Whole No. 2796. ! Lewistown Post Office. Mails arrive aud cluse at the Lewistown P. 0. us follows. ARRIVE. Eastern through, 5 48 a. in. " through and way 4 21pm. Western " " " 10 55 a. in. Bellefonte " " " 2 30p. m. Northumberland, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, 6 00 p. in. CLOSE. Eastern through - 8 00 p. in. " and way 10 00 a. m Western " " 300 p. m. | Bellefonte 8 00 " Northumberland (Sundays, Tueesdays and Thursdays) 8 00 p. in. : Money can be forwarded through this of fiee in sums from SI to S3O, by the payment of the following fees; From $1 to $lO ten cents; $lO to S2O fifteen cents; S2O to S3O twenty cents. _ j Office open from i 00 a. m. to 8 p. m. On Sundays from Bto 9 a in. S. COMFORT, P. M. J.ewistowu Station. Trains leave Lewistown Station a* follows: Westward. Eastward. : I Pittsburgh and Erie Mail, 3 56 a. in. 10 45 p. in. I Baltimore Express, 5 26 a. m. I Philad'a Express, 605a. m 12 18 a. m. I Fast Line, 625 p. in. 516 " B Mail 421 " I Fast Mail. 10 55 " I llarrisburg Accom'n, 3 44 p. m. j I Emigrant, 10 4i a. m. Through Freight, 10 3U p. ui. 150a m j Fast " 0 45 •• ■ Express " 12 10 p. in. 12 35 p. in t3f Stock Express, 500 p in, 900 " I Coal Train. 1 15 p. m. 11 45 a. m. j I Union Line, <4l " I Local Freight, 7 3<> a. m. 625 p. in. ' NOTE. —The Pittsburgh and Erie Express | I haves east and west daily except Sunday ; I 11 iltiuiore Express west daily except Monday; I Philadelphia Express east and west daily ; I Fast Line east daily except Monday and west I July except Sunday; Fast Mail east daily ex leept Sunday; Mail Train west daily except Sunday; llarrisburg Accommodation east dai ly except Sunday, and Emigrant west daily | except Monday. Fare to Philadelphia, $5 85 " Baltimore, 5 20 '• llarrisburg, 2 10 " Alto. ni, 250 '• Pittsburgh, 6CO Aj-Galbraith's Omnibuses convey passengers to I *ad from all the trains, taking up or setting tliem I down at all points within the borough limits. WILLIAM LIND, litis now open A NEW STOCK I OF Cloths, Cassimeres AND VESTI N C S , I which will he made up to order in the neat- I est and most fashionable styles. apl9 AMBROTYPES I The Gems of the Season. IffMIIS is no humbug, but a practical truth X The pictures taken by Mr. Burkholdcr are unsurpassed for BOLDNESS TRUTH FULNESS. BEAUTY OF FINISH, and I DURABILITY. Prices varying according to size and quality of frame# aud Cases. Room over the Express Office. Lewistown, August 23, 1860. ■ . . .... Kishacoquillas Seminary I AND NORMAL INSTITUTE. _ \\ r ILL commence its winter session. OC M TUBER 12, 1864 and continue twen ty weeks. Cost fur B >ard. Furnished Rooms, II and Tuition in English Branches, $75. Fuel, Light and Washing extra. For particulars see catalogue. S Z SHARP. Principal. Kishacoquillas. Sept. 21. 1804. Academia, Juniata Co.. Pa, ClO.M MENCES its Summer Term May 4th, / 1864 For circulars address Mrs O. J FRENCH. Principal, or ANDREW PATTERSON, Proprietor apG 1804-ly Attorney at Law, Office Market Square, Lewistown, will at tend to business in Mifflin, Centre and Hunting don counties u>y2G Large Stock of Furniture on Hand. V FELIX is still manufacturing all kinds •id Furniture. Young married persons and others that wish to purchase Furniture w ili find a good assortment on hand, which will I => sold cheap for cash, or country pro duce sken in exchange for same. Give me a call y • 7 alley street, near Black Bear Ho ieb 21 Lock Repairing, Pipe Laying, Plumbing and White Smithing IMIE above branches of business will he promptly attended to on application at the residence of the undersigned iri Main street. Lewistown. J ! d0 GEORGE MILLER. Gii. i i.oni*. A LARGE assortment of Floor, Stair and Carriage Oil Cloths, of all colors, best quality, ami cheap, at the store of J. B. SELIIEIMER. L. LYONS 5 PURE OHIO Catawba Brandy, I AND Sparkling Catawba Wines, ! Equal in Quality and Cheaper in Price than the Brandies and Wines of the Old World. FOR BCMMKK C< M ('LA I NT. C HOLER A INFATCM. DI- | AKKHtEA, BOW EL COM PL AI NT, Clt A Ml* A COtlC. ! A sure Cure is guarantied, or the money will be. refunded. IN support of tlie above statements, are presented the Certificates of Or. Jas. R. I Chilton, Chemist. New York; Dr. Il'train ! Cox, Chemical Inspector, Ohio; Dr. Jatnes R. Nichols, Chemist, Boston ; Dr. N. E. Jones, Chemical Inspector, Circleville, Ohio ; Prof. C. T. Jackson, Chemist, Boston ; Dr. Chas. Upbam Shepard, Charleston, S. C.: and J. V. Z. Blaney and G A Mariner, Consulting i Chemists, Chicago, all of whom have ana lyzed the Catawba Brandy, and commend it in the highest terms, for medicinal use. Analysis of the