Whole No, 2679. 1602. - OCMOBtiK,; o ~~7~14 21 28 i .Sunday | j 5.12:19 20 1. S 15.22.at> j Monday |j 1.1 20 27 •L-.IMV - y K-.gM ao TUesday ! 7 H'cijaft WYi'-.i'iv ;t lo 17 -'4 | jWcdVulavjl ts!U S2 2 Tliur-dnv + I'ilSj'-u ! Thursday 2 alio 23 30 KnTo |A j 1J! 1o: 20 | .Friday (3 10(17 24 31 Saturday jOj lU;dO|-'7 1 |tfttnrdny Uill|lß|2S| NOV 1>1 EK. 1) FtIIMHKK. SuuTav 2 1 23.30, Sunday | j 7 14 21,281 Myit'liiv 31017 24 I Monday '1 5;i5 ; 22 29 fnt-iiav i 4 II 1*125. j .Tuesday |a ! 9 10 : 23 301 WcU'sd'ay I j 6i12i1M|26l Wed'sday 3| 10117(24 31 Tliiiridav' -i o|i3 20|27| j (Thursday *ll is 26 j 7|14 211281 | j Friday 5|12 1!) 20 Saturday |l| S|ls|22|29| 11 Saturday o|l3|2o|2:| | Pennsylvania Railroad. Trains leavo Learistowit station a# follow*: WESTWARD. rtSTWABD. Tlip'ttgh'Express, 6 1 a. ni. 11 1 p.m. Karaith's Omnibuses convey passengers to and from all the trains, taking up 01* setting thorn 4owu at all points within the borough limits. VS the action of the Belief Board docs nut seem to he fully comprehended, frequent applications f< >r relief being made in person or ly letter to the undersigned, he deems it proper to state that payments will be teim porarily renewed to those formerly on the list on presentation of certificate signed bj not less than three known taxpayers, stating ing that the applicant has not received sufif cient Irom her husband or other support, to enable Iter, together with Iter own industry, to make a living for herself anu family, and gitiug reasons for such inability. This is intended for the benefit of all really in need, and for 110 others. lhe orders issued under this regulation ire continued only uutil the troops are again psid off. Blank certificates can be procured from those who have heretofore distributed orders. GEO ROE FRYSINGHR, Secretary of Relief Board. Lewistown, .June 18, L S G2 GEO. vr. ELEES,," Attorney at Law, Office Market Square, Lewistown, will at tend to business in Mifflin. Centre and Hunting den counties. my2G Lock Repairing', Pipe Laying, Plumbing and White Smithing j I IIE above branches of business will be JL promptly attended to on application at the residence of the undersigned in Main street, Lewis town. janlO GEORGE MILLER. A. 8. WILSON*. T. y. CTTLKT*. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, I.KWIS'i'OWN, PA. OFFICE in public square, threo doors west of the Court House. mhl2 WILLIAM LEND, has now open A NEW STOCK OF Cloths, Cassimeres AND VESTS NCS, which will he made up to order in the neat f-4t and most fashionable styles. ap!9 Kishacoquillas Seminary 3 ANI) NORMAL INSTITUTE. r |UIE third Session of this Institution wib _L commence April 24, 1802. Encouraged by the liberal patronage receiv ed during the previous Session, the proprietor has been induced to relit the buildings and gn-unds to render them most comfortable and convenient for students. He has ulso secured the assistance of Rev 8. McDonald, formerly tutor of Princeton I Diversity, and well known in this part of die country as an able scholar and devoted Christian. A competent music teacher has •*l*o been engaged. mh26 S. Z. SHARP, Principal. Jacob C. Blymyer & Co,, Produce ?md Commission Mer chants, LEWISTOWN, PA. teTFlour and Grain of all kinds pur chased at market rates, or received on storage and shipped at usual freight rates, having -•torehouses and boats of their own, with care is! captains and hands. Stove Coal, Limeburners Coal, Plaster, Fish and Salt always on hand. Grain can be insurdd at a small advance on cost of storage. n022 Cloths, Clothing, Boots, Shoes, &c. A GOOD assortment of Cloths, Cassimeres, sIL Tweed Vests, Pants, Woolen Shirti aud Drawers, Linen and Gotton Striped Red and Gray Woolen Shirts, Boots, Bhoes, Hats and Caps for men and boys. seplS JAMES PARKER. SELLING cheaper than the cheapest—Syr ups and Molasses at 40 to 50 cents per gallon; Coal Oil and Coal Oil Lamps. We will sell tho above goods cheaper than any bouse in town for cash or country produce. Give us a call. We charge nothing for show ing goods at JOHN KENNEDY'S, Lewistotyn, June 25, 18GJ2. E.iitr.i BY A. SMITH, County Superintendent. For tlio Educational Column. Two Hints to Teachers. 1. OH Optnimj Exercises.