IS S©SR A GNMGIMISIEIKESS whole No. 2763. IJLewistowa Post Office. M ails arrive and close at the Lswistown P. i. as follows . ® - ARUIVS. Eastern through, 5 33 a.m. j " through and way 421pm. |'l Western " " " 10 38 a. ni. Bellefon'e '■ " " 2 30p m. i 1 Northumberland, Tuesdays, Thursdays and , aturdays, t> 00 p. ui. j CLOSE. Eastern through 8 0o p. in. : 1 •' " and way 10 00 a. m Western " " -3 30 p. m. j'l Bellefonte 800 " j Northumberland (Sundays, Wednesdays 1 nd Fridays) 8 00 p. m. j Office open from 7 30 a. m. to 8 p. m. On : l uudays from Bto 9 am. S. COMFORT, P. M. j Lewistown Station. m Trains leave Lewistown Station as follows - . Westward. Eastward j Baltimore Express, 4 40 a. m. Philadelphia " 533 " 12 20 a. m 1 Line, 626 p. in. 350 " HVast Mail. 10 38 Pail, 4 21 " fsffhrough Accommodation. 2 35 p. m. .u®migrant, 9 12 a. m. Through Freight, 10 20 p. m. 120a m. -fast " 340a. m. 815 " '*plxpress " 11 00 " 235 p. tn. Express, 5 00 " 9 05 CjC'ial Train. 12 45 p. m. 10 38 a m. -"L'col Freight, 645a. m. 626 p. tn. CarGalbratth's Omnibuses convey passengers to 7g!§jkri<i from all the trains, taking up or setting them Krapowu ai all points within the borough limits. GrEC. vr. SLEEK, Attorney at Law, I Office Market Square, Lewistown, will at tend to business in Mifflin,Centre and Hunting- : Jj||don counties myifi rs.. J.i. icAr.zs H/AFCERS his Professional services to the ! citizens of Lewistown and the surround- King country. Office in the Public Square op , B puffite the Lewistown Ilotel. jan 13-6ui* § Large Stock of Furniture on Hand. ; A FELIX is still manufacturing all kinds of Furniture. Young married persons j *ss and others that wish to purchase Furniture if will find a good assortment on hand, which.! :/■ will 1"* sold cheap for cash, or country pro I Ifduce eken in exchange for same. Give me J a call * r alley street, near Black Bear Ho i Jacob C. Blymyer & Co., f Produce and Commission JYler- > chants, LEWISTOWN, PA. Hay-Flour and Gram of all kinds pur B chased at market rates, or received on storage ; ft and shipped at usual freight rates, having If storehouses and boats of their own, with care m ful captains and hands. Plaster, Fish, and ■ Salt always on hand. sep2 j Lock Repairing, Pipe Laying, Plumbing and White Smithing ■| ITMIE above branches of business will he j §!% X promptly attended to on application at j W the residence of the undersigned in Main .*"*• street. Lewistown. janLO GEORGE MILLER. AMBROTS EYP 1 The Gems of the Season. rTMIIS ; s no humbug, hut a practical truth X The pictures taken by Mr. Burkholder -j' are unsurpassed for BOLDNESS TRUTH I FULNESS. BEAUTY OF FINISH, and I DURABILITY. Prices varying according | to size and quality of frames and Cases. Room over the Express Office. Lewistown, August 23, 18G0. I J. A. ROHllEll, . DENTIST, I TT7"OULI> respectfulv inform the citizens > t of Mifflin and Huntingdon counties, | that he wiil practice at the following times || and places: The first week in each month at MeYey towD; second at Belleville: yiird at McAlavey's Fort, Huntingdon county. He is prepared to execute work of all kinds pertaining to his profession. Teeth inserted on silver and gold plate or vulcanite base. Extracting and filling teeth done in the most approved manner. jel7-ly. EISVfALL'S SEW PATENT HEMIC SOLES & HEELS A Great Saving of Boots and Shoes. TIIIS article is light, cheap and durable, will wear about four times as long as leather, is made to fit the shape of any boot or shoe, makes no noise, cannot slip, keeps the boots from running over at the sides and down at the heel, and can readily be put on. Call and trv theiu. Fur naif f,v mar 2 BILLY JOHNSON. L _ * Tuscarora Female Seminary. Academia, Juniata Co., Pa, COMMENCES its Summer Term May 4th 1864 For circulars address Mrs O. J FRENCH Principal, or ANDREW PATTERSON, Proprietor ap6 1864-1 y CHE MHSTML TRUIkMS. The meanest face you look upon, the clay of coarsest mould, Thro* which no ray of spirit-day, close-watching you behold; Where petty cares have dimmed the glance, and fur- ; rowaU in the brow, And eTil thought a sign baa wrought beyond erasing j now—. This form so mean, so cold, so low, this seeming soul- j less clay, Wore once the grace of a baby-face, and the beauty of ; childhood's day; Those eyes once gazed with eager trust, above, around below. And a mother with pride that was hard to hide, pushed the hair from the open brow. The proudest heart that wakes your pride by the evil I spell of sin, The harshest tone that makes hoarse your own, if there j be no watch withiu; The most unloving, unloved soul that can slight your | hope or fear, And careless look down on