Massachusetts Stale Assayer, j January 25, 1858. When evaporated through clean linen it left no oil or offensive matter. In every res pect it is aPI KE spirituous liquor. The oil which gives to this Brandy its flavor and aro ma, is wholly unlike fusil, or grain oil. Its odor partakes of both the fruit and oil of grapes With acids, it produces ethers of a high fragrance. The substitution of this Brandy for Cognac Brandy will do away with the manufacture of fictitious spirits, sold un der this name both at home and abroad. Respectfully. A A. Hayes. M D., Assayer to State Mass , 10 Boyleston St. By the same, in 1804. I have analyzed "L Lyons' Pore Catawba | Brandy," with reference to its composition j and character, being lire same as that pro- j duced in past ye: rs. A sample taken from j ten casks afforded the same results with re ganl to purity; a slightly increased amount of the principle on which its flavor depends was determined by comparison with former samples. The indications of analysis show that this Brandy is produced by the same process as most of the imported Brandy. Respecfnlly, A A. IIAYES M D. State Assayer. Boston, July 20. 'O4. 10 B- yleston St. Manufactured by H H Jacob & Co . (To whom all orders sin-nld be addressed.) Deput, 91 Liberty St., New York. nov9 3mos. E. & H. T. ANTHONY & CO. Mauofaclurm of Photographic Materials, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. 501 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. IN addition to our main husinees of I'llU TOGRAPIIIC .MATERIALS, we are Headquarters for the following, viz: STSBrSOSCiCPES AND STEREOSCOPIC VIEWS Of these we have an immense assortment, in cluding War Scenes. American and Foreign Cities and Landscapes, Groups, Statuary, &o , &o. Also, Revolving Stereoscopes, for pub lic or private exhibitions. Our catalogue will be sent to any address on receipt of stamp. Photographic Albums, w e were the first to introduce these into the United States, and we manufacture im rnense quantities in great variety, ranging in priecfrotn 50 cents to SSO each. Our Al bums have the reputatiou of being superior in beauty and durability to any others. They will be sent by mail, free, on receipt of prke. terFine albums made to order, CARD PHOTOGRAPHS. Our catalogue now embraces over five thou sand different subjects (to which additions are continually Leing made) of Portraits of Eminent Americans, &c , viz : about 100 Major-Generals, 2tH) Brig.< Gedcru/s, 275 Colonels, 100 Lieut' Colonels, 250 Other Officers, 75 Navy Officers, 550 Statesmen, 130 Divines, 125 Authors, 40 Artists, 125 Stage, 50 Prom'nt Women, 150 Prominent Foreign Portraits. 3000 Copies of Works of Art. j including reproductions (if the most eelebra ted Engravings, Paintings. Statues, &c. Cat j nlnguea sent uti receipt (if stamp. An order ! tur (ine H.>zen Pictures front our catalogue will be tilled on the receipt of SI.BO, and sent j by mail, free. | Photographers and others ordering goods ;C. 0 P will please remit twenty live per j cent, of the amount with their order E & 11 T ANTHONY & 00., Manufact'rs of Photographic Matrials, 501 Broadway. New York. I Psif The prices and quad!;/ of our . oods i cannot fail to satisfy nov9- ly. 3,. P. ELLIS. OF the late firm of McCoy and Ellis, has just returned from the city with a choice ; assortment of DRY GOODS & GROCERIES, selected with care and purchased for cash, which are offered to the public at a small ad vance on cost. suitable for ladies, gentlemen and children, with many new patterns. 11 is <;uo( i IUI: comprise choice Sugars, Molasses, Coffee, Su perior Teas, Pure Spices. Ac. Also, QUE EN.S WARE, GLASSWASE, and all other articles usually found in Stores, all of which his old customers and the public i in general are inv ted to call and examine. Country Produce taken at fell market prices. It. F. ELLIS. Lewistown, March 9, 1804. I FOUND out that Iloff.nan's is the place for Groceries. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1865. THE MIHITBEL SONG OP A THOI'SAXD YEARS. BV HENRY C. WORK. Life up your eyes despouding freemen! Flmg to the winds your needless fears! He who unfurled your benuteous banner, Hays it shall u/ace a thousand years I A thousand years, my own Columbia! "I'is theglud day so long foretold! 'Tin the glad morn whose early twilight Washington saw in times of'old. What if the elouds one little moment, Hide the bine sky where morn appears— When tljf bright sun that tints theiu crimson. Rises to shine a thousand years? A thousand years, to. Tell the great world these blessed tidings! Yes. and be sure the boudmau hears; Tell the oppressed of every nation, Jubilee lasts a thousand years! A thousand years, &c. Envious foes beyond the ocean! Little we heed your threat'ning sneers ; Liule will they—our children's children— When you are gone a thousand years. A thousand years, Ac. Rebels at ho oe t go hide your faces— Weep for your crimes with bitter tears: Yon could not bind the blessed daylight. Though you should strive a thousand years. A thousand years, Ac. Back to your dens, ye secret traitors! Down io your own degraded spheres! Ere the first blaze of dazzling sunshine Shortens your lives a thousand years. A thousand years, Ac. Haste thee along, thou glorious noonday! Oh for the eyes of ancient seers! Oh. for tlie faith of Him who reckons Each of his days a thousand years! A thousand years. Ac. For the Educational Column. THE SCHOOL HOUSE OS THE HILL.. SCENE FIRST. On a bright November evening— Bright the stars that watched above us, Bright was o!d Orion gleaming O'er Stone Mountain iu the distance. Bright the stream beside tlie hillock, . Bright the glow-worm on its edges. Bright the merry laugh of childhood, Ringing faint and still more laiutly. Not a farmer saw I labor. No man calling to his neighbor. All the children quiet sleeping. All the cattle ceased their feeding. All the lazy pigs were snoring in ihe straw stack in the buniyard; Even Carlo now was dozing On a rug up -n the doorsili. Whippoorwiils have ceased their singing, Katydids n > longer fiddling. Scarce a cricket dales his chirping, Save within the chimney corner. Only now and then a murmur. Like a milldam in the distance. Or some gently blowing zephyr Walling fragrance fioiri the pine trees, Could i hear from all aroud ine. Thus I stood one autumn evening, Stood within a grove of hemlock. Stood and looked into a schoolhouse, Looked upon its torn up benches. On its smoky walls and ceiling, On its desks, ill-shaped and greasy, On its old and 1 -aky bucket. All within was dark and gloomy. All without was bright and cheerful. Turned I not away then quickly? Turned away with heart so sadly. When a voice within me whispered, ••-Thus the infant mind is ruiued." Then some angel spirit touchej me. Touched me, till entranced 1 listened To some sweet, melodious music. Like the low and pent up murmuring Of the streamlet, flowing gently By the hill thai stood below me, And a voice within it singing Lines of truth I here shall quote you: God created fields and mountains. Forest trees and meadows green. Streams that gush from living fountains, Life and light where'er 'tis seen. Birds upon the branches singing. Herds upon the thousand liiil.s. Monsters in the ocean swimming, Tiny fishes in the rills. Sun and moon to us appearing. And the siars we see above — All His works, to us endearing. Show His wisdom and His love. God made mau his image bearing, With a soul of priceless worth, Not an earthly creature fearing, Lord and king of all tlie earth. Placed before him hills and mountains. Meadows, fields, streams, rocks and rill; Flocks ami herds ith rippling fountains. All that sea and air can fill. Why then, in his earlv training, Cheat him thus of Nature's book ? In your dingy schoolroom straining, Crush him down with sour look ? In a schoolroom! Yes. a prison! Fettered down upon a scat. Where no soul has ever risen, Save it were upon its feet. Oh. how can you. cruel parent, Shut your offspring in a cage ! Keep him there in daily torment— Task unstuted to his age! Thus the voice did sing so plaintive, Sang till night her sable curtain Dropped atid ail was still. SCENE SECOND. On a bright December morning, 15: iglit and clear the sky above us. Bright the sun yet faintly snirnng Oef Jack's Mountain iu the distance; Shining through a grove of hemlock, Sinning on a whitened schoolhouse, On a bill beside the streamlet. Bright the merry laugh of children On their way to school so early. All the farmers' boys are whistling. Calling to their nearest neighbors; Ali the children up and waning. Wanting mamma now to dress them; All the cattle loudly lowing. All the noisy pigs are grunting, Near the eider press below me. Even Carlo keeps a barking At he don t know what he's meaning. Scarce a creature now is quiet. Save it were one dead or dying ; E'en the mill below the timipiae Has commenced its noisy clatter. Thus I stood one early morning. Stood within a grove of hemlock, Stood and looked into a schoolhouse. Looked upon its tidy benches. On its whitened walls and ceihug, On its new and shiuiug bucket, ' On its new made desks there standing, Standing there t > face the teacher Like the soldiers do the Captain. All without was noise and bustle, All within was peace and quiet. All around the room were nlackboards, Half a dozen maps above them. Maps so useful, made by Peitun. All above the window banging Garlands made of spruce and iaurel, Made so neat by maiden fingers. On the teacher's desk was standing One boquet of latest flowers— Some Chrysanthemums, they call them, Htaud beside the Holy Bible. Then I heard a modest tingle, And two score of youths and maidens Came within, so bright and cheerful. Doffed their hats and said-good morning," Took their seats, remaining quiet While the teacher read a chapter; When again I heard a tingle, AH arose aiul sang so sweetly. Then the teacher offered prayer. And a voice within me whispered, "Here the youthful mind is growing." Now, the morning service over, Each one busy at his lessons. TIMOTHY SHORTFELLOW. j Ihe first scene was suggested to the wri j ter on beholding an old and blackened schoolhouse standing in a line grove of hemlock. Ihe part in rhyme is intended to show the error and cruelty of parents ; who send their children to school too young, taking them from the fields and flowers, birds and fresh air, and shutting them up in a monotonous schoolroom, filling their , lungs with foul air, stinting their limbs for want of exercise, and laying burdens on their minds which will leave their evil ef fects upon them forever. We contend that a child should not he sent to school until six or seven years of age. The i strength of mind and body then acquired would enable them to far outstrip those j who commenced to study several years be fore. The second scene was suggested on be holding the same schoolhouse some time afterward when a five teacher had whiten- J ed everything into neatness and order as j described ab. ve. For the Educational Column. Reading. Rooks! hooks ' There is nothing to my eye which preseuts a scene so enchanting j as a collection of valuable hooks. I can not look up >n a good hook as so many pa ! ges hound in call, Ac., hut almost the same j sucrcdness surrounds them that would the ! souls, without the bodies, of their authors It is scarcely possible to prize too highly j the power which enables us to hold com uiuuion with mighty geniuses and choice ; spirits, the wise, the good, the great of all j the past. Every teacher especially should be an ; ample reader. Conversation may he more i animated in that it gives the music of the ! voice and the ever varying expression of j tlie eye and the " human face divine," hut how greatly is this want made up j greater wealth of (bought obtained from reading : both it is true are needful. Con- j versation, as 'tis said, makes a ready man, I but reading alone makes a full man, anil j who needs more to be full than the teacher, I whose stock of knowledge is so constantly I drawn upon ? The pure living stream no ! longer reireshes the thirsty soul than its j sources are replenished from God's great i reservoir. Let the supplies be stopped and i the flowing waters will cease, leaving be- | hind them a dry channel, or collect in stagnant pools, devoid of all their life giv ing sweetness. A teacher who would keep up his stock ol knowledge must read, and read exten sively. But what and how should they read —should they conform to a " system atic reading?" I conceive the human mind a thing too lree and noble in its nat ural impulsive boundings to work always in the same stiff and tightly drawn laces, like a cart horse; therefore they should read when they felt like it. It is true, and the fact cannot be concealed, that what is read lor the mere pleasure of it, is often more fruitful iu direct practical results than spe cial efforts. Let it not be understood that we depreciate special study, to which every good teacher must give a reasonable amount of attention, in order to secure a continued and symmetrical intellectual growth, but the mind should drink from the fair foun tain of knowledge when thirsty, just as we do at nature's limpid streams. A teacher should read everything that is fit to read, for within the whole range of literature there is scarcely anything, if rightly con sidered, which may not furnish him with valuable material for instruction. K. MIMELMMfiOIIS, Daguerreotypes. Just about dusk one evening a boy, dressed in homespun, of the peculiar lea | ther color and style, familiar to us all, with broad brimmed black hat aud long hair— of that laborious ela.-s whose dress has not varied for centuries, and is the same on the wee toddling babe, through youth and man ! hood to the grey bearded sire, " who mars not the manner of his beard," it knows no 1 variance or shadow of turning—came into a photograph gallery and asked whether j they "took pictures here ?" "Yes." "Can ! you take mine now?" "No, it is too late. You must come earlier in the day when | the sun shines." He looked somewhat j surprised, while the well bred artist, with | out a symptom of a smile, assured him that !he must come while the sun shines. Per haps it would have surprised him more had lie been told that his picture would be ta i ken by the same process which his gran : dame bieaehed her snowy linen in the mea | duw. A careless bystander might have | laughed—a town boy would, sure, yet the majority of us would have little reason. — I We know of course that it is done in sun light, because we sec it done every day, but how lew cure to push their inquiries tur j ther. ' - We know there are daguerreotypes, am brotypes, photograph, and we know the difference by seeing that one is on a metal lic plate, one on glass, another on paper, and we know it because we can't help it. HUEHHMISJ WEWsnFSTa IKSiJSJo Dagueire was a French painter. While painting panoramas he conceived the idea of heightening the effect by throwing col ored lights and shadows on them, produ cing the effects of the changes of day and the seasons called diorama. He was leu to the discovery of fixing on prepared metal lie p utes images of objects thrown upon them by the lens of the camera obseura. It was observed that chloride of silver blackens in the sun though white as snow when first prepared. So other subjects were observed to change by the chemical action of the sun. The process of Da guirre is thus simply described. A tablet of silver plated copper is carefully cleaned with pomice or other powder. The tablet is exposed to a vapor of iodine until it be comes a pure yellow, and with a careful exclusion of light it is deposited in the camera, and receives the impression of the rays of light coming lroin the object only, all other being excluded. Light coming frotu the sun lulling on a surface not trans parent is reflected and carried back to the eye and gives you sight of the object, with its lights n i shades according to its reflec tion. These reflected rays from one body passing through the tube of the camera, all others excluded except from the back ground, acting chemically on the prepared plate, make the image When removed to a darkened room and dipped in hyposulphate of soda, washed with water, it becomes insensible to fur ther action of light The calotype invent ed by Mr. Talbot in England about the same time, was by covering a piece of pa per w th a changeable salt of silver, ex posing it in the camera, and developing the image by a solution of galic acid. It gave what is called the negative, that is, in the negatives the lights and shadows answer respectively to the shadows and lights of the object; while in the positive the lights correspond to the lights and the shadows to the shadows. The daguerreotype has a superiority over any process yet presented. The features are exquisitely defined and there is a min uteness of detail and life like appearance not otherwise attainable. This is because it is taken on hard metallic mathematical plate. Paper on which photographs are taken diffuses and the diffcnence is as the difference between writing on blotting and on writing paper — MijfliuLary Telegraph. Wit and Wisdom. Isn't it odd that a running vine should produce a cant elope ? A woman's tears soften a man's heart, her flatteries his head. One half of the rebels are " given over to believe a lie," and the other to tell it. With a childhood full of affection, we may endure half a life in the cold world. There is more poetry in the rime of Jack Frost than in the rhymes of most of our poets. The Yankees it is said are apt to mind their p's and q's; the Chinese their teas and cues. If you meet a young lady who isn't at all shy, you had better be a little shy your self. If a young lady hopes ever to have the honor of giving the mitten, she had better learn to knit. Many a man saves his life by not fearing to lose it, many a man loses his life by being over anxious to save it. A little explained, a little endured, a lit tle passed over as a foible, and 10, Mie jag ged atoms will fit like smooth mosaic. In the holy duties of ministering to the sick souls grow white as well as cheeks ; j one that goes in as a nurse may come out , an angel. " Wake up and pay your lodgings," said the deacon, as he nudged a sleepy stranger with the contribution box. Critics complain of a want of originality in poetry. PoeLs may well complain of a waut of originality iu criticism. A true man has a much strength in ad versity as iu prosperity. As, in the dark of the moon, she swallows the tide as pow erfully as in her full orbed brightness. There are some people who live without any design at all, and pass through the world like straws on a river—they do not go but are carried. " I'm afraid of lightning," murmured a pretty young woman during a recent storm. '• Well you might be," sighed her despair ing lover, "when your heart is steel." The Washington Republican imagines that if the rebels had come within the for tifications of that cily they conld not have ! stood against the charges ol the hotei keepers. It is a general law of nature that the more legs an animal has, the lower he is in the scale of being. And yet the dogs with four legs are not so low as those with but two. An individual advertised in one of the morning pupeis for a wife, the other day, and requested each applicant to enclose her carte de visite. One of these correspon dents closed her repiy in these terms: " I do not enclose iny carte, for though there is some authority for putting a cart before a horse, I know of noue for putting one i before an ass." New Series-Volume XIX. No. 9. Sad Accident. —Charles K., a young •op eration of the people in the endeavor to keep the enrollment list continually correct, , the Enrolling Board has been directed to : have copies of said list kept open to the ex' ' ami nation of the public at all proper times, ; and shall give public notice that any person : uiay appear before the Board and have any name stricken off the list, if he can show, to the satisfaction of the Board, that the person named is not properly enrolled, on account j of— ; 1. Alienage: 2. Non residence ; j 3. Over age ; 4. Permanent physical disability, of such degree as to render the person not a proper subject for enrolment under the law aud reg ulations: 5. Having served in the military or naval service two years during the present war and been honorably discharged. Especially civil officers, clergymen, and all prominent citizens are invited to appear at ail times before the Board to point out errors ] in the lists, and to give such information in 1 their possession as may aid in the correction 1 aud revision thereof They should understand that it is plainly for the interest of ea h sub district to have j stricken from the lists all Dames improperly enrolled, because an excess of names increases I the quota called for from each sub district; : aud that it is equally for the interest of each person enrolled in a given sub district, to place upon the lists all persons in thesubdis trict liable to do military duty, because the greater the number to be drawn from, the less the chance that any particular individual will be drawn. It is the personal interest of ; every enrolled man that the quota in which j he is concerned shall not be mad • too large, j and that his own chances for draft shall not j be unjustly increased ; both these objects will be attained if all parties will aid in striking out the wrong names and putting in the right ones. Especially is this the interest of those drafted men who by putting in substitutes themselves liable to draft, have secured ex emption which by the terms of the law holds good only until the present enrollment is ex hausted in their sub districts Men who are over 4-5 yeors of age, and in consequence ex cused by law from the performance of duty in toe field, owe it to the cause and the coun try to take a zealous and active part in the correction of tiie enrolment lists, a military service of the first importance. The law re- • quires that the quotas shall be assigned in proportion to the enrolment, and the fairness j and justice of this mode of determining tbe 1 amount of military service due from each and every section of the country cannot be doubt ed if the enrolment is made as nearly perfect as it is practicable to make it. The amount I of service due to the nation from every town or county, is thus laid fairly and plainly be : fore the citizens, and it is expected that a higher motive than a selfish interest will prompt all to do their share in perfecting tbe i enrolment and securing a just and efficient execution of the laws for raising troops, wher ; ever it becomes necessary to apply them. By order Maj. K. I. Do DOE, A. A. P. M. Gen. ALEX. M LLOYD, Capt. Fro. Marshal. M. S. HARR. Commissioner. A. ROTH ROCK, dec 14—3t. Snrgeon of Board. Blacltftiuilli*. *FMIE Blacksmiths say Selheimer keeps the I best Iron and Steel in town. He doesn't lonly keep the best, but he keeps the largest assortment, and sells the cheapest. Go to J. B. SELUEIMEK'S.