— lt is cus tomary in about nine tenths of the schools (f the county, for the teacher, either alone or accompanied by the scholars, to read a chapter in the Bible. This practice is al together commendable, and it would be gi atilying if it were adopted in every school. However, there arc different modes of con ducting this exercise, some of which seem to nic unwise and really useless. To the majority of scholars, the close reasonings of Paul's Epistles are not very useful or edifying, because their profound character places them beyond the comprehension of children, not to say of very many persons of mature years. I think the teacher should use his best judgment in this matter, and have the scholars read only such portions of Scrip ture as are, in the main, easily understood, and from which rules or suggestions for their conduct can readily be derived. In order to render this exercise properly use ful, it seems Lest for the teacher to call the attention of his pupils to the lesson taught in the Scripture read, ar.d to make a brief, pointed application of it to the incidents of every-day occurrence in the schoolroom, and in the intercourse of children and youth with the world. It is well to shun these two extremes : first, going through the exercise as a mere form, of no real use or interest j and second, regarding a!! parts of the Bible equally profitable for the in struction of the young, and therefore refu sing or neglecting to use one's good judg ment in the matter. J n some schools the teacher is wont to follow the Scripture reading with prayer, and this also is entirely commendable, if it be done in the right spirit and manner. 01 course, prayer in a schoolroom is essen tially the same as prayer in any other place, and one spirit should characterize it everywhere—a spirit of thankfulness, hu mility, penitence, and trust; but the form and extent ola prayer should be deter mined, in u great, degree, by the place and circumstances. It should be appropriate, should have direct reletence to the persons for whom it is offered. So in the school room, it seen s fitting that a prayer be brief; simple, so that pupils may intelligently though silently join in it; utterly truthful, so that they may feel that in this exercise their teacher is thoroughly sincere, free from the slightest taint of hypocrisy. The singing of two or three verses of a hymn is very salutary in its influence, and should be practised whenever possible, the teacher selecting such hymns as his pupils can understand and sing with healthful zest. These opening exercises, or any one or two of them, need consume but little time, if rightly conducted ; and their influence upon both teacher aud pupils cannot fail to be highly, beneficial, to fit all for a more hearty and successful performance of the day's duties, and for greater delight in them. 2. The Teacher's Manner before his Pupils. —If a teacher can succeed in giv ing his pupils these two distinct impres sions,—that he is certainly master in the schoolroom, and that he is a genuine man, —he has gained the victory; if he fails in either of these respects, he is hopelessly deleated from the start. It is absolutely necessary that a teacher be, and feel himself, sure of success in es tablishing and preserving good order, in carrying into effect whatever regulations he deems requisite to the highest prosperity of the school. Let him give the subject of school government und management so much and so careful previous study, that he may be prepared for all kinds of emer gencies, ready to meet any perplexity, sure that he knows what to do next. Let his manner be such that scholars shall instinct ively kpow him as their master, as one not to be trifled with, as one who fully knows what he is about aad what ho intends to have them do —in a woid, as master of the situation. But when this wholesome impres-ion has been produced, let the teacher not fail to show himself thoroughly' a man, in ability and desire to instruct, in hearty interest in the progress and joy of his pupils, in sym pathy with them in the trials of their pa tience, their little troubles and (Jelights. — Let him show that while he has a slrong hand to restrain, he has a willing hand to assist; while his eye is sharp to detect wroug-doing, he is quick to see diligence, obedience, and generous conduct; while he can use sternest tones in reproof of malice or meanness, his voice has most en couraging tones for the faithful and merit orious. In fine, let the teacher seek to show his pupils the style and character of a manly man. S- GOOD NEWS! GOOD NEWS! BE Laines, Merinos, Wool Plaids, Bonnet Ribbons, Swiss and Cambric Muslins, Black and Fancy Silks, Realy made Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Ilats, Shawls and cloth Capes, and a large stock of Fancy Goods, for COST, at JOHN KENNEDY'S. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1862. SATDRAI, HlirOßt The Flying Foxes of Ceylon. | There are more singular inhabitants of Ceylon trees than monkeys. The flying fox es hang from them like fruit. The flight of these creatures is directed by means of a membrane attached to the inner-side of | each of the hind legs, and kept distended I at the lower extremity by a projecting bone, just as a fore and-aft sail is distended by a "gaff. "Over the entire surface of the thin membrane of which they are formed, sentient nerves of the utmost delicacy are distributed, by means of which the ani mal is enabled during the darkness to di rect its motions with security, avoiding ob jects against contact with which, at such times, its sight and other senses would be insufficient to protect it." By day they suspend themselves from the highest branch es of the silk cotton trees, hanging by the claws of the hind legs, with the°head turned upward, and pressing the chin a gainst the breast. At sunset, taking wing, they hover, with a murmuring sound, occa sioned by the beating of their broad mem braneous wings, around the fruit trees, on which they feed till morning, when they re sume their pensile attitude as before. J hey hang in such prodigious numbers, that the branches often give way beneath their accumulated weight. They fly in clouds as thick as bees or midges. "When at rest or asleep, the disposition of the limbs of the flying fox is most curious. At such times, it suspends itself by one foot only, bringing the other close to its side, and thus it is enabled to wrap itself in the ample fold of its wings, which envel op it like a mantle, leaving only its up turned head uncovered. Its fur is thus protected from damp and rain, and to some extent its body is sheltered from the sun. As it collects its food by means of its mouth, either when on the wing or when suspended within reach of it, the flying fox is always more or less liable to have the spoil wrested from it by its intrusive companions be ore it can make good its way to some secure retroat in which to devour it unmolested. In such conflicts they bite viciously, tear each other with their teeth, and scream incessantly till, taking to flight, the persecuted one reaches some place of safety, where he hangs by one foot, and grasping the fruit he has secured in the claws and opposable thumb of the other, he hastily reduces it to lumps, witli which he stuffs his check pouches till they become distended like those of a monkey; ' then suspended in safety he commences to ! chew and suck the juices, rejectinf the : refuse with his tongue. Curiosities of Nature. Among the papers published in costly style by the Smithsonian Institute at \\ ashington, is one on the microscopic plants and animals which live on and in the human body. It describes quite a number of insects. The animal, which produces the disease called itch, is illustra ted by an engraving halt an inch in diam eter, which shows not only the ugly little fellow's body and legs, but his very toes, although the animal himself is entirely invisible to the naked eye. When Lieu tenant Berryman was sounding the ocean, preparatory to laying the Atlantic Tele graph, the quill at the end of the sound ing line bronght up mud, which on being dried, became a powder so fine that on rubbing it between the thumb and finger, it disappeared in crevices of the skin. "On placing the dust under the microscope, it was discovered to consist of millions of perfect shells, each of which had a living animal. By the President of the United States pf America: A PROCLAMATION. I, Abraham Lincoln, President of the Uni ted States, and Commander in-Chief of the army and navy thereof, do hereby proclaim and declare that hereafter, as heretofore, the war will be prosecuted for the object of prac tically restoring the constitutional relations between the United States and each of the States and the people thereof, in which States that relation is or may be suspended or dis turbed. That it is my purpose, upon the next meet ing ef Congress, to again recommend the adoption of a practical measure, tendering pecuniary aid to the free acceptance or rejec tion of all the slave States, so called, the peo ple whereof may not then be in rebellion against the United States, and which States may then have voluntarily adopted, or there after may voluntarily adont, the immediate or gradual abolishment of slavery within their respective limits; and th■)t the effort to col onise persops of African descent, with their consent, upon this continent or elsewhere, with the previously obtained consent of the Governments existing thare, will be contin ued. That on the Ist day of January, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, all persons held as slaves within any State, or designated part of a State, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States, shall be then, thenceforward and forever free ; and the Ex ecutive Government of the United States, in cluding the military and naval authorities thereof, will recoghize and maintain the free dom of such persons.; and will do no act or acts to repress such persons, or any of them, freodT Cff ° rtS thCy may mak ° for their actual That the Executive will, on the first day of , n " ar y by proclamation, designate the States or parts of States, if any, in which the people thereof respectively shall then be in rebellion against the United States; and the fact that any State, or the people thereof shall, on that day, be in good faith represont ; ed in the Congress of the United States by members chosen thereto at elections, wherein a majority of the qualified voters of such State shall have participated, shall, in the , absence of strong, countervailing testimony, be deemed conclusive evidence that such State and the people thereof are not then in rebel lion against the United States. That attention is hereby calLd to an act of Congress entitled "An Act to make an addi tional Article of War," approved March 13th, 180_, and which act is in the words and fig ures following: "Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of Amer ica in Congress assembled. That hereafter the following shall be promulgated as an addition al article of war for the government of the army of the United States, and shall be ob served as such: "ARTICLE —. All officers or persons in the military or naval service of the United States are prohibited from employing any of the forces of their respective commands for the purpose of returning fugitives from service or labor who may have escaped from any ! persons to whom such service or labor is claimed to be due ; and any officer who shall be found guilty by a court martial of viola tion of this article shall be dismissed from the service. "SEC. 2d. And be it further enacted, That this act shall take effect from and after its passage." Also, to the 9th and 10th sections of an act entitled "An act to suppress insurrection, to punish treason and rebellion, to seize and confiscate the property of rebels, and for oth er purposes," approved July 17th, 1862, and which sections are in the words and figures following: ° "SEC. 9. And be it further enacted. That all slaves of persons who shall hereafter be engaged in rebellion against the Government of the United States, or who shall in any way give aid or comfort thereto, and escaping from such persons and taking refuge within the lines of the army, and all slaves captured from such persons, or deserted by them, and coming under the control of the Government of the United States, and all slaves of 6uch persons found on or being within any place occupied by rebel forcos, and afterwards oc cupied by the forces of the United States, shall be deemed captives of war, and shall be forever free of their servitude, and not again held as slaves. "SEC. 10. And be it further enacted. That no slave escaping into any State, Territory, or the District of Columbia, from any other State, shall be delivered up or in any way impeded or hindered of his liberty, except for crime or some offenco against the laws unless the person claiming the said fugitive shall first make oath th t the person to whom the labor or service of such fugitive is alleged to be due is his lawful owner, and has not borne arms against the United States in the present rebellion, nor in any way given aid or comfort thereto." No person engaged in the military or na val service of the United States shall, under any pretence whatsoever, assume to decide on the validity of the claim of any person to the service or labor of any other person, or sur render up any such person to the claimant, on pain of being dismissed from the service. And I do hereby enjoin upon and order all persons engaged in the military and naval service of the United States to observe, obey, and enforce, within their respective spheres of serviee, the acts and sections above recited. And the Executive will, in due time, recom mend that all the citizens of the United States, who shall have remained loyal thereto throughout the rebellion, shall, upon the res toration of the constitutional relations be tween the United States and the people, if that relation shall have been suspended or disturbed, be compensated for all losses by acts of the United States, including the loss of slaves. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and caused the seal of the United States to be affixed. Done at the City of Washington, this the 22d day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty two, and of the Independence of the United States the eighty-seventh. ABRAHAM LINCOLN. By the President, YY M. 11. SEWARD, Secretary of State. No More Tampering with Enlistments. Aiders, Abettors, and Sympathizers with Trea son, to be Arrested and Tried under Powers of Courts Martial—Suspension of the Writ oj Habeas Corpus to all Traitors—Decisions °f Courts Martial to be Final, (be. BV THE PRESIDENT 0 THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. A PROCLAMATION. Whereas, It has become necessary to call into service not only volunteers but also por tions of the militia of the States, by draft, in order to suppress the insurrection existing in the United States ; and disloyal parties are not adequately restrained, by the ordinary processes of law, from hindering this meas ure, and from giving aid and comfort, in va rious ways, to the insurrection : NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT ORDERED? First. That during the existing insurrection, and as a necessary measure for suppressing the same, that all rebels and insurgents, their aiders and abettors, within ths United States, and all persous discouraging volunteer enlist ments, resisting the militia drafts, or guilty of disloyal practices, affording aid and com fort to the rebellion against the authority of the United States, shall be subject to martial law, and liable to trial and punishment by courts-martial or military commission. Second. That the writ of habeas corpus is suspended in respect to all persons arrested, or who are now or may hereafter, during the rebellion, be imprisoned in any fort, camp, arsenal, military prison, or any place of con- finement by any military authority, or bv the sentence of any court-martial or military commission. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand, and caused the seal of the United otates to be affixed. ['■ 8-] ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Hone at the City of Washington, this the twenty-fourth day of September, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty two, and of the Independence of the United States the eighty-seventh. By the President: W. 11. SEWARD. Secretary of Stato. T . , Large Armies, lhe following lacts, culled from the fields of ancient story, may be of some in terost at the present time : I ho city of Thebes had a hundred gates, and oould send out at each gate 10,000 fighting men and 20,000 chariots. The army ofTrerah, King of Ethiopia, consisted of 1,000 000 men and 300 char iots of war. Sesostris, King of Egypt, led against hi* enemies 600,000 men, 24,000 cavalry, and 26 soytbe-armed ohariots, 1491 B. C. Haniilcar went from Carthage and lan ded near Palermo. lie had a'fleet of 2,- 000 ships and 3,000 small vessels, and a land foroe of 300,000 men. At tha bat tle in which ho was defeatod, 150,000 were slain. A Roman fleet led by Regulus against Carthuge, consisted of 830 vessels, with 140,000 men. Tho Cartbagenian fleet numbered 350 vessels, with 150,000 men. At the battle of Cannat, there were of the Romans, including allies, SO,OOO foot and 6,000 horse; ofHhe Carthagenians, 40,000 foot and 10,000 horse. Of these, 70,000 were slain in all, and 10,000 taken prisoners; more than half slain. Hannibal, during his campaign in Italy and Spain, plundered 400 towns and des troyed 300,000 men. Ninus, the Assyrian king, about 2,200 years B. C., led against the Bactrians his army, consisting of 1,700,000 foot, 200,- 000 horse and 16,000 chariots, armed with scythes. Italy, a little before Hannibal's time, was able to sond into the field nearly 1,- 000,000 men. Semiramis employed 2,000,000 men in building the mighty Babylon. She took 100,000 Indian prisoners at the Indus, and sunk 1,000 bodts. Sennacherib lost in a single night 185,- 000 men by the destroying angel—2 19; 35 37. A short time after the taking of Baby lon, the forces of Cyrus conissted of 600,- 000 foot, 120,000 horse, and 2,000 chari ots armed with scythes. An army of Cambyses, 50,000 strong, was buried up in the desert sands of Africa by a south wind. When Xerxes arrived atThcrmopyle, his land and sta forces amounted to 2,641,610 men, exculsive of servants, eunuchs, wo men, sutlers, Ac., in all numbering 5,283,- 320. So say Herodotus, Plutarch, and Isoerates. The army of Artaxerses, before the bat tle Cunaxa, amounted to about 1,200,000. Ten thousand horses and 100,000 foot fell on the fatal field of Ilsus. When Jerusalem was taken by Titus, 1,- 100,000 perished in various ways. The force of Darius at Arbella number ed more than 1,000,000. The Persians lost 90,000 men in this battle. Alexander about 500. So says Diodorus. Arian says the Persians, in this battle, lost 300,000 ; the Greeks 1,200. A Soldier's JVift Objecting to an Ex change.—A private of the Twentieth Mas sachusetts regiment was taken prisoner at Ball's Bluft last fall, and confined at Salis bury, North Carolina. Some weeks since a friend called upon his wife with the assu rance that her husbrnd would probably be exchanged for a rebel then in our hands. "I won't have him," cried the woman in alarm ; "I love Tom, and I won't have him exchanged; I don't want a rebel husband." The friend corrected the poor woman's mis apprehension ; the absent husband was finally released, and she learned that for once "exchange was no robbery." "State of Matrimony" has at last been bounded and described by some Western student, who says: It is bounded by hugging und kissiDg on one side, and cradles and babies on the other side. Its chief productions are population, broom sticks, and staying out late o'nights. It was discovered by Adam and Eve, while trying to find a northwest passage out of Paradise. The climate is sultry till you pass the tropics of house-keeping, when squally weather sets in with such power as to keep all hands as cool as cucumbers, — For the principal road leading to this inter esting State, consult the first pair of blue eyes you meet. Preferring Drowning to Going to School—A curious case of suicide occurred at Niagara Falls a few days since. A little boy named Armstrong, aged nine years, was averse to attending school. His parents ordered him to go to school with an elder brother, but he steadily refused, and while his brother was trying to compel him to go, he stated that if he was compelled to go to school he would jump into the ca nal and drown himself. Suiting the action to the word, he started on a run to the ca nal, and before he could be caught, plunged in and was drowned. New Series—Vol. XVI, No. 48 jf HE MINIIRE&, ; a-Thc Now Oijoaus Delta gives, in the following | touching lines, a faithful picture of the horrors Seces sion has brought upon that city, where hundreds of widows and thousands of orphans already bemoan the infatuation of the desperate men whoprecijiiuted the proud, blind Slaveoeraey into a causeless, wicked Rebellion, which, if not soon suppressed, must begih to desolate the North, as it has the South, Little Minnie's Wish, I wish this war was ended, And father was at home! Then mother would not cry so much— Oh! why dou't father come ? I'm sure my mother loves me, But—why 1 cannot tell— She makes no more new clothes for ino, But works oa clothes to soli. * I asked her, once, about it— Dear ma! she could not speak— She only pressed njc to her breast, While tears fell 011 my cheek. I'm sure there's something very had Has happened, for I know My mother did not de this way About twelve months ago. I am too young to reason much, But then its very strange, That, just because dear Papa's gone. This everything should change. For. since he went away, the man That used to bring us bread Has ceased to come along this way— I'm thinking he is dead. I see the milk-man still goes by, But—'tis so strange to tell— He will not stop at our house, Nor eren ring his bell I The butcher, too, that used to be So kind, polite, and clean, Will not bring me one bit of meat — I think he is right mean. 1 told mama to change them all, And try some other men, Sho sighed, und then came down her cheat Big tears, like drops of rain. Ma used to have nice, furniture, But—why I cannot say— She let a man, who had a cart, Take nearly all away! I wish this war was ended, Ar.d father was at home— Then ma, I'm sure, would smile again! O, when will father come? LQ 31N—'There's a Song the Angels Sing.' There's a song the angels sing, And its notes with rapture ring Round the throne whose radiance fills the heavens above; Shepherds heard the distant strain, Watching on Judea's plain: Glory be to God, to men be peace and love.' Cno*rs.—' Through the earth and through the sky Bet the anthem ever fly, 'Glory be to God again! Peace on earth, good will to men!' 'Tis a song for children too, To their Savior 'tis their due; Let its grateful notes ascend to him again; Join with angels in their song, And the heavenly strain prolong, ' Glory be to God, good will and peace to men.' Through the earth, Ac. Soon around thai throne may wo With those happy angels he, Striking harps to strains that never moro shall cease ; Jiingling love with loftiest praise, Still the chorus there We'll raise, ■ Glory be to God, to men good will and peace.' Through the earth, Ac. HIGHLY IMPORTANT TO FARMERS! LONG stories and paper recommendations are of no account. lam at present enga ged in building PELTILVS PATENT HORSE POWERS, >two sizes, one for four and one F22Eijss^ for Worses. It is supposed to he better than any other kind Jsassssfead made here or elsewhere. I have obtained from the patentee authority to make and sell in all of Pennsylvania west of the Susquehanna, and to prosecute all those who make, use, or vend to others to use, in the district described. Those interested will take notice of this. I expect soon to build a NEW THRESHER, which will thresh 40 bushels of wheat per hour, or 80 bushels of oats. Please call and examino for yourselves before you buy from others. I also continue the WMSIWBX® & SEsnmiiisycg. of any kind of machinery of Iron, Brass or wrought Iron, as usual. Having a large lot of patterns, and a first class pattern maker at work in the shop, I am prepared to fill al most any kind of an order, either for casting? or patterns. BULL PLOUGHS, aide hill and bar share Ploughs, THKESH ERS with Shakers, Horse Powers, Saw Mill Cranks, and various other castings on band ready for sale. All work sold as good, which proves defec tive, to be made good. THOMPSON & STON* authorised to sell. JOHN K. WEEKES, Lewistown, July 30, 1862. Agent. w A m us TIN WARE! COUNTRY MERCHANTS in want of Tin War# will find it to their advantage to purchase of J. B. Selheimer, who will sell them a better article, and as cheap if not cheaper than they can purchase it in any of the eastern cities. Call and see his new stock Eewistown, April 23, 1862-ly. WALL PAPERS, Window Blinds, Qucensware, Umbrellas, Cutlery, Wil low and Wooden Ware, as usual, at ap3o OFO. BLYMYER'S.