THE GAZETTE. LEWISTOWN. FA. Wednesday, November 2,1864. " G. A. R. FRYSINGER, PUBLISHERS. K*, VUf < I* iho 11 paper in this part of tho tut" print*-it 011 h f.woi prvsss ates in ofir ratioo—lua Adarns Power Press for the Paper, a doni te mediant hand press for Jobs, and a Newbury Jobber for Blanks. Cards. Ac. TEEMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. The GAZETTE 1- pnbHshed every Wednesday by GEORGE Fp.rsi.vGEa \ >.. x, at ii.Ao in advance, or fc at Ihe end of the voar. FOR PKI-SIDKM, ABRAHAM LINCOLN. FOR VICE PRRSIDKWT. ANDREW JOHNSON. UNION ELECTORAL TICKET. Morton McMiclntel, Th omas On n ningha in, Robert P. King, G. Morrison Coates. llenry Bum in, William 11. lvern, Barton 11. Jenks, Cliarles M. Runk. Robert Parke, William Taylor, John A. Hiestand, Richard 11. Coryell, Edward Halidav, Charles F. Read, Elias W. Hale, Charles 11. Shriner, John Wistcr, David M'Conaughy, .David W. Woods, , Isaac Benson, Jolin Pat ton. Samuel B. Dick, Everard Bierer, John P. Pcnne}-, Ehenezer MMunkin, John \V. Blancbard. tef GO AND VOTE EARLY, TAKE YOUR NEIGHBOR WITH YOU and see that yon have the Union Ticket. Wanted at this office, a load of good fodder, and good winter apples. The official soldiers' vote of this county, published in another column, hears upon its face a refutation of the libels ot the Democrat on the officers of the army influencing their votes. According to it, there are no honest officers in it unless they arc Yallandig ham sneaks, and the judges, inspect ors and clerks, although taken from both officers and men, arc all rascals ot the most approved stamp. The real wonder in the vote referred to is that 80 many should have voted for candi dates who opposed allowing soldiers to vote at all. We know that a majority of the officers in the army, of both high and low decree —just like nearly all the office holders at home—are auxious supporters of Lincoln And why .' Simply because war is a prof itable business, to them, and the longer if lasts the more money they make. 88,000 a year, and 85.000 a year, and even 82,000, (which latter sum is about what captains get.) are very snug gums, especially for broken down politicians and one horse law yers, for there are really too many such holding the offices.— True Democrat. This is certainly one of the most ex traordinary attacks upon army officers we have yet read, and out Hcrods Herod in unpatriotic zeal for the Yal- Jandigham peace crew. There are no doubt some men among the officers who are governed there as they would be at home by mercenary motives, but that all or a majority of those who are hourly liable to be killed or wounded, expose life and all they hold dear for the sake ot a few dollars salary T , is a libel upon them as unjust as it is un generous. \V e could give numerous instances of both captains and colonels who have endured all the privations incident to war, who could have lived at home at their case in the enjoyment of wealth. We know others who left happy homes and good situations, with a full knowledge of the risk they ran —but, according to the Democrat, pat riotism, love of country, and a desire to vindicate the laws against a foul re bellion, had no place in their actions, but all was a lowy-grovelling, mercena ry spirit! \\ hen such infamous senti ments are instilled into themindsofvo ters in the name of demoejacy, men who have still some regard for our fate as a nation, may well tremble for their country. Soldier's Vote. The following are the official figures of the soldier's vote, as received at the Secretary of State's office: Union 17,888 Democratic 5,282 Majority 12,656 —ln the Court of Appeals, of Marv land on Friday, the application for an injunction in the case of the new Con stitution was dismissed, and the Gov ernor has issued his proclamation, declaring the new Constitution adopt ed. " Hard Times " j The Democrat insists that times are I hard and with its characteristic pre f tended sympathy with tenant farmers. mechanics and day laborers, cites them as sufferers, and then has a fling at any and everybody who do not spend -i all they make, including leading dem °r j ocrats and sundry others who we feel pretty certain have made more money s ' in these war times than any republi j cans we know of in this county. But v to the point. With wheat at 220} or ! bushel, new corn 1 35, hav 820 per ton, f butter from 35 to 40 per lb., poultry J 25 cents, and everything else in pro . portion, with ready sale tor cash, what j is to prevent the tenant men from get ! ting along? And so with the median . .... ie. He has raised his prices so as in a great measure to correspond with the : prices of goods. So too with the la borer. Instead of bis having emplov i ment a few days in a week at 75 to 80 cents a day, labor now seeks him with constant employment at from 81.50 to 82.00 per day. N r or are the actually necessary articles of living so high as to be beyond the reach of all these, for : the simple reason that people can and do buy them and still have more mon | ey than they ever had before. The ; sugar we are now using on our table j cost 25 cents per lb.; flour is not as j high as it was eleven or twelve years ago; coffee, according to city quota tions, ought to be soid at 40a45 cents per lb., and as we now use one pound where we formerly used three, we re- I peat it that the poorer classes at the ' present day have a better opportunity of making and saving money than they i , ever had before. If however like i j some fools we know of they throw ■ away 810 here, 820 there, and 850 ' somewhere else for silks, satins and ' other claptraps, without a tittle of ben j efit to themselves or anybody else, we ! do not wonder that •• hard times" stare ! them in the lace, and serves them ! right. The Way of the Transgressor is Hard. I The Lagrange (Missouri) American | has an account ot the arrest in that | place of a man who boasted of bis i rebel proclivities and his participation ! I in the murder of the Missouri militia | at Centralia. During one of his more 1 | peaceful frames of mind he dictated the following letters: HANNIBAL, MO., Oct. 6th, 1864. To MRS. CENA SMITH, Lyons, Clinton County, lowa :My Dear Wife—l bid you good bye —L hope to meet you io heaven j I —I die like a man. My dear wife, I married you under an I assumed name. My right name is A. B i ! Bloom. 1 want you to get a gravestone for our ! child Bammy 1 die for my country like a man, ever true to my principles. May God bless you | —time hastens. 1 have thrown icy life away, which I had no right to do. \\ rite to Billy Potts and tell him 1 am gone. If Billy comes back from the army, marry him like a woman. Tell BassGard- 1 ner good-bye. I bid you all goodbye. May' God bless you. Cena, I am trains to be bung. A. B. BLOOM. HANNIBAL, Mo., Oct. 6, 1864. MRS. JOHN 11. LAWHATON, Lewistown,! j Pennsylvania: Dear Sister—These hands ( j will soon be cold in death ! I write you for the last time. I wrote to you since I ! left home, but got no answer. lam going home to Heaven to meet my mother ] hope you will meet me there. I have been in the rebel array. lam going to be hung time hastens and 1 have but little time jto say anything—l die like a man—l was \ taken as a rebel spy. May God bless you ! 1 Bid my brothers and all my friends good bye. A. B. Bloom is gone—he is no more. : ; | My wile is living in Lyons, Clinton Co., , lowa. I was married in Little Rock, Ar ; kansas. 1 want you to take Cena Bloom and keep her with you while you live. I die like a man for mv country. A. B BLOOM. He was taken to Hannibal, Mo., tried and executed on the 7th October bv a detail of twenty-four men. TheCour . 