathes the foe but falls before as With freedom's soil beneath our feet. And freedom's banner streaming o'er ne. Kotieei of Hew ichertiirmfnli. Judge Wilgoa and T. M. Uttlej have formed a Lawful Partnership—A new edi tion of the Mistakes of Educated Men See Franciscui' new advertisements—Reg ister's Notice—Sheriff's Sales—Estate Notice Indefinite Charges. Wc can scarcely pick up a self-styled democratic paper in which we do not find some vague and undefined charge of swind ling alleged to have been committed under the present National or St3te Governments, yet, bcyoni mere assertions, not a single instance has been adduced in proof. We have no doubt, under the extraordinary circumstances of the past year, much un necessary expenditure has been made and that many have swindled the government, but with the superabundance of thieves and robbers let loose some years ago from the Pennsylvania Canal, Portage Railroad, <tc, who have naturally turned their atten tion to the General Government. c ince State plunder has been blocked, it would have been strange had any department escaped the ingenious devices of that trained gang. Let those laminar with the leading con tractors examine into the matter, and what is the result? Why, simply that three fourths of all the heavy contracts for beef, horses,clothingand army stores generally are in the hands of so ciiled democrats! These, they say, are honest! If they are, the random assertions that the government has been swindled to a large amount—one mod estly estimating the sum at one hundred millions arc worth about as much as their democracy was a year ago when they acivocated the rebellious doctrine of non coercion Aumet will come toon enough. As an instance of this system of whole sale denunciation, wc refer our readers to the Democrat of last weok, in which the impression is conveyed that a Mr. Lcib k a defaulter to the amount of a million of dol lars We know nothing of the man, but we do know that a deputy Quarter Master is not a disbursing officer, and therefore he never could have had the one hundredth part of that sum in his hands. He may be in arrears from a waut of proper vouch crs—just as Gen. Scott was in Mexico, and as many of our best army officers are now but that the government has lost any such sum as stated bears the earmark of doubt on its face. It takes such used-to be head democrats like Floyd, Cobb, Thomp son, Ac., to do business on that scale. fcarThe report that tho five dollar U. S. demand notes had been counterfeited turns out to be untrue. The most diligent in quiry has failed to discover any such coun terfeit, and it is believed now that the whole story is an invention of tho parties who promulgated it. Col Thomas A. Zoigle of York, which left Harrisburg for the .cat of war on Sun day last, has in it a number of officers and men from this county. A. Wilson Norris is I'irst Lieutouaut and James X. Sterett (son of Johu A.) Second Lieutenant in company D; Klias W. Eisenbise Captain of ooinp Fj Edwin Zcigler Second Lieut, iu Ooinp. G. editor up the riser (Traugh) who ii more ready to shoulder a mail bag than a musket, makes ropeated slurs at our sons as stay at homo patriots," Ac. The editor ot the Gasette has no sons subject to military duty, and* we must oonfess our inability to understand him unless ha bas got it into his noddle that all of the name beraaboute and • '•ewbore are sons of ours. MT*in the west, rcoently. Gen. Halleck deemed it " expedient" to administer the oath of allegiance to an entire conference, and we Incline to the opiuiou that Gen. Dii ought to here done the same at TGHimoro Tu "War and its Ends. The great difioulty experienced ny oar government it undoubtedly owing to the importance attached to alavery, and its con nection with almost every step that ia ta ken All this is detrimental to a success - ful prosecution of the war, and ought to be forthwith discarded. But one rule must govern us, and that is to protect slavery among the loyal men, and destroy it with fbe disloyal, without regard to the mouth ings of doughface politicians in or out of Congress. So too with the States which have acceded, and thereby lost their rights as States. Until we can ascertain who were loy