your smile or frown, as if from a separate sphere— That nature cold and proud must yet mysterious ter- | rors know, Must wrestle with Death for each gasping breath, j must be laid in the dust below; That voice must sink into whispers faint, and mean- i est service crave, And that hand must cling to some humble thing in a ; shrinking from the grave. j Familiar thought, I own, to call this truth of our com- j moQ lot, Yet midst jar and strife of the daily life, its lesson is forgot; We pity withold from the haughty dust that must shroud aud pail endure, And with loathing shun some world-stained one that was once a baby pure. Not worthy in vain were the fancy tasked irom the actual oft to turn To the rosy sleep only cradles keep, to the shade of j the fuueral urn; The present may all loveless seem ; be o'er it a mem- j ory east. Of the first low cry and the last sad sigh—of the Fu- I ture and the Past. ' s. c. c. ; —Chambers' Journal. j mES&IKETEHES What Came of a Vaiettine. On the evening of the 13th of February, ! 1850, two young men fiat in a comfortably furnished room in a large New \<>rk hoard ■ ing house. A bright fiie glowed in the | grate, well chosen engravings adorned the walls, and a bright light was diffused about the room Irom an Argatid burner. | Let uie introduce the occupants of the. 1 ; apartment as Tom Stacy and John Wilbur. I young men of twenty five or thereabouts, who were knowu in business circles asSta i ey & Wilbur, retail dry goods dealers. No Broadway, 'i hey had not neen in busi ; nefis long, but werealieady doing unu?uull\ i well They had taken apartments together. ; one of which is now presented to the | reader. 'lias it occurred to you. Wilbur,' asked his partner, removing hi 9 cigar, and knock ing away the ashes, -to morrow is St. Y al • entine's day ?' i 'Yes, I thought of it this afternoon, as I was walking up from the store.' 'So f Ld I, aud to some purpose too, as I ; will show you.' Tom Stacy went to the drawer and drew out a gorgeous valentine, an elaborate com ; : biuation of hearts, doves, etc. 'What do you think I gave for that?'he j | asked 'I don't know, I'm sure. It appears to I I be verw elegant.' j 'lt cost me ten dollars ' 'Whew !' whistled Wilbur 'lt strikes me you are very extravagant or vcr*.* de j voted. May I know what, fair dauisel is to | be made glad by the receipt ot this elegant ; missive?' 'That's my secret,' said T - m laughing. I 'I don't mind telling you, however. It's j to go to Edith Castleton.' . 'I presume you feel particularly inter ested in the young ludy? 'Not at all, but I told her I would send a valentine, ct a villa! Shau't you conform ' | to the custom of the day?' * j '1 had not thought of it,' said John I thoughtfully, 'but I believe I will.' I 'And what fair lady will you select as j . i the recipient?' t '\ r ou remember the poor seamstress who occupies an attic in the hcose.' 'Yes, I have met her on the stairs two or three times.' 'She looks as if times wore hard with her; i I think I'll send her a valentine.' j 'Aud what good do you think it will do i i : her?' asked Stacy, in surprise. I ! Wilbur went to his desk, and taking out ; a sheet of note paper, drew from his port inonaie a ten dollar bill and wrapped it in ' the paper, on which he had pteviously writ t ten, 'From St. Valentiue,' and placed the g whole in an envelope. I 'There,' said he, 'my valentine has cost i. as much as yours, and I veuture to say it will be as welcome.' "You arc right, I wish now I had not bought this costly trifle. However as it is purchased, I will send it.' ♦ 1 b The next day dawned clear and frosty. [t was lively enough for those who sat by r comfortable dies aud dined at luxurious ta bles, but lor the poor who shared uoue of WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1864. these advantugts, it was indeed a bitter day In an attic room meanly furnished, sat a young girl, pale and thin. She was cower ing over a scant) wood tire, the best she could afford, which heated the rootu very insufficiently. She was sewing steadily, shivering from time to time as the cold blast shook the windows and found its way through the crevices. Poor child ! Life had a very black aspect for her on that winter day. She was alone in the world. There was absolutely no oue on whom she could call for assistance, though she needed it sorely enough. The thought came to her more than once in her discomfort, 'ls it worth while living any lunger!" But she recoiled from the sin of suicide. She might starve to death, hut she would not take the life that God had given her. Plunged in gloomy thought she contin ued to work Al l at once a step was heard ascending the staircase which led to her door, t-he arose in some surprise and opened it, thinking it must be the landlady or one of her seivants. She was right. It was a servant. 'Here'B a letter for you that the postboy just brought, Miss Morris.' 'A letter for me !' repeated Helen Mor ris, in surprise, taking it from the servant's hand. 'Who can have written to me?' 'Maybe it's a valentine, Miss,' said the girl laughing. 'You know this is Valen tine's day. More by token, I've got two this morning. One's a karaker (caricature,) so mistress calls it Just look at it.' Bridget displayed a highly euibell'shed pictorial representation of a female hard at work at the wash tub, the east of beauty decidedly Hibernian. Helen Morris laughed absently, but did not open her letter while Bridget remained —a little to the disappointment of that curious damsel. Helen slowly opened the envelope. A banknote tor ten dollars dropped from it to the floor. iSiie eagerly road the few words on the paper—'From St. Valentine !' •Heaven be praised!' she said, folding her hands gratefully.' This sum will ena hie me to carry out the piau which I had in view.' Eight years passed away. Eight years with their lights and shadows They brought with then the merry voices of ehil dreri—they brought with them new made graves—happiness to "some and grief to others. Toward the last they brought the greatporo merciai crisis of '57, when houses seeming to he built upon a rock tottered all Mt once to their fall Do not many remember thai time all too well, when merchants, with anx ious faces, ran f rom oue to another to solicit help, and met only averted laces and ois iriifitittl looks? \mi how was if in that time of universal bmiiue with our friends—Ftacy and Wil bur? Up to 1857 they had been doing an ex eel lent business They had gradually en Urged the sphere of their operations, ami were rapidly growing rich, wheu this eras! came. They immediately took in sail. Botl were prudent, and both felt that this w<n the time when this quality was urgently | needed By great efforts they had succeeded in 1 keeping up till the 14th of February, 1858 j On that morning a note of two thousand i dollars came due. This was their last peril. That surmounted they would i e able to go 1 on with assured confidence. But ala 9 ! this was the rock of which they i had most apprehension. They had taxed i their resources to the utmost. They had l called upon their friends, hut their friend? ! were employed in faking care of themselves; j and the selfish policy was the one required i ! then. 'Look out for number one,' superseded the golden rule for the time being. As I have said two thousand dollars were due on the 14th of February. 'IL'W much have you got towards it?' asked Wilbur, as Stacy came in at half past j eleven. 'Three hundred and seventy dollars,' was j the dispirited reply. ' 'Was that all you could raise?' inquired hi? partner turning pale. 'All.' 'Are you sure you thought of every j body.' '1 have been everywhere. I'm fagged to death,' was the weary reply ot Stacy, as he sank exhausted into a chair. 'Then the crash must come,' said Wil bur, with a gloomy resignation. 'I suppose it must.' There was a silence. Neither felt inclined to say anything. For six months thgy had j been struggling with the tide. They could see shore, but in sight of it they must go down. At this moment a note was brought in by ahoy There was no postmark. Evidently ' he was a special messenger. ! It was opened at once by Mr. Wilbur, to whom it was directed. It contained but ; these few words only: . ! 'lf Mr. John Wilbur will call imcnedi j [ ately at No. Fifth avenue, he will learn - j something to his great advantage ' f! Jobu Wilbur road it with surprise, aud passed it to his partner. 'What does it mean do you-think ' 'I don't know.' was the reply, 'but I advise yon to go at once ' 'it seem? to be a leuii: e handwriting said M t? l-?r fh-'ugf.tfuHy '\es Don't you know any lady on Fifth Avenue?' 'Well, it is worth noticing. We hive met with so little to our advantage latch j that it will be a refreshing variety ' In five minutes John Wilbur jumped in ; to a horse cur aud was on his way to No , Fifth avenue. lie walked up to the door of a magnifi cent brown stone house and rang the bell, j He was instantly admitted, and shown in- i to the drawing room, superbly finished. j He did not have to wait long. An ele- • gaut. lady, scarcely thirty, entered, and bow ing, said : 'You do not remenber me, Mr. Wilbur?' 'No, madam ' said he, in perplexity. 'We will waive that, then, and proceed to business How has your bouse borne the crisis in which so many of our large j firms have gone down ?' John Wilbur smiled bitterly. 'We have struggled sucee-sfully till to day,' he answered. 'But the end has come. : Unless we can raise a certain sum of inon | ey by two. we are ruined.' 'What sum will save you ?' was the la ! t'y'f question The note due is two thousand dollars. ; Towards this we hkve but three hundred ; and seventy five. 'Excuse me a moment.' said his hostess. She left the room hut quickly leturned •There, said she, handing a small strip of paper to John W'ilbur. 'is my check for ; two thousand dollars. You can repay it at your convenience. It you shou d re quire more, eome to me again.' •Madam, you have saved us,' excl.limed ! Wilbur, springing to his teet iri delight ! • What can have inspired in you such j a benevolent interest in our p osperity ?' 'Do you remember. Mr. Wilnur,'said tiie lady, 'a certain valentine, containing a j ten dollar note, which you sent to a young I girl occupying an attic in your lodging i house, eiiiht years since?' > 'I do distinctly. I have often wondered j what became of the young girl. L think | her name was Helen Morris.' •Bhe stands before you,' was the quiet , response. 'You, Helen Morris!' exclaimed Wil ! bur, starting back in a*nazeuient. 'You 1 surrounded with luxury !' j 'No wonder you are surprised. Life has strange contrasts. The money which ; you sent me' seeuied to come from God 1 was on the brink of despair With it I j put iny wardrobe in repair, and made ap j plication for the post of companion to a i wealthy lady. I fortunately obtained it. ' [ had been with her hut two years when a : gentleman in her circle, immensely wealthy, j offered me his hand in marriage Ics ' teemed hnn. He was satisfied with that i married him. A few years since he died, i leaving me this house, and an immense for i tune. I have never forgotten you, having i accidentally learned tnar my timely succor j came from you. I resolved, if fortune ev i er put it in my power, I would befriend I von as you befriended me. That time has c one. I have paid the first instalment of my debt as Helen Morris ' John Wilbur advanced, and respectful !ly took her hand 'You have nobly repaid uie,' he said. 'Will you also award me ! the privilege ot occasionally calling upon : | you?' _ I i 'I shall he most happy,' said Mrs. Eust j tace, cordially. John took a hurried leave, and return I t ed to his store as the clock struck one j He showed his delighted partner the check i he had just received. 'I haven't time to explain,' he said,'this ) j must at once be cashed.' 'Two o'clock cauie and the firm was : saved—saved from their last peril. Hence j forth they met with nothing but prosper . ous gales. ! ' What more? Helen Eustace has again changed her name. Bhe is now Hplen Wilbur, and j her husband uow lives at No Fifth Av enue. And all this came ot a valentine. lEIPMAMeif, The Drunkard's Son. 'Mother, this bread-is very hard. Why don't we have cake and nice things, as we ; used to when we lived in the great house? ! Oh, that was such a great house, mamma, and I did love to live there so. You made j sweet uiusie there, mamma, with your fiug ers when Fa would sing Pa used to laugh theu aud take me on bis knee, and say I ' was lis own dear boy. What makes Pa > sick, Ma ? I wish he wasn't sick—for it makes me afraid when he stamp? on the ' floor, aud says so loud, 'George go off to ' bed !' say, when will he get well and take me on his knee and love me as he used to? } But Ma, there is a tear in your eye —let me wipe it. There another comes; oh— another ! Did I make you cry these tears, - mamma?' 'Hush, little innocent, you can i not stop your mother's rears ; lor they are the overflowings of a fouutain, filled with 1 blighted hopes, anguish and misery, she mz.MFߣ2f ©SCTTCSr* ZKftSST* cannot tell you when your father will love, j for alas, he is a drunkard.' I heard a beautiful boy, scarcely four years old, lisping this tu his mother; ami 1 pitied him f o my inmost soul. His fath er >va- once rich :.nd happy, and nearly i loiized hi? little son ; but in an evil hour I;.* began to sip the intoxicating cup —the habit fun) grown upon him untii the peace j of lus family was destroyed, and he a ty j >aru The beautiful Louse in which they : bod lived, was now exchanged tor a miser able cottage in the suburbs of the city; \ I and little George doomed to be the com . panion of the idle and vicious 'Another Nail in Your Coffin' A young nephew of my father's captain 1 sailed with them a long voyage around the globe, and was a favorite with all, but was ' ' sadly intemperate. Whenever he took a glass of grog Captain Brintnell was aecus tonied to say. 'Ah, Ned, there'? another nail in coffin.' And so it proved, lor the poor lad bad so poisoned arid fired his blood that it could not stand the heat of the tropical sun, and he sunk under ex posure to it, and died the miserable death ! •ot the drunkard They put in to a little ; lonely island, and made him a grave under the green sward, hut no loving mot hi r, or ■ gentle sister could weep over it, no psalm was sung nor prayer offered. The nails \ had ail been driven in that roueh coffin, and he was laid to rest in it until the res urrection morning. And so thousands are busy to day driv ; ing with vigorous blows the nail? in their ow'n coffiins That soldier who feeds his j growing taste for strong drink is almost sureiy preparing himself a coffin ?h mi l he ever he wounded, or any illness cause liiui to be taken to the hospital. Said one well conversant wirh soldier life, 'The sick and wounded 'eold water i ' men' always stood disease and wounds and opera ions 'omter than chote Aho drank liquor. Disease of the camp, wool"* no* , amputations were but death watrants for i drunkards.' General Have luck also remarks/The med ical officers have distinctly attributed the rapid recovery oi our wounded at GLuzne to their lormer abstinence from strong j drinks' i Testimony to the same effect might he , grcately extended Is it not worse than foily, is it not almost madness for any one ! thus to jeopardize h 1 ? life for u mere uio i mer.tary gratification ? Is it not viitually ! suicide, a crime which leave no space for i repentance, which therefore has no for- : ; giveness ? Weigh this consideration j well when next you take up the wine cup, j j and unless your are quite prepared to drive i ' another nail home in your coffin, don't quaff lit off Do not pass it to another, but let | ; the thirsty ground drink it up. It will do j i no harm there. When the youthful Summerfield was of fered brandy to revive his sinking powers in hi? last illness, he put it aside, saying, 'No; when 1 die. 1 die softer ' Ah, dy ing in a sober, fearful reality Who would r not rather meet his last enemy with clear r vision and a full comprehension of the on i ly way in which he may be vanquished ? I 'Thanks "tie unto God, who •giveth us the . victory, through our Lord Jesus Christ.'— I : t"orri .-poncfeure of die £. S. Times. mm-j-MRWi The Rag-Collecting Brigade- The waste which is made in population of nearly three millions of people, would, if properly attended to, prove an enormous source of profit. Look, for instance, to the great loss which at the present time results from tho waste of materials used for making paper, a matter of much con sequence, for we are uow obliged to buy : enormous quantities of rags for paper making ' from abroad. For the purpose of prevent i ing this, the R.g-Collecting Briga-Je, in i connection with the London Ragged Schools, has been formed at Albion place, L union wall, where at the present time I there are more than thirty hoys and youths, who, with the trucks to which we have before referred, collect a considerable quan tify of rags The advantage is great to poor boys, and produces also a national saving. For instance, although this llag collecting Brigade has been established but a very short time, there have been paid up ! to last Christmas 424/ in wages to boys who, hut lor this institution, would have been dangerous vagabonds upon tht LOD i dou streets. Besides, they have collected, I by four trucks only, in nine months, 49,- i 818 bottle-; of paper, 38 tons 19cwt. 1 qr. ; 15 ib.; racs, mixed, 9 ton? 18 cwt 2 qr. 1 221b. There are also various rags and bones, carpet, cloth, fat Ac , metals, and rope, altogether making a weight of goods I collected by these lads of 82 tons 3 qr. ! 27 lb Beside this there have been about 70/. worth ot stuff purchased which was not bought by weight, and the committee | have good reason for believing that more ! than one half of this material would never have found its way into market but for the ! facilities which the brigade afl'orda The materials collected are of the most varied ! description; cocked hats, hearse trappings, old aquariums; in oue bag a million of pos tage stamps, and iu a lot of rubbioh was i found a Bank of England obsfk-book, New Series—Vol. XVIII, No. 23. which wu9 at once forwarded to the Bank: in another was found hal?-u dozen psir9 of new stockings, which were duly returned to the owner —Jjondon Exchange. The Palm Tree of Scripture. —Pclra tree, a tree remarkable tor loftiness.straight ness : nd productiveness, and hence, uiodo an emblem in .Scripture of uprightness, fruitfulnoss and victory. Its fruit is the date, very sweet and nourishing, and a large portion of the inhabitants ot Egypt, Arabia aud Persia subsist almost entirely upon it. Camtds are fond of the stone. Palm branches were signals of joy and triumph The leaves are six or eight feet long, and proportionabiy broad when spread out, and are used to cover houses, and make couche?, baskets, bags, fences, hats, etc. From the fibre.-, ot the branches are made thread, ropes, rigging, etc. Indeed the natives (says Gibbon) celebrate, either in prose or verse, three hundred and sixty uses to which the trunk, branches, leaves, juice and fruit are applied. The palm tree attains maturity in thirty years from planting the seed, and continues in lull strength for seventy or eighty years, bcur ing annually three or four hundred pound# of dates; and finally dies about two hun dred years old. From its sap, palm wine is made, called by the natives araky. It is a beverage which easily intoxicates and is thought by Bishop Lowth to be tho 'strong drink' nientioted by Isaiah.—Jew ish Chronicle. —Tho Harrisburg Telegraph ''Bays that it is not probable there will he a call made on Gov. Cnrtin for 'lie mili tia of the State, at this time. —Newfound and is said to be a country without a reptile, arid the Chattanooga Ga ze'te says a Vallandighum is a reptile without a country he ought to 'move' to Newfoundland. —Tho House of Representatives of ] larrisburg, passed, with amendments, ill" let lor the payment of claims for damages' by 'ho rebel raids. Also an act for the payment of the money ad vanced by the banks to pay the militia called into service 1862. The bill to provide for the instruction of or phan children of soldiers, alter some discussion, was postponed. Xeat Retort —'When a superior race like ours,' said one of the chivalry the other day to a modest looking federal sol dier, 'crnies in contact with an inferior race, like the niggers, what do you think will be the result?' '[ guess the contrast must result in a big crop of muluttoes in your State, judg ! ing from the complexion of a good many of your people,' retorted the soldier, ' THE RELIEF FUND. ; T~M)R the information of all concerned, the _l following regulations are made public: Ist. In ali cases a certificate of being cred ited to some district in Mifilin county must accompany the application. This must be in writing, either from the Adjutant General's office, from a mustering officer, or a bounty ! committee. I 2d. Tiie application must state, by endorse ment ut the head or on tfae back the namo of the soldier, hi? company aud regiment. 3d. Two or three men ought not to aot for an entire borough or township in signing the certificate of recommendation as deserving the relief. 4th. Twelve weeks pay, in three monthly orders, is given, when all recent applications are discontinued. If a renewal is asked for, the parties must apply to the Board of Re lief in person, or show positive evidence that i they are in need. Justices of the Peace, bounty committees, and all others making promises to soldiers or their families, will govern themselves by the above regulations, as I shall hereafter pay no attention to applications unless they conform to them, but file them away for actiou by the Bo rd of Relief. Where the papers are all right or approach ing the proper form, there is no difficulty in being placed on the list for twelve weeks, but so many of late have been informal—in ma ny cases leaving me to bunt up the necessary evidence of credit. &e —that I am compelled to ask for more care. GEORGE FRYSINGER, ap27-6t Sec'y. > f the Relief Board. Estate of Andrew Watt, deceased. X- OTIDE is hereby given that letters of i. v administration on the estate of Andrew Watt, late of Brown township, Mifflin couo*" ty. deceased, have been granted to the un dersigned, residing in said township. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment, and those hav ing claims to pre&eut them, duly authentica ted for settlement. JOHN D. BARR. | apl3* Administrator. • Estate of Robert Wallace, deceased. ■ "VTOTICE is hereby given that letters tes lament iry on the estate of Robert YV al lace, lae of Wayne township, Mifflin county, dec.! have been granted to the undersigned, the hret named residing in Indiana county. Pa., and the latter in Newton Hamilton, Mifflin county. All persons indebted to said estate are requested to make immediate payment, and those having claims to present thein du ly authenticated for settlement. WM. WALLACE. Ind. 00.. my 4 JOHN PURCELL, N. Hamilton. BEST Note and Letter paper at march 2. SW AIN'S. i ATTOLF'S celebrated Hanover Gloves, just , 1 TV received by R. t\ KLLId.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers