THE GAZETTE. LEWISTOWN, FA. Wednesday, January 27. 1834. G. * G. K. FRYSINGF.R, I'UBfJSIIEUS. KfgTh* i. ;ieu< is thf onljj paper in this part of the State printed on r. power press, uud has facilities for doing work of all kinds equaled by few. We have three presses in operation—an Adams Power Pre-s for tlio Paper. * doubie medium hand press for Jobs, nd a Newbury Jobber lor Blanks. Cards. &e. Our circulation needs no braggart puffing, as advertisers •■an ascertain the quantity of printing paiier we ptir chase and pay for on application to tin* agent of the paper mills in this town, or make inquiry at the dif ferent post offices through the county. Our Job files, which are open to examination by any one. will show that we do two-thirds of tins class of work. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. The GAZETTE i* published every Wednesday by t'EtKOE FRTSIXGER £ Sujt, at $1.50 in advance, or $2 at the end of the year. To on* wUirett. 4copies will he scut tor $5. *J copies for $lO, or GO copies for S2O. These terms will le rigidly adhered to. Cash Rates of Advertising. Administration or Executor's Notices $2 00 If published in both papers, each I 50 Auditor's do 1 25 Sheriff"s Sales, 12 lines 1 00 Each additional line S Estray, Caution or other Notices, not exceeding 12 lines, 3 insertions, 1 00 Tavern Licenses, single, 1 00 If more than one, each 50 Registers Notices of Accounts, each 50 On public sales published in both papers, a deduc tion of 25 per cent, on all matter over one Square. All other Judicial Notices same as above, unless the price is fixed by law. 12 lines of burgeois, or 10 lines of nonpariel, make a square. About S words constitute a line, so that any person can easily calcul ate a square in manuscript. Yearly advertisements will be inserted on such terms as may l>e agreed on. In all other cases 12 iines constitute a square, and will be so charged. FOR PKESIDEX r, ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Notices of New Advertisements. Those interested in the Boot and Shoe Trade, will please notice the ad vertisement of M essrs. Chase & Peddle, Philadelphia. Proposals for building a House on the parsonage premises at Iteedsville. Soaps of all kinds at Swain's—best in market. See advertisements ot Farmer & Gardener and Gardener's Monthly, two excellent agricultural publica tions. List ot Letters. Meeting of Jieleif Board. CUR STATE SENATOR. The Lewistown Democrat has of late so frequently attributed indecent lan guage to the Gazette, that people have gut to look upon it as a sort of "stop thief apology for its own indecorous attacks. Thus last week folks are gravely told that our calling Bueher, the Senator from this district, a " piece of Democratic machinery," was in decent. and thereupon it launches into a defence of his revolutionary conduct, even alleging that the democracy ap proves it. That he is nothing more than a piece of machinery is shown by the fact that he is doing precisely what Jet Davis and Ins allies desire him to do, that is, squander the tax payers' money, prevent all legis lation on the subject of bounties to volunteers, and disarrange tho ma chinery of government generally. A man who does this in a time of peace can hardly be called more than a po litical trickster ; and he who does it in a time ot war is no more a democrat than the one who burns blue-lights to the rebels, for both are giving " aid and comfort to the enemy." We do not believe that the honest portion of the democrats either admire or ap prove the course pursued by Bueher and his associates, who, if they honest ly believed themselves in the right, would not vote at all under a speaker legally elected at the close of last ses sion, but whom they say is not the Speaker. Common sense people of all kinds, whether democrats or republi cans, cannot see that hair-splitting distinction which Bueher and others make, and think that when questions are up affecting the right of soldiers to vote, of giving thanks to Grant, Meade, and other Generals and their armies, Ac., it would be quite as easy to say aye as no—for by voting at all they recognize the officers of tho Sen ate, an idea which as yet does not seem to have entered their noddles. —Some blue birds are already about. —Mr. Stanbarger will accept our thanks for a number of legislative documents. —The trial of F. P. Hill, a conductor, charged with embezzling the funds of the Reading Railroad Company, is progressing at Harrisburg. —The boiler of the U. S. gunboat Dragon of the Potomac flotilla, explo ded on \V ednosday, killing ten men and dangerously scalding live others. \Y m. W . Treadwell, Cashier of the Peoples' Hank of Hudson, Michigan, is reported to have absconded with 860,000 of the funds of the bank. —Cbailes A. Dana has been eon lirmed in executive session of the Sen ate as Asistant Secretary of War under the act recently passed and approved for that purpose. The President and Gen. MeCieJlan. Gen. MeClelian's report of his cam paigns, at tiic instance of the Copper head Cox of Ohio, was ordered to he printed by Congress, and is said to be one of the most extraordinary mili tary reports ever made, making more than a thousand pages. Instead o< giving a clear and concise report of his operations, it is mixed up with all kinds of letters and opinions not of what teas done, but what he thought ought "to have been done so that he could have succeeded in taking Ilich mond. Hut from all this mass of ver biage the following facts leak out: O O Ist. that Gen. McClellan had the larg est, best equipped, and most enthusi astic army ever put into the held in this country. 2d. That on every oc casion where lie claimed to be success l'ul lie failed to follow up his advanta ges. 3d. That by delay, be was every day weakening his gallant army by sickness in the Virginia swamps, while the rebels were even day becoming stronger. Our noble President, though no military man, as early as April foresaw the catastrophe, and had Gen. McClellan followed his advice, what reader can doubt the re sult. Here is the letter —look at the date, read and reflect on it : WASHINGTON, April 'J, ISC2. Major General McClellan. MY I 'EAU SJR: Your despatches com plaining that you are not properly sustained, while they d<> not offend me, do pain me very much. Blenker's division was with drawn from you before you left here, and you know the purpose under which I did it, and, as I thought, acquiesced in it—certainly, not without reluctance. After you left, I as certained that less than twenty thousand vnor> ganized men, without a sinylefield>buttery, were all you designed to be left Jor the defence of Washington and Manassas Junction , and part of this even was to go to General Hook er's position. General Bank's corps, once des gned for Manassas Junction, was divert* ed; and having taken a trip up on the line of Winchester and Strasburg, I could not have it without again exposing the Upper Potomac and the Baltimore and Ohio Bail road. This presented (or would present, when McDowell and Sumner should begone) a great temptation to the enemy to turn hack from the Rappahannock and sack Washing ton. My explicit order that Washington should, by the judgment of all the com manders of army corps, be left entirely se cure, had been neglected• It was precisely this that drove me to detain McDowell. I do not forget that I was satisfied with your arrangement to leave Banks at Manas ses Junction; hut when that arrangement was broken up, arid nothing was substituted for it, of course I was constrained to sufe-Nti* tuto s methiog for it myself, and allow me to ask: Do you really think I should per mit the line from Richmond, via Manassas Junction, to he entirely open, except what resistance could he prevented by less than twenty thousand unorganized troops? This is a question which the country will not allow me to evade. There is a curious mystery about the ttunt' ber of the troops now with you. When I telegraphed to you on the Gth, saying you had over a hundred thousand with you, I had just obtained from the Secretary of War a statement taken, as he said from your own returns, making 108.000 then with you, and en route to you. You now say you wll have 85,000 when all en route to you shall have reached you. How can the discrepancy of 23,000 he accounted for? As for General Wool's command, I under stand it is doing for you precisely what a like number of your own wuuld have to do, if that command was away. I suppose the whole force which has gone forward for you, is with you by this time, and il so, I think it is the precise time for you to strike a blow. Jig delay the enemy will relatively gain upon you. ; that is, he. will gam faster by fortif cations and reinforce meats, than you can by reinforcements alone. And once more let me tell you, it is indis pensible to you that you strike a blow. / am powerless to help this. You will do me the justice to remember that I always insisted that going down the Bay in search of a field, instead of fighting at or near Manassas, was only shifting, and not surmounting a diffi culty : that we would find the snme enemy and the same or equal entrenchments, at either place. The country will not. fail to note, is now noting, that the present hesitation to more upon an entrenched enemy is but the story of Manassas repeated. I beg to assure you that I have never written you, or spoken to you, in greater Kindness of feeling than now, nor with a fuller purpose to sustain you, so fur as in niv most anxious judgment I consistently can. But you must act. Yours, very truly. A. LINCOLN. Those who will carry back their memories to April, 1862, will acknowl edge that without knowing a word of President Lincoln having written this letter, the public mind was thoroughly imbued with the conviction that what he pointed out ought to have been done. AN hy it was not, has never yet been satisfactorily explained. Our Congressman—His Record. Last week Mr. Smith of Kentucky offered the following preamble and res olution : WHEREAS, A most desperate, wicked and bloody rebellion exists in the jurisdiction of the United States, and the safety and seeuri ty of personal and national liberty depends upon its absolute and utter extinction; there, fore, Resolved, That it is the political, civil mor al and sacred duty of the people to meet it, fight it, and forever destroy it. thereby estab' lis bin g perfect and unalterable liberty. Extraordinary as it may seem 1G copperheads, among whom were An cona, Stiles and Miller from this State, voted against this resolution. Our member did not vote at all, although he voted on another question a short time before. The Bread Top Railroad. In answer to some personal attacks on L. 1. W attson, Esq., President of the road, that gentleman gives the fol lowing truthful statement of the dif ficulties under which it labored. That it was kept out of the hands of the sheriff is some evidence of skill in its management, and as it is now doing a good business, with fair prospects be fore it, untried hands would hardly better it. 1 confess to two serious mistakes in the early part of our operations. One was in supposing that the market for bituminous coal was like the anthracite, almost unlimi ted : the other was yielding to the pressure of landlords, in making branch roads to their lands, at a time when the market would not justify so extensive a development. The em banassment caused hy this brought the coin pany on the verge t.f destruction, and some of the roads mode added nothing to the net revenue of the company for years. Ihe hoard of directors and myself did the best we could to retrieve this error, and by strenous efforts prevented the sale of the road, which would have left no stock to dis pute about. At present the branches are all becoming profitable, and the stock is out of danger, with a prospect of soon not only paying interest, but of making up in time tor loss of back interest. Jdroad Too today ships much more coal than any Bituminous Coal Company in the State, and nearly as much as the whole Cumberland region. "To manage a road with money and cred it is not so difficult, but to manage one so heavily involved as the Broad Top was in 1857, without money or credit, and to in crease the road and sidings within five years ten miles, to improve collieries, build station arid engine houses, and pipe water to them, add eight locomotives to the rolling stock, and at the same tinio relieve the company from embarrassment, we have found to be no small job, whatever others may think to the contrary. "In conclusion I hav only to add. that I have done the best 1 could for the interest of the c mpanv, but I do not at any time wish to bold my position an hour longer than it is the wish of the majority of the stockholders that I should do so." North Carolina. | The rebel papers in this State are ! daily becoming bolder in denouncing j Jeff Davis and bis crew, and give | strong indications that we shall soon I have a rebellion within a rebellion. Lhe following is c( pled from the ! Raleigh Standard of a late date : " We are now reaping the bitter fruits of ' peaceable secession,' in forcing from their once happy and peaceful homes into the army all from eighteen to forty-five years of age, to be driven to the slaughter like oxen to the shambles. And to till up the thinned ranks, the present Congress now has before it the monstrous proposition to conscript all ■ from sixteen to fifty- five years of age, and make them subject to military law, which the Richmond Examiner boldly denounces as nothing less than an attempt to make Mr. Davis Dictator. '• Lot is examine and see what kind of a body it is that is imposing such burdens on the people of North Carolina. " We have a Congress, the legislation of which is controlled by members from Ken tueky, fennessee v Missouri, Arkansas, Louis ana, and other places, who impose odious and oppressive laws upon us, which can no mure be enforced on the people of the States which they profess to represent than upon the people of New York or New England. The chief cause of the revolutionary war which sundered the connection of the Colonies from the mother country was that the English Parliament imposed oppressive laws on the colonies which did not affect the people of England themselves. No conscript law can be enforced upon the people of Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, Arkansas, Louisiana, nor on a large portion of Virginia, Florida, Mississippi, or Texas. No tax lair, nor tith iny, or impressment law can be en forced, on them, while those irresponsible members viay force from their homes every-person in North Carolina able to bear arms, regardless of age or condition, and place them in the army, as is now urged by them in Congress, ami 'leave the helpless women and children to starve. Tuey may put us under a military despotism, und place over us a dictator, and impose taxes and burdens on us which are insujrportable, and there is no redress, unless North Car olina will protect her children. Is it not an outrage on every principle of free government, for men of desperate for tunes, professing to represent other States, on whose soil they dare not set their foot, to make and enforce odi<>u- and oppressive laws uu our people? Are we prepared to submit to this? If not, then let every man arouse himself before it is too late, and denounce these attempts to betray our liberties and place us under a military despotism. Let every man that can speak or write denounce these outrages on civil liberty until their de nunciations are heard aud heeded in Con gress. "But if Congress, in a spirit of dospe ration, should act the tyrant and impose such crushing burdens on the people of North Carolina as are insupportable, then they should demand of the Governor that he forthwith convene the Legislature in order to call a State Convention of ilie sovereign people, to lake into consideration what is best to he done to relieve our people from the grievous burdeus imposed upon them, Let the people speak out, write to their representatives in Congress—yea, hold meet ings, and remonstrate against those ioiquit ous schemes to enslave and starve us. If you do not, silence will be construed into sub mission and approval of the chains that Congress are forging for us. We have too b-ng implicitly trusted to such architects of ruin as Wigfall it Co., who are now for placing every man in the army, and all under the control of a dictator. " Trust them no longer. Remember their fair promises. The dwellers in the garden of Eden when they listened to the tempting prom ises of Satan, were not worse deceived and ruined than were the people of the fair, happy, and blooming South when they listened to the fair promises of those arch deceivers, Yancy, Wise, &. Co. " A heretofore contented, prosperous, and happy people were told by them that we must withdraw all connection from our Northern task-masters, who were making us pay one dollar and fifty cents fur shoes, ten cents per yard for shirting, two dollars per sack for salt, ten cents per pound for sugar, the same for coffee, &c. And these same reckless men, who are now for putting all into the army, (except themselves and a few favorites,) then told us that secession would be peaceable, and there would be no war ; that we were to have a nation of our own, free from extortioners ; a perfect paradise, with the tree of life—the cotton plant—in our midst, before which all nations were to bow down and worship, and from which rivers of free trade were to flow to the ends of the earth, on the bosom of which the rich merchandise from every clime was to lie freighted and poured down on opr laps, free of taxation. How hare thivy deceived us! The blond of hundreds of thousands of our i poor children, smoking from the many buttle Jit Ids, and the cries of slurring women and children tell the tale'. Will our google be, longer deceived by those false pro/diets ami arch deceivers ? Or will they not command the peace and staunch these rivers of blood?" AGRICULTURAL REPORT. The annual report for 1802, the pti), lication of which wan authorised by the last ('< ingress, bus lately turn, to sonic extent, distributed. We urn in deb ted to the lion. Jas T. Utile for a copy. It is the first work of llm kind issued since the organization ( ,i the Agricultural Department aL Washing ton, and we feel sorry that it cannot be laid on the table of every reading farmer in the country. We agree with the West ( hester Record that it is admirably gotten up, and we hope that members of the last Congress, through whose hands it is distributed, will place it in the hands of their Agri cultural Constituents without delay. W bile we congratulate our friend, lion. Isaac Newton, for his success in this 3rst official effort of the kind, we cannot see how he can follow it up with such improvements, from year to year, as will make each one superior to its predecessor. Air. Newton, he fore assuming the duties of Commis sioner of Agriculture, was a practical farmer of Delaware county. Speech of General Meade. In his speech at Philadelphia on Tuesday evening General Meade said : " As I said when I to-jk command of the Army of the Potomac, I say to you now. I have no pledges to make. W hen I return to my army all 1 can say is that we will do the best we can to suppress the rebellion, and to overthrow all those whoare in arms against our common country; to have our Sag res pected, and have it wave over ererv foot of ground from the Canada* to4he Rio Grande, and the golden sands of the Pacific. The banner of the Stars and Bars wo will num ber among the things of the past, and the rebellion, with all its associations, will be re membered as things that have existed, but have no longer any being. " W hat we need is men. I want you here, all of you, every man of you, however small mav be his influence, to use that influence to send recruits to that army. The more we get the better will it be for that army, and the quicker will the war be ended. The war must be ended by hard fighting, and it be comes every man, woman and child to work for the increase of our armies in the field. When that is done I trust that next summer will come to us with peace restored to the land, and happiness, contentment and prosi parity pervading the entire country." Hunting Conscripts with Dogs —The Array and Navy Journal publishes the following extract from a cavalry offi cer's letter, written from Southwestern Tennessee. " 1 have been out with my regiment spouting for three weeks in the region lying between the Tennessee and Mis sissippi rivers, northeast of Memphis. For the first few days, we were after a guerilla company, who were engaged in hunting up, or hunting down, con scripts with dogs. Brutal and horri ble as it may seem, it is nevertheless strictly true, and you may rely on it, that at this very hour, hundreds oft he people of \\ est Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama are being hunted down with blood bounds. 1 could not realize it until by the most positive evidence I find it true. We were once almost within hearing of the baying ot the hounds, and sent a scouting party, who came very near catching some of the devils. If they had been caught they would have received short shrift." With the exception of some skirm ishing between small parties, there is no war news of interest- There have been captured since the beginning of the war, 270 steamers; 15 ships; 25 barks; 30 brigs; 547 schoon ers and 117 sloops. Total; 1045. Not less than 40 have been beached, burn ed or scuttled, to avoid capture. The Rebel steamer Grey Jacket, recently captured by the gunboat Ken nebec, had a cargo of five hundred bales of cotton. The steamer is valued at 8100,000. A "reliable gentleman" who left Richmond on 16th inst., reports that one or two divisions of Lee's army have reinforced Longstrect, and that the attack on Knoxville is to be renewed, lie also reports that the rebels are about evacuating Richmond The Springfield (Illinois) Journal says that Gen. McClernand has ten dered his resignation as a Major Gen eral in the volunteer service of the United States. Advices trora Key West state that three valuableprizes had been captured by the vessels East Gulf Squad ron, namely: The British schooner Don Jose, from Nassau; the bark Roe buck, bound from Havana to Mobile; and the. sloop Hancock, which was ta ken off the Florida coast by the Sun flower. They had all valuable cargoes. Admiral Farragut bad arrived at Key West. —There are still seven townships in Northumberland county that refuse to j accept the Common School System! No wonder they elect copperheads to represent them in the Legislature. Mrs. Marv Piatt died near White Peer „M ills, I nion county, a few weeks ago, aged something over seventy years .She was ;i daughter of John Brady, noted in the Revolutionary annals of Northumberland county; a sister ol Capt. \\ 111. P. Brady, now and for many years past an officer of the State Senate; niece of Gen. Hugh Brady; and a blood relation of Samuel Brady, (lie celebrated Indian tighter. Married. On the 15th int . by Kv. J S McMurray JOSKI'H I OIIAS.S'.MVKit to Miss JANE I l'. IJI.N ION, both .it Centre county. tin the lib jit*)., in Mc\ evMwn, hv Rev. D D t'i nki), I) i>, JAMK§ ROSENKKR H'OIIIII- IMI c anity, to Miss ELIZA ANN AUKAN I'. lit Mifflin county. il. UUtl. i.,.,1 . I,v Key. Clarke, JOHN • Ol |,| l,|; t,, M,,„ KLLJE SIMONS, both of Ml lit 11l 15'HHil V, "'I lloi 1 ill, t b v I>,. v M L Shindle, | it it..l ~| t j„. bride',. father. DANIEL j HAIILKY i. M„,m;.saN HOFFMAN, both <>l rayatttf toMimMp, Juniuta county. At the Lutheran parsonage. in this place on the gliih itit , hv K.-V II K Fleck J V ; [ t,n S TKIPLKY to Miss LEAH BROWN, both of Lewistuwn. On the 21st inHt.. by Key. Shem Yuder J LiiUlSriAN \ODKII, of Brown township, to Miss KA 1 a LhR, of Union township. : (in the 24tb December last, ISRAEL j SI'IGELMKYEK to Miss ELIZABETH ! LLSIf, both of Decatur township. Died. , At the resident:' l of i,j-s brother, on Min day morning. 25th in-t, CARROLL Mc CLE A X, aged about 35 years. In this plate, on M unlay morning la*?, ANN. wife iurn not vc whose child has fled From the regions of the dead, io yon winged angel hand, In a brighter, happier land. In lJrattori township. ELIDE S, son of Edward ami Mary Moore, aged 4 months. Suffer tittle children to come unto me, for ! such is the Kingdom of Heaven." On the _lst inst., in Armagh township, | OEOIvtiE RUBLE, aged 52 years, 5 months ! and 5 days. In the hospital at Alexandria, Va., on the j Mth inst, D. A. MeOLI'RE. of East Water, j ford, Juniata county, late a member of Co. I, 149 th Regiment, P. V., aged 26 years and 10 months. j On the morning of the 15th inst.. very sud denly. Hon. ANDREW PARKER, of Mif j flintown, in the 59th year of his age. At a meeting of the Mifflin county Bar, ! held at Lewistoivn. on the 16th day of Janu ] ary, 1864, E. L. Benedict, esq , was called to ; the chair, when the following preamble and J resolutions were unanimously adopted : | 5V UEKEi.s. The sad intelligence of the death j of Col. Andrew Parker has reached ns, and whereas, his intercourse with our Bar has | been long, intimate, and must cordial, there ! fore Itesolced, That in the death of this highly esteemed and eminent lawyer we have sua tained a loss which we greatly deplore, that we deeply feel for his bereaved family in their affliction, and that we tender theui our sin cere sympathy and condolence. Resolved, That we attend the funeral of ; deceased in a body. Resolved, That these proceedings be pub fished in the papers of Mifflin and Juniata | counties, that they be entered upon the rec ; ords of our courr, and that a copy of them be presented to the family of deceased. T. M. UTTLEV, 11. J. WALTERS, Secretaries. I TO CONSUMPTIVES CIONSU MP IT \ E sufferers will receive a J valuable prescription for the cure of COD : sumption, Asthma, Bronchitis, and all Thmat and Lung affections, (Irec of charge,) by j sending their address to Rev. E. A. \\ ILSON. Williamsburgh, jan2o-6t Kings Co., New York. THE MARKETS. LEWISTOWN, January 27, '.864. CORRECTED BY GEORGE BLVXYKR. Butter, good, slb. 24 Eggs, dozen, 21 Lard. 10 Wool, washed, 70 " unwashed, 41 CORRECTED BY MARKS A WILLIS. Wheat, white bushel, 000 to 150 " red, prime I 50 Corn, old, 1 00 Kye, 1 25 Oats, 75 Barley, 0 80 to 1 20 !• Timothy, 200 Flaxseed, 2 25 Cloverseed 8 00 Potatoes, 50 Dried Apples. 25 pounds, I 75 Marks & Willis are retailing flour and feed as follows: Extra Flour, per 100, 3 80 Fine, do 2 75 Superfine, do 3 50 Family, do 4 00 i Mill Feed, per hundred. 150 Chopped Oats and Corn per 100, 180 Chopped Rye per 100, 2 50 Salt " 2 50 Philadelphia Market. j _Flour —Superfine SO 50, extra G75 a" 25. Rye Hour 0 50. Corn meal 5 50 per bbl. Grain —lied wheat 170 c, white 180a 200c. llye 140a142c. Corn 111. Oats 87c weight. Cloverseed §0 00a 800 per 04 lbs. Flaxseed 315 per bushel. Timothy 3 00. Beef Cattle, Bal2Je; Cows, 820 to 50 esr head; Sheep, 7aße per lb. gross: ogs, 810 50 to 12 tho 100 lbs net. Gen. Meaylo r on Copperheads —At a reception of the officers ot tiiu Lri.-li Bri gade, in New York, last week. Gen. Mea gher, in rising to propose a tonst in favor of President Lincoln, expressed himself in the following pointed and eloquent teuns : "Beware of what has grown to he the most significant designation of Northern enemies ot this country; beware of the reptiles who are known as Copperheads. [Applause, and some hisses j Have no parley with them; show no mercy to them squelch thein [Applause and hisses.] For the enemies of this country in the North, who have no excuse, who l id their friends go forth to do battle, and thin cut down tiie bridges behind them so that they may fall sacrifices to the enemy, as they did when Gen Lee invaded Pennsylvania lust summer, raising a revolt when you were battling for the st irs and stripes upon the huquehanna; as lor these men, we have nothing but detestation; and for the Irish portion of it, I deprecate, I loath. I repudiate, I execrate tliesn " [Applause ] Sealed Proposals lie received until the 10th of Fcb f V ruarv npxt. fur the ERECTION OF A HOUSE on the Parsonage premises at Reedsville, Mifflin county. Pi. For plans and specifica tions eali on either of the undersigned. J D. N AGE NY, T . D. BAKU, J. ELLIOTT. Reedsville, J,-n. 27. !>f4-3t* To the Boot and Shoe Trade, CHASE t: PEDDLE. MA NU?ACIURLE.3 OF UPPERS, IJ kmh Third Sired, (t'f STAIRS,) PHILADELPHIA. Inform the trade that they keep constant ly on hand a fu!! assortment of Men's Wo men and ( hildren Boot and Shoe Uppers. 0 f . every description, made only from prime stock and fitted w ith best materials in the ; most fashionable City Styles. Trial orders are solicited, and prompt attention will be paid to all orders sent to them. Terms—Cash on Delivery. jan 27—3 m iraa aoaaiT \\ r ILL meet at the Commissioners'o - . fioe on SATURDAY, 20th February, at which time persons having objections io tile against any uow on the list, or'other bo siness relative to the subject of relief, are re quested to attend. GEORGE FR YSINGER, ,iaii2i-i) Secretary. FUSE SOAPS. M bite Castile, Honey, Brown do Almond, Glycerine. Ladies Own, Pancine Family, do Family, Gallagher's, Military, Shaving—an excellent article, Erasive, to remove grease spot 6, Shaving Creams, fcc. in large variety, Household, for washing purposes, to be had at E. SWAIN'S Variety Store, LAS I MARKET street, between Biymyer's and Ritz's Stores. jan27 For the Fruit, Flower and Kitchen Garden• 1864 THE 1864 'GARDENER'S MONTHLY. M. G BRINCKLOE. PUBLISHER, Office: 23 North Sixth St., Phila. IIKISTIS SI.SO A YE,%R t Ld iled l>y I homos Aleeh.an. THE MONTHLY CONTENTS ARE: „ BlNTS.—Flower Garden and Pleasure- Ground; 1-ru.t Garden; Vegetable Garden; \Y mdow Gardening. COMMUNICATIONS— Embracing the views of the best writers on Horticulture, Aboricul ture and Rural Affairs. EpixoK.AL-Giving the Editor's views on the important Horticultural improvements Scraps and Queries. New Fruits & Plants, Domestic and foreign Inte ligenee. Foreign rrespondence. Horticultural Notices, With each Department handsomely il lustrated. J These general features will be .etained, and the publisher pledges himsr'f that no labor or expense shall be spared to render the succeeding issues of the Magazine every way worthy of the favor with which his pre. viuus etlorts havp Loeii rtwardftd. SEND FOR A SPECIMEN. I hiladelphia, Jan., 27, 1864.—3t. A First Class Farmers' Magazine for Pcnn 1864. THE PENNSYLVANIA 1664! FARMER & GARDENER, DEVOTED TO AGRICULTURE, HORTICULTURE, AND RURAL AFFAIRS. EDITED AND PUBLISHED BY WM. S. YOUNG & CO., 52 North Sixth Street. Philadelphia TEll.lis : OYE DOLHIt A l'EAlt. The Sixth \ oiume commences with Jan uary number. Having obtained the services of eminent and practical Agriculturalists. Ibuticultural ists Stock Breeders and Bee Keepers, we confidently offer the Current Volume as one of the best ever issued, for originality, prac tical thought and reliable information. SEND FOR A SPECIMEN. Philadelphia, Jan., 27, 1864. 3t. * AyEEKLY LIST OF LETTERS remain- M mg in the Post Office at Uwistowu, .January 21, 1864. Brown Mrs. E. E. Miller FII Decker Lieut. A W. Preble Mr,.' Abraham Englund Mrs Ellen Shively George Eisenhaner lleury Snyder Albert folk Amos Stores Samuel Kayes James Stible A. R Kunklenmn CatharineZook Samuel Mo wry Miss Nancy (colored.) Persons inquiring for letters on the abvc or any other list will please state on whioj 5 !•? are advertised One cent due on eacl . jan27 SAMUEL COMFORT, P. M.