1 ier of that place says; i The prisoner gave his name as Ilughey I). Bloom, and stated that he had married his present wife, who resides in Lyons, j Clinton county, lowa under the assumed name of Smith, at Little ltock, Ark., a few years since, aud that his wite'is ignorant of . his real name One of his statements is t to the effect that he enlisted in the rebel , perv ice and served three years, when he - deserted and enlisted in the Federal service * I t Chicago, receiving a bounty of 8300 ! deserted at Springfield, 111., last Tuesday! j and made his way to Quincy, took a boat i ! tor Lagrange, wbeie he was arrested and i j; sent to this place. Another statement ; ; which he made, that he had been with ! Anderson, and had taken a part at the late 1 massacre at Centralia, and we learn that he i asserted that he knew some of the men that belong to Capt. Theis' company. The coat which he had on was identified, we ; learn as belonging to one of the members ot Capt. Lancaster's company. There was we learn a man of the : name of Hugh B. Bloom a resident of this place years ago, and although the name (if Lawhaton is evidently an error, it is no doubt the same person. Official Returns of the Soldiers' Vote for Mifflin County . | liciHtiur*. | Mi-iulm r* 11/ AtKCuMit. | VohttiHtniaticr. Auditor. Barker.* Johnston. Walters. Ohriaty Itfoope* Baiabtich* (foama Africa Wilson* Taylor- Whiteh'd*Weil Co. (}, 12th Cavalry, 1 11 11 * 1 Co. O, 40th, 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Cump Roinot. 1 t I 11 Co. F, lath Cavalry. 1 4 .1 1 6 3 1 1 8 5 1 4 1 4 Co. K. 205 th. 24 49 24 24 49 49 24 24 49 49 25 4fi 25 4* Co. H. 49th. | 1 3 1 4 3 11 4 3 1 3 I 3 Nut. Hospital, Hal fi more, 1 11 11 11 Co. |, Hth. I 11 11 i Co. M, 18th Cavalry. ts (i $ 6 0 6 6 5 0 fi (> 0 fi fi Co. U,K4th. I II II 11 Co. ft. 9tli Cavalry. 0 2 0 0 2 2 0 6 2 2 0 2 fi 2 Hospital JNo. 2, Nahvillp. 3 8 3 3 3 2 2 Ca <>p Biddte, Carlisle. 1 II 11 11 11. S. Wen Hospital. York. l It II ll Co. P,4oth. 3 1 3 3 1 1 4 4 2 2 2 Clarvsville Hoap., Md. 1 II Co. 11, 49th. 11 11112 2 111 Co. A, 49th. 5 5 5 5 5 5 5 Co. P. 194t1t. 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 Co. 11. 184 th. II 11 12 12 13 13 11 10 11 11 0 3 6 3 (lump Htotietnan. I). O. 11 11 Cos. C and il, IB4tli. 2 13 1 1 10 10 1 1 8 8 4 4 . Camp Bradford. 11 11111111 1 1 Co. 0,215t Cavalry 5 1 10 10 4 4 7 7 4 4 5 1 5 1 Co. 13,20 th Cavalry. 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 kh 1 1 ; Co. 11, 195 th. ti 0 fi 5 7 fi , 6 a (16 60 6 0 ■ lletaehrnenl 45th. 2 11 2 2 Co. P, 205 th. 44 35 39 38 41 38 41 40 38 37 42 37 40 38 Co. It. 53d. I 11112 2 1 Co. H, 149 th. 2 8 1 2 9 8 2 ~ 2 8 .8 2 8 2 .8 Co. H. 210h. II 1 ll 11 1 1 11 11 11 11 1 11 1 Co, 49th. 1 1111 11 Co. B, 49th. 8 3 8 8 3 3 8 8 3 3 7 3 7 3 Co. B. Ist fa. Artillery. 1 11 11 11 Co. C, B,4Ui. 1.11 11 1 1 l>e|. Co. P, 104 th. 6 fi (1 6 6 0 0 Haddington Hospital. 2 1 2 2 1 1 2 2 11 2 1 2 1 Cnvler Hospital. 1 11 1 J)ot. lfith Cavalry. l I 1 1 1-1 1 1 11 11 1 Camp Fry. l>. (J. 2 11 1 % 1 Co. K, 3d Artillery, fi 2 0 6 2 2 I 8 0 2 2 0 2 2 (Vi.li.'Mh. 4 4 3 1 3 3 1 1 4 4 Co. C, 148 th. 1 11 11 1 1 Co. I). Ist Cavalry, 5 2 6 5 2 2 8 5 2 2 4 2 4 2 Co. K, atWtlt. I 1 1 11 1 1 - - 3d Artillery. 1 11 11 11 Judic. 8(|. Hosp., D. O. 1 11 II Co. 0. Bil Artillery. II 111111 11 11 1 I Co. 11, 201 st; 3 3 ; 3 3 3 3 3 Total 205 101 20(1 198 170 W0 203 199 103 ltl 174 135 171 130 OFFICIAL RETURNS j j Of the General Election held in Mifflin County, j October 11, 1864, Congress, Barker* JohuHton Lewistown, East Ward, 151 93 Lewistown, Went Ward, 124 90 ! Derry township, 131 144 Granville, " 107 125 Oliver, " 63 105 | MeVeytown borough, 49 74 i Bratton township, 71 72 ! Wayne, " 101 119 ! X. Hamilton borough. 48 23 i Decatur townsaip, 83 90 i Drown. '• 76 109 j Armagh, " old, 113 72 ! Armagh, " new, 62 70 Union, " 141 103 i Men no, " 87 117 Soldiers' vote, 203 161 Total , 1610 1567 Senators. Hall* Haines* Walters Christy ' Lewistown, E. W. 133 135 122 it>B W. W. 112 114 106 97 ! ' Derrv, 118 120 157 156 i Granville, 94 97 137 134 Oliver, 63 63 105 105 ! MeVeytown, 49 49 74 74 Bratto , 72 72 72 70 I Wayne, 97 101 123 119 j j Newton Hamilton, 47 47 24 23 J Decatur, 83 83 89 90 i | Brown, 75 76 111 110 | Armagh, old, 112 112 73 73 ! Armagh, new, 61 62 71 70 : Union, 141 141 103 103 1 | Men no, 84 87 120 117 1 Soldiers' vote, 198 200 176 166 Total, 1539 1559 1663 1615 Assembly. Swoop*;* Balsba*-h* Reams Africa | i Lewist'n, E. W. 139 139 110 ill ; Lewist'n, W. W. 119 119 97 97 ! ; Derrv, 120 120 156 156 i Granville, 98 98 132 132 I Oliver, 63 63 105 105 ! MeVeytown, 49 49 74 74 Bratton, 72 71 72 71 Wayne, 101 101 119 119 Newton Hamilton, 47 46 24 24 | Decatur, 82 82 92 8 Brown, 76 77 110 109 Armagh, old, 112 112 73 73 ; Armagh, new, 62 62 70 70 I Union. 140 141 104 103 Menn >, 87 87 117 117 Soldiers' vote, 203 199 163 161 Total, 1570 1566 1617 IGII Commissioner. Auditor. Wilson* Taylor Whitehead* Weiler i Lewist'n E. W. 137 113 138 111 i Lewist'n W. W. 119 97 118 97 Derry, 119 153 121 153 ; Granville, 99 132 98 132 ; Oliver, 63 105 63 105 MeVeytown, 49 74 49 74 Bratton, 71 72 71 72 Wayne, 101 119 101 119 N. Hamilton, 47 24 47 24 j Decatur, 84 89 84 89 I Brown, 75 111 76 110 j ! Armagh, old, 108 76 112 72 | , Armagh, new, 60 72 61 71 j ; Union, 140 103 139 104 ; ; Merino, 91 113 88 116 ! | Soldiers' vote, 174 135 171 136 Total, 15.1$ 1588 1531 1585 nion candidates marked with a *. Company I, 184 th regiment, gave ! our county ticket 18 majority, but by some neglect no return was made to ( this county or at Ilarrisburg. There j are others of the same kind, sufficient: to have defeated both Taylor and Wei ler. —lt would seem from the following! : remarks of Jeff. Davis in his speech at' Augusta, Ga., just prior to Hood's ad-,' vanee, that the latter, which has turn-! Ed out so miserably, was undertaken: in aid of the peace party of the North:. 1 "We must beat Sherman; wo must' march into Tennessee; there we will draw from 20,000 to 30,000 to our standard, and so strengthened, tee must push the enemy bach to the Ohio, and thus [five the. peace party of the an uc : eretion no puny editorial can give.'' Great Fraud upon the Soldiers ! SEH ¥Ottk STATE AtFATS FOKGE VOTES FOit HctI.ELI.AV. BALTIMORE, Oct. 27—Extensive frauds ! have been discovered in this city and Washington on the part of some commis sioners of New York State to receive and forward votes of the soldiers. The N. Y. State agents, M. J. Ferry, of* Canton, St. Lawrence county, and Edward Donahue, of Albany, have been arrested and were brought to trial, this evening, before a | military commission, ol which Major Gen | eral Abner Doubleday is president, and j Col. .John A. Foster, of the 175 th New j York, is judge advocate. ' On the conclusion of the reading of the ! ! charges, Ferry plead guilty to a portion, j arid said he had signed the names of some, i In answer to a question by the Judge ] Advocate, Foster, who stated that his pleadings to the charge should be either I j general or special, he said he desired to i have counsel, lie was- informed that he j i could send for any person he should choose : as his counsel, and immediately sent for a lawyer of this city. I Donohue plead a general denial of the j j whole affair, and wanted to be represented by counsel from Albany or New York, lie ' said he thought the matter belonged to the civil tribunals, instead of a military one. He requested to know if Reverdy Johnson ; was to be had, as he w, s confident he would ' defend him. General Doubleday and j Judge Advocate General Foster said they i had no objection to postpone the case, as | the prisoners had no counsel, in order to ■ allow them to obtain it, and accordingly ; i adjourned until Friday at ten o'clock, j It is stated that seven dry goods boxes | of votes for the Democratic National and State nominees have been forwarded from ! here by express. Several packages of al- i leged forged tickets are in the hands of j the Military Commission, with letters, Ac., • involving parties in New York. After the adjournment of the court, Ferry made the following full confession : I do not recollect the time when the first papers were forged, but it was in the pres ence of (). K. \Vood, of Clinton county, New Y'ork; it was done in my office, No. i 85 Fayette street, Baltimore; I am, and j have been for the past two years, the agent : of the State of New Y'ork, appointed by Gov. Seymour, to look after the sick and wounded soldiers of New York; L first saw Wood on Wednesday of last week at my office. He came and represented himself j as an agent of the central committee of his county to look after its local ticket. He . talked about the way in which the votes : could be taken; it was agreed that we should sign the names of soldiers and officers and j send them home to have the local tickets 1 filled in; I made out small papers; I signed the names of soldiers on quite a number ! of them; I cannot tell what names we signed; the papers are in the bundle now on the table; I did not sigu the names of office .'B, but Donohue signed any quantity of them; there was a large package of these papers left with ine, which I destroyed; that puck age contained over two hundred; Donohue signed them all. The idea of forging ; these papers was first suggested by a man named Stephen Maxon; he is from the ; western part of the State of New Y'ork; I j J do not known from what county; he is not 1 in the service; he is a State agent; I cannot , say at what time it was first proposed to i forge these papers, but it was, at most, two weeks ago; I do net think there was any body present but Donohue and myself when Maxon first proposed to forge the papers; ! there was a man named S. M. Brundy in ' my office; he is now in New Y'ork; also, a ; man named 11. Newcorub; I neversawhim j until he came there; he is a lawyer in Al i bany; part of the forged papers were made ! iu my office, and part brought there; they ! were usually brought in a bundle, tied up; \ I do not know who brought them; I had no letters from Peter Cagger except what | where found in my desk; I never knew of j any correspondence on this subject with ' General Farrell, the commissary of subsis tence, except the package which you have; the packages contained a lot of blank en velopes an.l powers of attorney, with a letter from General Farrell, marked ''confi dential, which contained a list of the names ol residents of Columbia county; 1 did not let any one know that 1 destroyed the forged papers left with me, but told uiy associate that I sent them to different parts of the State to be marked; a young man came from Washington on Friday or Saturday last, saving, if I had any spare blanks to send them on to Washington; I aui not certain that he did or did not say anything about there being twenty men over there who could attend to these matters: I do not , know how many forged paper* were sent j oft, tut i heard them say that they Sent j ! them from Washington by the dry-goods box full; I do not recollect hearing them j talk despairingly, but they talked quite ! jubilantly and confidently; i sent a package | of forged papers to Gen. Farrell, with let i ters. BALTIMORE, Oct. 28. —The military j commission to day resumed its investigation ;of the frauds in the vote of New York j soldiers. j Donohue was brought into court at about feu o'clock. He had no counsel, but pro i ceeded in his own behalf to object to the j i jurisdiction of the court. The prisoner ; pleaded guilty of his having signed certain • blanks with the panic of (J. S. Arthur, \ Cupt. and A. A. G , and none others; and, j as it did not appear that he was an officer ; of the State id' .Yew York, or of the I tii ted States, there was, he contended no ; crime committed. j ADDRESS OK THE JUDGE ADVOCATE. It appears in this case that the defend ant, Kdward Donohue, dr., a young man : connected with the New York Central | Railroad —a road to th se who live in the .city ol New \ ork almost synonymous with , j treason has for the last two or three weeks ! been engaged in one of the most gigantic | frauds ever attempted to be perpetrated oo j | tbis nation—a fraud which, if it shall be successful, will, in my opinion, have pro ! dueed a disruption of our entire country, and our war for the preservation of the L'nion will be practically at an end, and i useless. It appears from the evidence of the two witnesses produced before you, that on one occasion, when a Republican, who happened to hear something that was said by one ol the State agents of the State of New York, \ that frauds were being perpetrated, went to the office of the State agent in this city, j he found him willing and ready to uiake ; false votes, and prudently presented him I self as one of the party they were working | for, ingratiated himself into their confi I deuce, and was allowed to see the working j of their party. It appears that the regular blanks for sol diers forged, the names of the officers who are purporting to swear the soldiers are ! written out by one party, the names of the ! soldiers who cast the vote, by another, and still a third one, who fills up the blanks 1 1 hese are then left either sealed or unsealed, j ( with the electoral ticket of the party which ! they represent, and as the first witness j : testified to you, several dry goods boxes j full of such votes have already left the city of Washington. At that time it will he borne in mind that 1 Edward Donohue was iu Washington. He ! | came to this city. How is this statement I as compared with his accomplice, Edward j j Newcomb, and with that of the first wit ■ ness, Mr Ward? Was it they who in- j duced him to commit this fraud, or did he i , induce them? Does Newcomb say that | Ward asked him, or was it Donohue who ! ; asked him to write these letters? He found Donohue in full blast, writing : as fast as he could; sometimes the name of ■ j a soldier and sometimes of an officer; some- 1 times giving one rank and sometimes another; j the other cne filling up their names, and i still a third one the full blank. Thus, the persons around this table, in the course of Sunday a'ternoon, filled up to the number ! of nearly a hundred; and, if three persons j could in one afternoon manufactur some one to two hundred such fraudulent votes, ' what" could rio f twenty men similarly em ; ployed for two weeks effect? The enormity of the fraud was appalling. The Judge Advocate continued by dwel-j ling upon the keinousness ot the offence. ! j ''Here,'' he said, "was a fraud that might ■ well call for the infliction of the severest penalty known to the court. The most sa cred right ot the brave uien who are absent from their homes, perilling their lives in the face of the enemy to uphold our liber- | ] ties, is invaded, and the votes are fraudu- ' lently sought to be given against the cause ! for which they have been perilling their j lives. Whilst absent in the field, these plotters at home seek to east the ballots of these brave men without their consent, and whilst they cam ot be present to speak for themselves, or defend their rights This j prisoner, who, though one of a numerous family ot children, cannot show that he has even one brother iu the field, uphold ing the flag of his country, is here proven ! to have corresponded with others to defraud our brave soldiers of their exercise of the sacred elective franchise A crime so enormous as this calls for vigorous punish j merit, and he hesitated not to say it merit ed the extreme penalty of death." CONDUCT OF THE PRISONER. During its delivery the prisoner was evidently more than ever impressed with & sense of his critical position, and at the conclusion of the Judge Advocate's ad dress, left the court in charge of the guard in a manner strikingly in contrast with the bold and defiant air with which he en tered it in the morning. 'J lie court room was now cleared, and the commission proceeded to deliberate upon • the case. The commission were only about half an hour coming to their decision, 1 when the doors were re-opened and the I court adjourned. I Such rascality needs no comment. PUBLIC SALE, i WILL be sold at-the Farm ..f ,j, TF scriher. near Lewistown, on Friday, November 18th, lsea at 9 o'clock, a. m., 1 Three Work C!ore. Colt, ( 2 Cows, Youiug ( at 1 Aldt-rofV Bull, ' Ptirfceiw IDifer, L'U of Chester Figs, Tw'u horse Wagon and Bed. nearly no Sett of Yankee ilay Ladders. 1 Field Roller, Ilay (horse) Rake. Corn S heller. Muwc-r and Reaper, A very superioi two horse Rvdw.iv p„ with Thresher and Carrier, in i n,re order. with Plows, Cultivators 11 ' Ji I Forks, ko., Ac. Nov. 2. , F. G. FRANTISCF? L Notice to Collectors. VS money is absolutely required intf Treasury to lilt relief and other or* . Collectors are notified that unless suffi .... is paid over to meet ail claims, at NmJ,, | court, warrants will be issued a-ainst i[ " ; without respect to persons. With high prir!! j and cash for all kinds of produce, there"" no excuse whatever why taxes should uot n I ! collec eil and paid. AMOS HOOT, Levristown, Nov. 2, 1864. Trelw 1 ADJOURNED ORPHANS' COURT SALE, I>Y virtue of an order of the Orphans | ) Court of Mifflin county, the uu,l-r-i KU .; 1 will offer at public sale, at the Court 11 JU ,." 1 in Lewistown, on Wednesday, November 9, 18641 at one o'clock, in the afternoon, the following described Real Estate, viz: A IOT OF GROUND, situate in MeVet. I town. Mifflin county, fronting 58 feet 7 inoi. § . es, more or less, on Market street, and bei (£ l 214 feet deep, more or less, hounded bvi.;£ , of J. F. Rohrer, on the south, by Hullid H | street on the north, with an old frame build. 1 ing thereon erected. ALSO, A TRACT OF LAND, situate in O'iwl i township, Mifflin county, containing 62ar • i • more or less, bounded north by lands of Sa l i uel Horning, deceased, east by land- , I ; *ipi.)* Moore and other lands of Williaa I i W aketield. deceased, sou th by tb 1 JWjßhJuniata river and west by land*of] £maSS& Augustine Wakefield, with afinJ j stone bouse, stone and frame ban k barn. J choice yung orchard and other improvements | | thereon erected. j Also, A TRACT OF LAND. adj..wJ ; the above, containing 148 acres, 108 perches 1 more or less, with usual allowance f t for roads, adjoining lands of George £ i Mouse and George Settle on the north. H:! 11 j George Moose and Robert Horning MMIBI I on the east, the Juniata river on the suuit, j and other laud of William Wakefield's heirM | ou the west, with a STONE DWELLING HOUSE. FRAME BARS, and other improvements thereon erected. Attendance will be given aud terms made i j known on day of sale by H." J. WALTERS, Adair, of \V;,i. Wakejidd, deo'd. t November 2, 1564-ts LETTERS REMAINING UNCLAIMED I in the Post Office at Lewistown, Statedj Pennsylvania, on the 2d of Nov , 1864. | Andrews Wni. Long Samuel E. j Hrieker Geo. Miller Mrs. Annie Man { Dun lap Miss Martha B. Martin Miss FIIZH ' j Eunvs Mary M. Mitchell Lloyd Fowler K. MeQuir.lan Mi-.- Resara I j Fairn John I>. McD-mell John ! Eelher Levi McDonald John | Fleming Wm. A. Parker Ann Good Miss Hannah Snook Mr-. Ann A. I Henry Jos. K. Shively Mrs. Elizabeth i Jacobs Thomas Swisher Edward Keller Annie E. Shires Sarah Leg.. Sophia 2 Thompson Edgar I L.-go Samuel Wagoner Sarah J. Lehr Misa Malinda WoU'e i Co. K. D. I Leokens Geerge H. Woods G. M. Veager Christ. To obtain any of these letters, the! applicant must call tor 'uriverfised letters : give the date of this list, and pay one ecu | for advertising. not called for within one month, j they will be sent to the Dead Letter Otfcce. uuv2 SAMUEL COMFORT, I'. M. FOR SALE. The two story Brick House in West Mar JAaggA ket street, opposite Col. Butler; "ucupied by Rev. Mr. \\ illiaui* : I" r terms,