il ani who disloyal, they ought all to be classed as territories —for no great er injustice cou'.i be committei than to re admit the present rebels to'political power, and thus place loyal men at thoir mercy. On this subject a cotemporarv has some well-timed remarks, which w commend to our readers. It says — In the present matter in hand, the trua view is, that all the States which have pas < s:d ordinances of secession are now out of the Union, and arc to be readmitted, not SiS a matter of right, but at such time and ; under such circumstances and conditions as may be judged best by the nation. Ex ceptions may, perhaps, be mado of Virgin ' ia and Tennessee, it: both of which, impor tant territorial divisionshaveremained stead ' ily loyal. Nothing is more absurd than the idea that the object of this bloody and exhausting war is to restore to their former political weight and power in the Union the old aristocracy of South Carolina, or that little nest of repudiating swindlers, hereto- fore fraudulently dignified as the State of Florida. The war has no such preposter ous object as that. It is to preserve our territory intact within its essential bounda ries, and to vindicate the vital fast that this is really a nation, and not a mere league of thirty four sovereignties. We arc fighting t6 maintain our own rightful au thority over the territory of South Caroli na and Florida, and not to enable the reb els ascendant there to send new Vulees and Mai lory a into the Senate to plunder us, or new Hammonds to beard and insult us in our own Capitol. We are fighting in short, to establish the rights, not of rebel*, but of t\e notion. It is, of course, the expecta tion and hope that ultimately the condition of affairs may be such as to render it safe to re-admit into the Union all the States which have left it. Rut grcst social and political changes must be made in some of them, before this expectation can be rea lized. In the meantime, the monstrous heresv that the Lnion exists to day as it did in 1860, contrary as it is both to notorious tacts and rational legal views, should not be tolerated for a moment. It takes two to make a bargain, and any agreement wc may hereafter make with South Carolina and I lorida, (wc speak of them byway of illus tration,) is a bargain de novo, they having themselves nullified the old one. In treat ing with them, of course wc must consider our duties to their 103* a I inhabitants, lew at best, but not on that account the less enti tled to protection. How it may be next week, or next year, 110 man can foresee, but to day the very worat way to protect them, would be to re invest the bloody and des perate factions which rule them with the powers and attributes of State sovereignty Democracy—True and False. The patent democratic Press continues to olaim Secretary Stanton and all others as "democrats' of their stamp, although there is as much difference between them as night aud daylight. Last week we gave some extracts from Senator Johnson's speech on Bright, and below we give a few 1 more opinions from others. Col. J. liich ter Jones, well known in this State, at the ! recent Welsh festival in Philadelphia, said : ' The Army represented the determination : of the American people to havo a government, and a nationality. Upon his sword were era blazoned the words " Constitution, and the Great Republic !" and he flashed them daily in the faces of his men. lie had been a Breck j iuridge Democrat, but he now abjured Party and stood by the IMWS. It was better that ev ery man, woman and child south of Mason and Dixon's line should perish, rather than j the Republic should not besustained. Though no abolitionist, he would say that, if Eman cipation must come, let it come, ij" necessary to save the Republic —and he believed that in this he spoke tho sentiment of tho entire army." GOT. Sprague, of Rhode Island, who is also claimed as a full blooded democrat, in his letter of acceptance to tho Union Con vention, says : , . PROVIDEWCI, Feb. 27. 1862. j n e . noi ®en the resolutions which Tour Convention has passed, and, with my ideas of duty in this great national emergency, consider it of little importance that I should know what they are. Ido not feel bound by party resolutions or party platforms . My du ; ty at the present oondition of public affairs | is to my country, and to do all in my power to preserve the Federal Constitution and to restore the Federal Union. This has been my position since the commencement of the struggle to maintain the Federal Government and to put down rebellion, and this will eon tinno to be my position until this great work is fully accomplished. W*. Sm AGP X. Senator Wright, reoently appointed from Indiana, expresses similar views ' Loyatiy in th* Methodic Conference. The following expression of sentiment was offered in the East Baltimore Metho dist Conference last week by Aqailla A. Reese end Geo. P. Chenowith : Wbire&s. Since the annual session of this body, a fearful rebellion baa broken out in several of the Southern States, threatening to overthrow the best and most benign Govern ment the world ever saw ; and whereas, the Federal authority has been compelled to use force of arms to suppress said rebellion and to maintain its own supremacy; and whereas, patriotism is a Christian virtue taught in the Word of Gad and enjoined upon u in the twenty-third article of religion : therefore. Resolved. That, as a body of Christian min isters in Conference assembled, we hereby express our abhorrence of the rebellion now cxistiug within our borders a* being treason able in its origin, sanguinary in its progress, an ! as tending to retard the progress of civil liberty throughout the worll. R-solocJ, That we hereby endorse and ap prove of the present wise and patriotic ad ministratis of the Federal Gorernment in its efforts to overcome the armed resistance of the so called Confederate States, with the view of maintaining the unity and perpetuity of the Government. Resolced, That, in our patriotic efforts in the past or present to sustain the Government of our country in her time of trial, wa are not justly liable to the charge of political teaching, and in the inculcation of loyal prin ciples and sentiments we regard the pulpit and press as legitimate instrumentalities. Resolced, That a copy of the foregoing pre amble and resolutions be transmitted to the President of the United States, signed by the president and countersigned by the sec retary of the Conference. After an animated debate, in which the I negatives took the flimsy ground of " in- I expediency," the resolutions were adopted by a vote of 132 yeas to 15 nays. The nays were as follows : Messrs. J. Wesley brown, Dcale, J FI Dash ieil, Hedges, Hall, Kepler, Kinsey, M'Court ney,Norris, Parish, Philip B. Reese, Sargent, Sterenson, Spangler and Welly. Mr. Shoaf, who it will be remembered was compelled to leave the church at York, on account of popular indignation against his disloyalty, came in next day, and record ed his vote among the nays. Sheer played the dog in the manger, speaking against the resolutions, but refus ing to vote. - No one who knows these men and their party proclivities will be much surprised at their course, or deceived by the shallow cloak with which they endeavored to en velop the vote. But whatever the motive, they have gained a notoriety and created a distrust which will completely destroy their usefulness in the church—for so far as we know public sentiment here, there is not a church in this county which would place itself in charge of any of these inexpe diency" gentlemen. In presenting the subject to the considera tion of the Conference, Dr. Ilese observed that it wa not only due to our eitr, but also to th * National government, that this body of ministers should adopt thesp resolutions. The riotous acts of the 19th of April are known to all men, hut the guilty parties are not so well known. Those wicked men, with treason and murder in their hearts, would have robbed us of our homes. There are men in this Conference who arc n >t in sympathy with our Government. The eyes of all I >yai citizens are fixed on this Conference, and 1 desire an opportunity to show my loyalty and the loyalty of my brethren to the world by recording our votes in favor of the resolutions. It has been intimated that if we take this step we shall compromise our brethren in the oth er Conference. No one sympathizes with those brethren more than I do. I was born and converted within her b >uDds. and by her licensed to preaeh the Gospel: but by pursu ing that myth, Secession, she has brought trouble upon herself; and poor Virginia, dis tracted and torn, is upon the verge of ruin.— Let us not follow in her footsteps. Rev. B. B. Ilamblin said that he had been studying the subject for fourteen months —ever since the first gun was fired at Fort Sumter. He had come there to record his vote for his country, which he would stand by as long as he lived. His station, Danville, had come to the same conclusion. No greater disgrace could come upon him than to be sus pected of sympnthsing with treason, and ho would not leave the Conference with the stig ma resting upon him. In answer to the idea that nothing could be lost by referring the resolutions to a commit tee, the Rev. J. A. Gere said that he differed with the speaker, and thought that the soon er that action was had on the subject the bet ter it would be for tbe Conference. A com mittee could not express his sentiments better than did the resolutions. They are, indeed, not strong enough for some members, but be deemed them sufficiently so for the occasion. They are not at all contrary to the spirit of Christianity—they are well expressed, and he hoped that they would not be referred. He had never been suspected of disloyalty, and he would stand by his country to the last. o<&_Frank R. Bellman, born April, 1835, in Union county, I'a., was killed fighting no bly at Fort Donelson. lie moved to Steph onson county, 111. with his father, Danil Bell man, and was a Sergeant in Co. A, -11 th reg., which suffered severely, Co. A, having 12 killed and 13 wounded. Lieut. II .A. Sheets, of Freeport Journal, was killed in the Bth reg. His parents, we arc informed, were from Union county. Smith D. Atk ns, of Freeport, was Capt. of Co. A, which lost also J Cronemiller, W. Clingman, D. Cramer, J. 11. Addams, J. A. Thompson, 11. Croenwald, D. F. Graham, J. Kalsy, F. Kearney, I. N. Rosa, and J. Trim per, killed. Some of these names indicate Union and Centre county origin.— Levcisburg Chronicle. UaJ-Private Joseph Kuhne, of the 2d Maryland Regiment, was hung at Fort Mc llenry, on Friday, for the murder of Lieut. Wbitson, at Camp Carroll, on the 10th of September. tt©_Captain W. D. Porter, of the guiboat Essex, wonnded at the capture of Fort Henry, is rapidly recovering from his in juries J PROCEEDINGS OF CONGRESS. In the Senate on the 3d, Hon. J. A. j Wright, Senator from Indiana in place ot Mr. Bright, appeared and took hia seat. — The bill for the administration of au oath | of allegiance to masters of American vea- eels clearing for foreign and other ports, ! was p**sd. A bill was reported from the : Military Committee for the encouragement jof enlistments in the regular army. The confiscation bill was discussed. Mr. Morril (Rep.). of Main, said the bill : had been characteriied as extraordinary. He admitted that ii was not in the class of ordin j ar J legislation ; but the man had better nev er been born who *hrinks from responsibility :at this time. The bill proposes to exercise , the extreme authority of the Government with ; the general purjose to put down the rebel j lion. The power of the Government depends ( on the actual condition of the country, wheth r peace or war. He contended that the Gov j ernment was in fact in a state of war, and : while in such a stite the Gjvernment had an | unlimited power over its enemies, in order to : preserve itself He said that the Cuostitu | tion provided fur the Government in time of peace with limitations, but in time of war it gave unlimited power to the Government, and ; to be so construed as to aid every honest en deavor to preserve the Government. Assu mir.g that the nation was in a state of war, the Constitution provides, beyond question, i that the power of self defence was lodged in | in Congress, and nowhere else. He conten ded that among the rights of a nation in a state of war was the right of confiscation of the property of the enemy. He quoted from i Grotius and the decisions of the Supreme Court to show that war gave the power of confiscation. The Supreme Court had held that Congress has unrestricted power. He claimed that the question of the right of the rebels to control slavery was connected with this question of confiscation. If we have a right to take their property, certainly we have the right to take away that which supports the war, and which in this case is the rausus i belli. Yet there are those who think we may take their property, but must not touch slaves. There aeems to be an attempt to con nect the institution and the Constitution to gether, and we are constantly diverted from our attempt to put down the rebellion, with the false idea that slave property has rights | above all other property. lie denied that there ! was any such connection, and declared that whatever made war against the Government ' must be overcome amd destroyed if necessary, j But difficulties are continually suggested, and when at last we are called to advance into the ' enemy s country, the great solicitude seems to be, how we can best do so with the least possible injury to the foe. There to be a doubt whether it is constitutional to ad vance at all, if, thereby slavery is to be en dangcrcd. He contended that the eneniv's country forfeited all rights of person and prop erty. Davis vras trying to found on empire, and break up the Government, and, asks to be let alone, and the enemies of all free govern ments are holding high carnival. We are told by the malcontents that we endanger our Christian character by refusing to be ruinsd. This was a continuation of the old struggle for free government and free institutions.— He would award to the leaders of the rebel lion the punishment deserved by them. But to the deceived people he would grant an am nesty. J hi* struggle must he carried through successfully. 'I ho great interest involved de inands it. It is in harmony with the aspira j tions of all ages, and the principles of truth ! and justhe, which are eternal. In the House the Committee on Elec tions reported that Mr. Veitch wna not en titled to a seat as representative from the Seventh Congressional District of Virginia The Direct Tax bill was reported front the Committee on Ways and Means, and made the order of the day for \\ ednesday week A resolution asking for all correspondence in relition to the condition of Mexico and the designs of the allied powers iu relation thereto, was passed. A bill to incorporate the Washington and Georgetown Railway Company was passed. It admits corpora tors front other cities, and takes away the corporation control. The President on the 6th transmitted to Congress the following message : Fellow Citizens of the Senate and House of Representatives: I recommend the adoption of a joint resolution by your honorable bodies which shall be substantially as follows: Resolved, That the United States ought to co-operate with any State which may adopt gradual abolishment of slavery, giving to such State pecuniary aid, to be used by such State in its discretion, to compensate for the inconveniences, public and private, produced by such change of system. If the proposition contained in the resolu tion does not meet the approval of Congress and the country, there is the end, but if it does command 6uch approval, I deem it of importance that the States and people imme diately interested should be at once distinct ly notified of the fact, so that they may be gin to consider whether to accept or reject it. The Foderal Government would find its high est interests in such a measure, as one of the most efficient means of self-preservation.— The leaders of the existing insurrection en tertain the hope that this Government will ultimately be forced to acknowledge the in pendence of some part of the disaffected re gion, and that all the slave States north of such parts will then say—the Union for which we have struggled being already gone, we now choose to go with the southern section. To deprive them of this hops substantially ends the rebellion, and the initiation of eman cipation completely deprives them of it as to all the States initiating it. The point is not that all the States tolerating slavery would very soon, if at all. initiate emancipation ; but that while the offer is equally made to all, the more northern shall, by such initiation, make it certain to the more southern, that, in no event will the former ever join the lat ter in their proposed confederacy. I say in ition, because, in my judgment, gradual' and not sudden emancipation is better for all. In the mere financial or pecuniary view, any member of Congress, with the census tables and Treasury reports before him, can readily see for himself how very soon the current ex penditures of this war would purchase, at a fair valuation, all the slaves in any named State. Such a proposition, on the part of the General Government, sets up no claim of a right, by federal authority, to interfere with slavery within State limits, referring, as it does, the absolute control of the subject, in each case, to the State and its people imme diately interested. It is proposed, as a mat- ter of perfectly free choice with them. In the annual message last December I thought fit to say; "The Union must be presorted/end hence alt indispensable means must be em ployed." I said thia not haetilT, butdeliber- War baa been mads, and continues to be an indispensable means to thia end. A prac tical reacknowledgmant of the national au thority would render the war unnecessary, and it would at once cease. If, however, re i sistance continues, the warmust also continue, and it is impossibis to foresee all the incidents which may attend, and a 1 the ruia which may follow it. Such as may seem indispensable, or may obviously promise great efficiency to wards ending the Mrugg!*, must and will ! come Tho propositi m rviw made is an offer 01.ly. I hnpe it may t>e esteemed as offence ' to ask whether the pecuniary consideration ; tendered w.<u! 1 not he >f mors value tu the States and private persons concorned than arc the institute n .and property in it, in the I present aspect t) f affairs. While it is trus that the adoption of th* proposed resolution would be merely initatory, and not within it self a practical mea.*oe. it is recommended, in the hope that it would luon lead to irnpor ' taut practical results. In full view of my great responsibility to my God and to my ; country, I earnestly beg the attention <>f Con j green and tbp people to the subject. Arkibim Lincoln. To Consumptives.—The Adverticr. hav ing Wen restored to health in a few week*, by a verv simple remedy, after hating suffered several year* with a severe lung affection, and that dread dietae Consumption— is anxious to make known to )at fellow sufferer* the means of eure. To at! who d-eire it. he r,!l send a copv of the pre scription used (free of charge), with the directions for preparing and u.*mg the same, which they will ficd a bck* Ccaa ro r Co>scMmo*r, Arram, Baosca.'ng. 4c The only object of the advertiser in sending the pre scription is to beucfit the afflicted, and spread infor mation which he conceives to he invaluable, and he hopes every sufferer wili try hi* remedy, as it will cost them nothing, and may prove a blessing. Parties wishing the prescription will please address Rsv. KDWARD A. WILSON. Williamsburgh, jani-am* King* County, New York'. A NEW AND BEAUTIFUL EDITION OF THE Mistakes of Educated Men; Ily Joltu S. Hart, 1.. 1.. I>. 12 nv>, mulin. price 50 cento ; paper coy er*, 25 cento. Copies of (hi* L> <k will be s >nt by mail on receipt of the price in postage stamps. Please address J. C. OAIIUIUUKS. Publisher. 1 H Sintih Fourth *frrrt. nth 12 Philadelphia, Pa. • A. 8. WILSON. T. It. VTrt.KY. W2&£©Xf is 'JWUM'Zv ATTOR\EY9 AT LAW, i.k wis rows-, r.v. OFFICE in public square, three donr* west of the Court House. rnhl2 REGISTER'S NOTICE. r | 11K following account# have been exam X ined and passed by tne, and remain fil-d ot record in this i ff: •* for inspection of Heirs. Legatees, Creditors, and all other* in anv way interested, and will be presented to the next Otphans' Court of the county of Mifflin, to be held at the Court House in Lewistown. on i'lll.'Rtjl'AY. 10th day ol April, 1802, for allowance and confirmation: 1. The Account of Willisim Mitchell, Ad ministrator of the of Mary Clarton, lute tf Perry township. dee'd. 2. The Account of John Fleming, Executor of Esther Thomas, late of Menns township deed. 3. The Acc tint of Simeon K Z-tok. Exi of Iaac Thompson, la;e of Union township dee'd. •4. The Aceount of \V in Creighton, lixr. of David Mutthorsbough, latent Derby township, dee'd. 5. The Account of William A. Moore, Ad ministrator and Trustee appointed to sell real estate of David Sunderland, late of Wayne township, deu'd. G. The Arc unt of Christian B. Yoder. Ad. of the estate of Siever Yoder, late of Brown township, dee'd. 7. The Account of Jacob Hartzler, Admr. of the estate of David Bjler, late of Union township, dee'd 8. The linn! Account of Jacob S .King and David J. Zook, Admrs. of Yost King, late of Menno township, deo'd. 9. The Account of John Bowersox, Admr., and Elizabeth Bowersux. Admrx., of Julio Bowersox, jr., late of Decatur township, dee'd, 10. The Account of Lewis 11. Leopold, Aduir. of George Leopold, late of Granville township, dee'd. 11 The Accounts of Thomas Reed, Guar of Davis B. Rothrock and Mary A. Rotlirock, minor children of Philip Rethrock, late of Derry township, d<*c'd. 12. The Account of William Ross,. Guar, of John \V., Gabriel, Saniue', Abraham. Catharine and Henry Garver, minor children of Jacob Carver, lateof Oiivertowuship, dee'd 13. The Account of Christian Peachev and John llartzler, Guardians of the minor chil dren of Samuel S. Z >ok, late of Union twp., dee'd. 14. The partial Account of D. F. Milliken, one of the Exrs. of Kobeit Milliken, late of Brown township, dee'd. 15. The partial Account of Sam'l Milliken, one of the Exrs. of R>bt. Milliken, late of Brown township, dse'd. 10. The partial Account of Elisabeth Gar ver, Admrx., and D. F. Milliken, Admr of Benjamin Garver, late of Union township, dee'd. SAMUEL BARR, Register. Register's Office, Lewistown, March 12, 18G1 Zygomatic Toothache Drops, FOR TOOTHACHE AMD MEIIRALOIA. rriUS is an infallible remedy for every kind X of Toothache, (ulcerations alone except ed,) and equally certain in every case of Neu ralgia which can be reached by external ap pliances. Though powerful in effect, it is ex ceedingly mild in action, and heuce can be freely used upon children. It will not destroy the enamel of tho teeth as clove oil or creo sote would. Price 12 cents per bottle. Our remedies may be relied upon as com pounded from the ingredients, regard less of expense; yet we put them all at prices which custom seems to have established for such articles. THF PHILA. ECLECTIC CO. B??k-Sold in Lewistown by Chas. llitx, Mrs. Margaret E. Irwin, and others, and in the county by Mary T. Brehman, J. AT. 8. Kob ler, and Hoar & McNabb. febl9 SPADES, Rakes, lloes, Ac., just received, and for sale by mhl2 " F. G. FRANCTSCUS." SHERIFF'S SALES. BT nrlue of „ondrj oritt of V.odiiioo, Exponas. Fieri Facias, and Levari Paci 4 , issued out of the Court of Common Plea* c - Mifflin county, and to me directed, will be er , posed to sale, by public vendue or outcry v> the Court House, in the Borough of town, on Saturday, April 5, 1862. at one o'clock in the afternooo, the fuliowij, real estate, to wit: All that certain piece or pares] of land sip uate in Bratton township, Mifflin count*, bounded and described as follows: Bsginnin* : at a black-oak stump, thsncs by lands of J i cob Kauffman north 48°, west 24 perdu i to a hickory stump; and north 41$°, west 20 perches to stones; thence bv residue and Cat per Dull's land north 3GJ°.*eavt 52 5 10 perch ee to stones; north 51°, east 25 2 10 perches , to stones; north 32j*. east 27 3 10 perches to a locust; north ou°, east 73 perches to post north east 9 perches to a post; thence by Samuel Yuder's land north 45J 3 , east 9 perch es to a chestnut; south 64j°, east 3 5 10 p* r to a poet; thence by lands of Lewi* Fibbi south 29°, west 105 10 perches to locust: south 42*. east 10 0 10 perches to post; snuth 41J° west 4 4 10 perches to post: south G7J* , 15 perches to a poet; thence by Jonathan Puthier's and Simon Oro'e lands aoutb 22$' west 172 perches to stones, and thence bv lands of Casper Dull nvrtb 87", west 40 perch es to place of beginning, containing G3 acre* and usual allowance of 6 per cent, of land for roads, with an old mill partly fallen down, a saw mill in about the same condition, and two <>M houses and a stable thereon erect' ed. Seized, taken in execution, and to he sold as the property of Solomon Harsh burger and Daniel Harshbarger. Admr. of David Harshbarger, dee'd., with notice to the wulow and heirs and tcrre tenants of the land bound by mortgage. A r.so, A Tract of Land situate in Oliver township, .containing 100 acres, more or less, about 20 acres being cleared, with a log cabin and lot of fruit trees thereon, bounded on the east bv Michael Anita, svuth by John Allen, west br .l imes Kreps, and north by Jack's mountain. Seized, taken in execution, and to he sold as the property f William Todd. ALSO, . All that certain Tract of Land "ilnatc in \\ ayne township, Mifflin county, c>ntaiuin" 530 ueres, ha the 'rime more or !e*. b mnded on the wast by John Caldwell, north by Bur lew, Sunderland* and Allen, cast bv Milliken and--" -"Penepackor. and south by Walli*, Melcher, and Drakes' hirs. abiut 300 acre* of which (ye cleared arid uudcr cultivation, and occupied as two farm-, with a frame home) hank barn, and ..thcr outbuildings erected on each farm. Sciz-d, taken in execution, ami to be tt'dj as the pro erty uf 11-nry Incin. ALSO. All those three Tracts of Land, surveyed in the name of Jacob Biir, Thomas White, 1 acol. Wertz or Witzrr. situite on the water* of Ml Indian's run and its tributaries, in the township of Granville. Mifflin county, con taining mi the whole 1213 acres and 7 perches, and allowance, m rc or less, with a framesaw mill and other improvements thereon erected Also. One other tract adjoining the nf<-rc said, containing 27 acres, uiwre or less, with aw mill, dwelling houses, stable and other itnprovfin nts thereon erected. Seized, ta ken in execution. nd to ha sold a* the prop erty of Wilson Welch and Wilson Welch. Ad ministrators of John Welch, dec'd., with notice to James Welch, terre tenant. A LSO, A 1 ract of L uvl situate in Dcrrv township, M ;fflin county, containing about 3 arres, in-us or less, bounded on the north by land of M . Miller, east by Jacob Miller * heirs, south by - a Toad, nnd west by Jwhna'han Amieh. with a frame house, framt stable an i other improvcreent-s thereon erected. Seized, taken ' u \ to be sold a* the pr .p-ny of Eliza A. Ki'ster. and Juiah L Kiester C. C. STAXBARGEII, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, L-wistown. March 12, IKC2. Estate of Catharine Bjler, deceased. NOTICE is hereby given that letters of ad ministration on the estate of CATH A KIN h. LEU. Inte of Brown township, Mif llin county, dec J., have b-*en granted to the undersigned, residing in said township. All pers>ius indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment, and those hnv ing claims to present them duly authenticated for settlement. C. C ZOOK. Admr. Brown township, March 12. 1,5G2.-Gt* PLOWS ! PLOWS ! SOD. Subsoil Plows. MeVeytown Plows, VV ings, Shares, Ac., for sale by F. G. FRANCISCUS. CENTS per gallon f..r the best No. 1 wO Coal Oil— warranted pure and inodor ous, and non-explosive, f„ r sale by the barrel or gallon. F. O. FRANCISCUS. r>k i \ DOZ. Coal Oil Lamps—all aorta and i fJVzes, from 31 cts. to fls 00 each "12 F. G. FRANCISCUS. •Yi \ DOZ. Coal Oil Lamp Shades, from 12c tmiVJ to $1 00 each. ml 2 F. G. FRANCISCUS. 1 DOZEN Coal Oil Chimneys, Wick", Al/V/ Brushes. Ac., for sale at city whole sale prices to retailers, by - mhl2 F. G. FRANCISCUS. Hamei: and Traoes. WAGON Ha.nei at 50 cts. per pair. Tra ces, Chains, Ac., at 75 cents per pair. All kinds of Chains usually sold in hardware •tores, sold at low rates, bv m " l 2 F. G. FRANCISCUS. CULTIVATORS, Cultivator Teeth and Points, at reduced prices from past seas ons, for sale by F. G. FRANCISCUS. OffllKßSk " I HAVE on band some very choice garden seeds, embracing the earliest vegetables grown, auoh as Peas, Cabbage. Cauliflower, *• F. G. FRANCISCUS. NAILS, at $3 20 per keg. mhla F. G. FRANCISCUS. S EL u L ! NG , off all kind# of Tin Ware, at wholesale pricos at retail. Those in want ot tin ware will do well to oall here before purchasing elsewhero. mhl2 F. G. FRANCISCUS. , N A I I_a B . OWING to the advanced priceaofcoal and metal, the prioes of Nails have advanced to $3 20 per keg. A liberal discount to deal ers. A full stock in store and for sale by T - G > FRANCISCUS. febo - Agt. llarrisbiirg Nail Co.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers