THE GAZETTE.I G. . That the boards of registration provided for iu the act entitled "an act supplementary to an act entitled an act to provide for the more efficient government of the rebel States," passed March 2,18(57; "and to facilitate restoration," passed March 21, 1807, shall have power, and it shall be their duty, before allowing the. registration of any person, to ascertain, upon such fact or information as they can obtain, whether such person is entitled to bo registered under said act, and the oath required by said act shall not he conclu sive on such question; and no person shall be registered unless such board shall de cide that he is entitled thereto; and such board shall also have power to examine under oath, to be administered by any member of such board, any one touching the qualification of any person claiming registration ; but iu every case of refusal by the board to register an applicant, and, in every case of striking his name from the list as hereinafter provided, the board shall make a noteor memorandum, which shall be returned with the registration list to the commanding general of thedistrict, setting forth the ground of such refusal or such striking from the list: Provided that no person shall be disqualified as a mem ber of any board of registration by reason of race or color. SEC. 0. That the true intent and mean ing of the oath presented in said supple mentary act is (among other tilings) that no person wiio has been a member of the Legislature of any State, or who has held anyexeeutiveor judicial office in any State, whether he has taken an o.tth to support the Constitution of the United States or not, and whether lie was holding such of fice at the commencement of the rebel- I lion, or had held it before, and who has afterwards engaged in insurrection or re | hellion against the United States, or giv i en aid or comfort to the enemies thereof, : is entitled to be registered or to vote; and {the words "executive or judicial" office ! in any State, in said oath mentioned, shall be construed to include all civil offices J created bv law for the administration of any general law of a State, or for the ad j ministration of justice, i SEC. 7. And be it further enacted, That the time for completing the original reg { istration, provided for in any act may, in the discretion of the commander of any | district, be extended to the first day of Oc ' tolicr, i *O7; and the board of registration : shall have power, and ii shall be their | duty, commencing fourteen days prior to any election under said act, and upon | reasonable public notice of the time and place thereof, to revise for a period of live ; days the registration lists, and upon being i satisfied that any person not entitled ; thereto has been registered, to strike the name of such person from the list, and j such person shall not be allowed to vote. {And such hoard shall also, during the | same period, add to such registry the | names of all persons who at that time pos jsess the qualifications required by said | act, who have not been already registered, j and no person shall at any time be euti- I tied to be registered or to vote by reason : of any executive pardon or amnesty, for any act or thing which, without such pardon or amnesty, would disqualify him from registration or voting. j SEC. 8. That all members of said boards of registration, and all persons hereafter! elected or appointed to ofiiee in said mili tary districts under any so-called State or municipal authority, or by detail or ap- I point men t of the district commander, ! shall be required to take and subscribe to ! the oath of office prescribed by law for the I officers of the United States. SEC. 0. That no district commander, or j member of the board of registration, or | any officer or appointee acting under them, j shall lie bound iu his action by any opin j ion of any civil officer of the United States. SEC. 10. That section 4of said last-nam j ed act shall be construed to authorize the commanding general named therein, | whenever lie shall deem it needful, to re ! move any member of a board of registra tion, and to appoint another in his stead, | and to (ill any vacancy in such board. SEC*. 11. That all the provisions of this ! act, and of the acts to which this is sup plementary, shall be construed liberally j to the end, that all the intents thereoi j may be fully and perfectly carried out. American Naßufaclurce.—The Ameri can VVatcli Company of Waltham, Uasaucliusctta. Our readers know that the best mech inisni of the best manufactories of this ; -oilntry is unsurpassed anywhere in the i world. The genius of American invent ors and mechanics produced the cotton | rin, the mechanical reaper and mower, j the sewing machine, the best telegraphic | instruments, and last, but not least, the ! wonderful machinery of the American ! Watch Company of Waltham, Mass., a neehanism that takes hold of the raw material—the brass and steel, and gold, md precious stones, and under competent lirection turns out that daily wonder and necessity —a perfect time-keeper. Beginning in 1850 in a very moderate way, but with the determination to make lone but thoroughly good watches, the Company have continued to enlarge their works from year to year, (its they wen inable to supply the demand,) until now hey manufacture about one-half of all he watches sold in the United States. Their factory covers over three acres o' • round, and as an illustration of its ex eiit, we may mention that it is supplied with over sixty miles of iron pipes. These watches have proved so reliable that sev eral of the railways of the country now ur'nish them as a partof theirequipment: ind while recommending other lines to ulopt the same precaution against aeci ients, the editor of the Boston Railway Times remarks: " We have carried one >f these watches for the past four years, md although it has had to submit to I -ough usage in camp life, horseback ri j ling, & •., we do not hesitate to say that j .t is the best time-keeper and less expen j live to keep in order than any watch we iver carried." The Company's success ;ias stimulated the manufacture and int portation of many worthless counterfeits j IO that buyers should be careful to se ] :hat they obtain the genuine American ! watch made at Waltham. Clippings. | BftL. A new medical novelty is a Bosto j uian, who practices by the Naturopathy | method. i A book-keeper in St. Louis having ! been detected in embezzling the funds ol | uis employers, committed suicide in that I 'ty. fetf In Evansviile, Indiana, on Wed | nesday, a fire occurred by which one man j lost his life and three others were badly i burned. Loss of property, $3-3,00). £.svT The Surratt trial still drags its te jdious length along, the evidence being di j rected mainly to falsifying Weichniun's | testimony for the prosecution. SHi- The people of Central City, C'olora ! 10, have subscribed $-5,000, to be paid fot | Indian scalps, "with the ears on," at tin j rate of S2O a piece. WaT" W. 11. Langley, a suspended flour i merchant, of Gailipolis, Ohio, is reported ! to have the largest life insurance of any | man in the country —$'500,000. Ifejy'l'lie ladies put paregoric into tin | ice cream at a strawberry festival In Cin cinnati to prevent injurious effects. The effects were not injurious but ludicrous. ffiUuMrs. Elizabeth Lockman died at ! Bethel, Pa., a'few days ago, at the age o j one hundred aud five years. She was a ! middle-aged woman during the Presiden cy of Washington. BThe wheat crop of the United j States is said by experienced farmers and : leaiers iu the West, to be the largest crop j ever grown in this country, and it is esti ! mated at the enormous amount of 225,- j 000,000 bushels. | ' fctTAt San Bernarda, Cal., is a eab i bage grown from seed sent out from the Patent Office, which is three feet broad. This is believed to be the biggest cabbage head in thueouutry except—but the name need not be mentioned. BjSSOn Saturday afternoon a week, while at work in the hay-field of his nephew, Mr. Christian Kauifman of Man or township, Lancaster county, Mr. Abra ham Kautt'nian was overcome by the heat and fell speechless, dying in a few min utes. Robert Toombs, formerly United States Senator from Georgia, and after wards a rebel officer, wrote a letter recent ly, in which he said, " I regret nothing iu the past, but the dead and the failure, and 1 am to-day ready to use the best means 1 can command to establish the i principles for which 1 fought." fSep'" Those who owe money on bond and mortgage, or have payments to make of any kind, should be careful not to vote for Sharswood for Judge of the Supreme Court. He lias already decided, officially, that all such payments must be made in gold or silver, which at present rates of premium is a serious matter to those con j eerned. tny At present there are one hundred and fifty-eight patients in the Pennsylva nia State Lunatic Hospital, and the'trus tees have decided to receive no more un til the number is reduced below one hun dred and fifty. They recommend an ad ditional hospital, to be located in one of the northern counties. 9@uA.bul Aziz, Sultan of Turkey, ar rived iu England on Friday, and was welcomed by His Royal Highness, the • Prince of \\ tiles, and escorted in grand J style to London. The populace turned |out en masse, and greeted the procession j with the most enthusiastic eheers, to the great gratification, no doubt, of their High | Mightinesses. | Disturbances have broken out in j Galicia, aud the Austrian troops sent to j quell the rioters have been beaten. Rus sian emissaries are said to be at the bot- ; 01 . " Ie trouble, and they are accused ot having worked upon the national feel ings oi the Sclavonic population, thus creating a feeling of discontentment and ; hostility to Austrian rule. Correspondence of the (ftitzetfe. A TRIP TO EUROPE. LETTER NO. V. Naples—ltalian Skies—Bap of Naples— A City of Churches —Mt. Vesuvius —The Ascent —The Crater —Pompeii and llcr culaneum —The Museum, etc. NAPLES, June 10, 1867. At midnight of Friday last we arrived j in this celebrated city. We are stopping . at a line hotel, the windows of my room ; 1 commanding views of both Vesuvius and ! the Bay. The weather is not near so hot |iis we expected to tlnd it in this southern • climate. I have experienced much warm er at this season of the year at home. I | am somewhat disappointed in the appear ance of the scenery of this noted locality, jlndeed, Italy, on the whole, though itj lias been called "the land of poets and i painters," falls far behind my expecta tions. The "charming Italian skies," of which you have heard so much, are for ' the most part, the creation of imaginative Englishmen, who are accustomed to al ways seeing the sun through a fog in their own country, and of course would go into' I ecstacies anywhere over a sun-set viewed ] through a clear and transparent atmos-i phere. Excepting works of art, there is j nothing in all Europe to compare with the natural attractions of America, and Ij predict that the day is not far distant I when Europeans will flock to our conti-1 i nent as Americans now do this. ! Naples is situated on the north coast of | I a bay which has the reputation of being; i the most beautiful sheet of water in the i ; world. The entire shore is lined with ' j cities and towns, of which this city is the j largest. Vineyards, orange and lemon I groves, and white villas, dot the whole I country around. Thebuildingsof Naples) j ire magnificent. There are over three hundred Catholic churches here. There is but one Protestant church, in which service is conducted in Italian. Notwith standing the great number of churches,; and tiie apparent devotion of the multi tudes who frequent them, there is little I real reverence displayed for religion. Yes-! t-rday was the Sabbath. We had no other means of knowing it hut by the date upon which it occurred. Stores and mar-: kets were open; horses, mules, wagons j uid carriages thronged the streets; every body and everything was on the go. Sab bath quiet, domestic tranquility and com fort, and the blessings of good govern ment are all unknown in this land. Again tnd again, in my passing observations! j liming this people, have I had cause to! thank my God that I was born in free and happy America. The crowning glory of this locality is the great volcano, Mr. Vesuvius, which rises a vast green cone from the midst of the plain, constantly emitting from its •rater a stream of smoke, which presents the appearance of a pillar of cloud by day ! j md of tire by night. At two o'clock this! i norning we started out to make the as-J | cent of the mountain, choosing that hour' !to avoid the iieat of the day. There is a j carriage road as far as what is called the j Hermitage, a small house where an old | monk used to dwell. From here mules' | oid donkeys are employed to carry trav •llers some distance further ; but at last a I point is readied where the ascent is so | steep that even mules and donkeys can go ! no farther, and then you are compelled 'to climb up on foot, or be carried in a ! hair, which is the mode usually adopted jbv ladies. Stout peasants can beempioy ied to pull you up the mountain side by | means of a strong strap, oneend of which j they place over their shoulders, while you take hold of the other end ; but this metli | oil is aoout as tiresome as simply using a I staff to assist you in your climbing ope | rations. The whole side of the mountain j where the ascent is made is formed of slag and scoriae, but the pieces are wedg- i ed together so as not to move much, and (lie foot clings to them so that you do not -dip. On the whole it is good footing.— | L'he only difficulty is, it is so steep. It is i i thousand feet up rough rocks, as steep i as you can go. On the summit of the mountain we | found two craters or openings, the largest |of which looked like the mouth of the : bottomless pit itself. Its sides are forin ! *d of precipitous cliffs of rock, covered i with deposits of sulphur. The floor of Mliis crater is covered with molten lava,! i which presents an appearance as black a? | jet. From the centre of this floor rises a great, black, rounded cone, like the stack jof an immense blast furnace. It is about fifty feet high, having an opening at the j top about ten feet in diameter, which; glows with a furious heat, and from which, •very now and then, bursts forth a thun- j lering explosion, which throws into the j air a shower of stones and melted lava.— The crater seems to be from four to live| | hundred feet across, and its walls from ! eighty to a hundred feet high. Of course we could not leave here with- | out visiting the famous ruins of Hereula-I i ueum and Pompeii. These ancient cities were buried by an eruption of Vesuvius j i centuries ago, and arc now objects of great i ! interest to travellers. A great part of j Pompeii has been excavated, and presents ! | the appearance of a mass of ruined walls, • little else being visible, as everything movable has been conveyed to the great ! government museum in Naples, where! I ire to be seen tools and implements, j household utensils, mosaic pictures, jars and vases, articles of jewelry, and hund reds of other things which throw light upon the manners and customs of the in | habitants of these ancient cities. Here, : ! too, is preserved the head of the Roman sentinel, who stood at his post until bur-; j led beneath the tide of molten lava, and | whose fidelity as a soldier has been the! | admiration of the world. There are many other minor points of ! interest around and about this place, but | 1 have neither time nor space in which to J describe them. Yours, HANS. £jreriatJgotkes. The Greatest Pain-Reliever in the World. Warranted superior to any other, or no liar, fur TBC cure or Chronic Rheumatism, Toothache, j Headache, Sore Throat. Mumps, Bums. Cuts. Insect j Stings, Pubis In the Back, Chest, and Limbs, Sprains, Old sores. Swellings ; also to take internally for 1 larrboea, Dys" ••ntery. Colic, Spasms. Sea Sickness, Vomiting, and Croup. It Is perfectly innocent to take internally, If used accord ing to directions, and never falls, as thousands can at- ! test. K was lirst introduced In 1817, and now millions of' bottles are annually sold. Every one who has ouec used ! J it. continues to .do so, and recommend It to their friends ; as the most valuable medicine extant. Certificates enough j TO till a dozen newspapers have been received by Dr. To j bias. Ills medicine, the Venetian Liniment, will do all that Is stated, and more. No one will regret trying It.— Those residing at a distance from a physician, will tlnd It J a reliable medicine to have on hand In case of accidents, I : Ask for DR Tobias* Venetian Liniment, and take no other. ! I Price W cents and sl. Sold by all Druggists. Depot, SO j Corllainlt Street. N. V. JU.IR-LNI IN THE CORAL CAVES I sea-green is said to he the prevailing hair I color, anil the FISH-TAILED MAIDENS ; sit on the rocks aud comb their green locks assiduously. ! ! But the BELLES OF EARTH I prefer glosiy browns and shining blacks to any other tlng ! es, and If nature has not given their fair heads these beau- ! | tiful hues, or If mischance has robbed them of their once ; exijiilslte beauty, they dou't cry about it, but resort at ! ! once to CIUSTADORO'S HAIR DYE, ! which In five minutes does alt that nalureever did for any ] ; head In her happiest mood. Manufactured by J. CRISL A- I I DORO, 63 Maiden Lane, New York. Sold by all Druggists. 1 Applied by all llali Dressers. Ju.l7 1m ! BOOK NOTICES. Oliver Optic's Magazine," Our Boys and Ctirls," for July 6th, which is the first number of the new volume, appears en larged and improved. It contains a beau tiful portrait of Oliver Optic, and the first two chapters of a new story by hint—en titled "Breaking Away, or the Fortunes of a Student;" a Story by Olive Logan; Life in India, by a lady who was born and resided many years there; Sea Things, by George S. Burleigh, the poet; The Mysterious House; a marked Declama tion, and the usual variety of Rebusses, Enigmas, Charades, &e. This number comes with a beautiful cover, printed iu color, and is elegantly illustrated. Pub lished by LEE A SHEPAKD, Boston, $2,50 a year, $1,25 for six months, single copies six cents. The publishers offer to send a copy free to any boy or girl who will write to them for it. It is a somewhat remarkable fact that the democratic papers are condemn ing the execution of Maximillian. In Congress their members are also siding with the monarchical party. Has Jef had any anything to do with this new leniency. ftssT Nearly one hundred persons were lately stunned by a stroke of lightning which struck one of the sheds of the Springville Agricultural Fair Grounds in the western part of New York. A CARD FROM THE AieiSAtf Willi ED., OK WALTHAM, MASS. r riIIS Company beg leave to inform the A- public that they commenced operations In ISSO, and their factory now covers fouracres of ground, ami has cost more than a million dollars, an 1 emp 9. over 730 opera tives. They produce 75,000 Watchesa year, aud make and sell not lest than one-half of all the watches sold la the United States. The dlifereuce between their manufacture and the Euro pean, Is briefly this: European Watches are male almost entirely by band, and the result Is of necessity a lack of that uniformity, which Is Indispensable to correct time kef pin.;. Both the eye and the hand oi the most skillful operative must vary. But It is a fact that, except watches of the higher gra i ;s, European watches are the product of the cheapest labor of Switzerland, and the resuit Is the worthless Ancres, Leplnes and so called Patent Levers— which soon cost more In attempted repairs, than their ori ginal price, Commo 1 workmen, boys and women, buy tbe rough separate parts of these watches from various factories, polish and put tliem together, and take them to the nearest watch merch .nt, who stamps and engraves I them with any name or brand I hat may be ordered. llosv American Watches are Maile. The American Waltham Watch Is male by no such un j certain process—and by no such incompetent workmen. All tyc Company's operations, from the reception of the raw materials to the completion of the Watch, are carried ; 011 under one roof, and under one skillful and competent ! direction. But the great distinguishing feature of their Watches, Is the fact that their s -veral parts are all made by the finest, the most periect and delicate much nery ! ever brought to the aid of human industry. Every one of the more than a hun Ired parts of every watch is ma le by ; a machine—that infallibly reproduces every succeeding | part with the most unvarying accuracy. It was only ne j cessary to make one perfect watch of any particular style aud then to adjust the hundred machines nece-sary to re produce every part of that watch, and It follows that eve j ry succeeding watch must be like It. The Company respectfully submit their watches "on their merits" only. They claim to make A Better Article fur tle Money : by their improved mechanical processes than can be made under the old-fashiooe 1 handicraft system. They manu facture watches of every gra le, from a good, low priced, and substantial article. In solid silver bunting cases, to the finest chronometer; and also ladies' watches in plain gold or the finest enameled and Jeweled cases; but the Indis pensable requisite of all their watches is that they shall be : (JXID TIMEKEEPERS. It should be remembered that, except their single lowest grade named " Home Watch Company, Boston," ALL WATCHES nude by them Are Fully Warranted by a special certificate, and this warrantee Is good at all ! tunes against the Company or its agents. ROBBINS & APPLETON, jul7-lm 18*4 Broadway, New York. MILROY Drug & Hardware STORE. I HIE undersigned having established in the Drag and Hardware Business, solicits the pa tronage of the public. DRU3S AND MEDICINES of all kinds purchased from a first class house in Philadelphia, an l warranted pur-: an-1 fresh. All pre scriptions ortierc 1 will be carefully compounded from the best ingredients. The Drug Buuies is princi pally managed by I>R. A. HARSHBAUGER, practic ing physician, and persons ordering Drugs and Med- I icines from a distance may rely 011 having them care- Gully prepared and shipped. 1 have gone to consid • viable expense 111 purchasing a large assortment, and will sell as cheap as can be bought elsewhere. All kinds of PATENT MEDICINES, BITTERS, & WINES AND LIQUORS, lor medicinal purposes only. SWAI M' S V A NACEA, for the cure of Scrofula and Rheumatism. Elixir, Calisava. Iron and Bismuth for Dyspepsia and other affections, and all articles kept in a Drug ; Store. HARDWARE at reduced prices. Bird Cages, Iron and Nails, house furnishing Hardware, Oils and Paints. Ac., Ac. Give me a call, aud see for yourselves. I , W. J. MeMANIGAL. ; Milroy. July 17, 1567. UPSTATE NOTlCE.—Notice is here- I-( by given tiiat letters testamentary on the estate of Mary S iigram, late of I)e --• catur township, Mifilin county, deceased, have been granted to the undersigned, re |siding in said township. All those in debted to said estate, are requested to ; make immediate payment, and those hav ing claims to present them duly authen ticated for settlement. ROBERT INGRAM, j jyl7 Executor. 171 ST ATE NOTlCE.—Notice is hereby A given that letters of administration 011 theestateof Joseph W. Boody, late | of Wayne to\ynship, Miffiin county, de ceased, have been granted to the under signed, residing in said township. All persons indebted to said estate are hereby notified to make payment without delay, and those having claims to present them, duly authenticated, for settlement. ELIJAH MORRISON, jyl~.6t* Administrator. I" STATE NOTlCE.—Notice is hereby JLI given that letters of administration on ttie estate of Jacob Kaiifl'maii, late of Bratton township, Miffiin county, deceased, have been granted to the under | signed, residing in said township. All persons indebted to said estate are hereby notified to make payment without delay, and those having claims to present them, duly authenticated, for settlement. HENRY HARTZLER. JO N ATHAN KA U FFMAN, jylO.Gt* Administrators. LUST ATE eX George Mettle, lec'l. J2i —Notice is hereby given that Letters of Administration 011 the Estate of GEO. SETTLE, late of Bratton township, Mif fiin county, deceased, have been grauted to the undersigned, residing in same township. All persons indebted to said estate are notified to make payment im mediately, and those having claims to present them duly authenticated for set tlement. MARTHA H. SETTLE, juue-5-6t* Administratrix. OUR COLUMN BRIM FULL! Y7"ES, running over with comforts for you jL and yours, and all at REDUCED PRICES! Goods sold with privilege of returning if they don't turn out as represented, at the Big Coffee Pot Sign. Look at it; find what you want, and then drop in and we'll show anything you wish to see in our line. Handsome! our stock of TOILET-WARE, stamped and Japanned wnre; under this head we have a large variety of goods. On hand, a full stock of wholesale and retail, warranted tip*top, home manufacture. We do Jobbing, Roofing and Spouting, promptly, and do it right or no pay. As for i -STOVES, we'll tell you something new about I that by and by. You can now be suited in Fruit Cans and Jars, I either Tin, Glass or Stone. Fisher's Patent j Cans; also Stone Jars to close up same as the I tin. the Glass, too, are the same principle; ! the Gilmore Patent Tin Cans, the least trou j l.le of any we have; but the Press-Top Can j is the CHEAPEST; we have now Machinery to make almost a Can a minute: So look out fur LOW PR ICES, and if you want to save your fruit, as well is money, buy HOME MADE CANS. G'EKMAIT TRAYS, a nice stock and at half price Floor, Table, Stair & Window. WINDOW SHADES, : Splendid quality and very cheap. Odd sizes made to order. SHADE & CURTAIN TRIMMINGS, Picture Cord and Tassels, Wood and Willow-Ware, | ' full stock. Remember the place. TBI CHAMPION CLOTHES WRINGER. j kp j The only Wringer with the patent cog wheel roller regulator, which allows the roll ers to seperate and adjust at both ends with j out separating the cog wheels, It has also a ! patent curved clamp which has an equal ' hearing on the tub the whole length of the Wringer, while all other wringers are mere j Iv fastened to a single stavp -it each end. and jby the use of Bailey's Patent Grasshopper ! Spring, for controlling and putting the pres ure on rollers, only one pressure or thumb screw is requirid, which makes the Wringer self-adjusting and adjustable, and insures an j equal pressure the whole length of the rollers, j notwithstanding the articles being wrung I may be very uneven. Sold on trial at the Big Coffee Pot Sign. Kl TCIIEN FIXING S, Pie Fork, Pie Crimpers and Trimmers, Egg Boilers, Cherry Stoners. Magnetic Hammers,Matchest Shoe Blacking, Dusting and Scrub Brushes, ! "Shoe and Sweeping " | Crumb and White wash " j Corn Wisps and Brooms, Spain's Patent Parrel Churns. Cedar Tubs and Buckets, Painted Tubs and Buckets, Washing Machines, zinc and wood, Washing Machines, Pollar's new style, Clothes and Market Baskets, Sewing and Fancy Baskets, Clothes Pins and Lines, Clothes Horses and Wringers, latest & best, Roiling Pins and Potato Mashers, Butter Prints, Paddles and Spoons, Bread Toasters and Wire Gridirons, Coal Torigs and Knife Boxes, Coffee, and Sugar Boxes, Coffee and Tea Canisters, Spice Boxes, wood and tin, Sad or Smoothing Irons, ; Tea and Coffee Pot Stands, Match Safes, 7 different kinds, Mouse and Rat Traps, Dinner and Tea Bel's, Step Ladders and Garden Toole, Coal Sieves and Buckets, Coal Shovels, Tongs and Pokers, Paste Jaggers, Coffee Mills and Beef Pounders, 3 kinds, Egg Whips and Slicers, Soup Ladles and Basting Spoons, Flesh Forks and Vegetable Skimmers, Pat'd Cake Turners and Nutmeg Graters, Tack Hammers and Hatchets, Carpet Tacks and Stair Rods, Waffle Irons and Iron Bake Pans, i Brass, Porcelain, Tinned and Iron Kettles i and Sauce Pans, Iron Tea Kettles and Pots, Butter Bowls and Towel Rollers, Flour Sieves and Clothes Line Keels, Scissors, Suuffers and Nurse Lamps, Siaw Cutters and Lanterns, Clothes Dampeners, Wire Dish Stands and Covers, Knives and Forks, Butcher and Carving Knives, Table Steels, Ivory Knives, Plated Forks and Spoons of all kinds. J. lItVIN WALLIS, At the Big Coffee Pot Sign. Lewistown, July 17, 1867. Pt Bl* IC? BALL • ill be sold at public sale, at the dwell ing of the sub scriber at Mt. Rock Mill, Deny townsliin half a mile north of Lewistown, on SATI RDAY, JULY 20th, 1567, the following personal property, viz: One IIORSE, One CO IF, Three HOGS one and two-horse Wagons, Cart, Sulky' Rockawuy Carriage, Sleigh, Bedsteads Bedding, 15 Blankets, about TOyardsCar pet, Oil Cloths, Lounges, Tables, Sink Safe, Stands, Cook and other Stoves, Pine' Dough Tray, Looking Glasses, Chairs' Churn, Hat-rack, 2 Clocks, Ironing Fur nace, Mandril and Circular Saw, Rifl e | Bureau, Quilting Cotton, Fruit Cans' I Brass Kettle, Spirit Level, 2 Mowin-J Scythes and Sueads, Robe, I Double and Singletrees, Log smoother Chains, Horse Blankets, Sleigh Bells,Sad idle, Harness, Plow Gears, Bridles, Picks I Shovels, Crow Bars, Carpenter's and Coo|>er Tools, 20 Augers, Meat Tubs, Lard and Lard Cans, Bacon, Sewing Machine and a general variety of household and kitchen furniture. Also, a lot of 1 and 1| and 2 inch Lum ber, new; also, a lot of old Lumber Joist ; old Rooting, <&c. Sale to commence at 10 o'clock, a. ni. when terms will be made known, i jylb G. LEHR. \TOTICE TO TEACHERS. ! JLN Teachers will please take notice that U. S. History has been added to the Com mon School branches in which they wili hereafter be examined. Theory of teach ing lias also been added. Teachers are requested to give attention to those studies. Those who desire to attend school for this purpose, as well as to improve their knowl edge in other branches, are informed that Kishacoquillas Seminary opens on Wednesday, July 17, and that special at tention will lie given to teachers and those intending to teach. MARTIN MOIILER, julo-2t Co. Supt. Mifflin Co. Desirable property for SAIJEL —The subscriber offers at pri vate sale his FARM, situate ill Wayne township, Milllin county, near Atkinson's Mills, containing 270 ACRES, a good part limestone, 130 of which are under cultivation, well fenced, with run ning water, balance in good timber. The improvements consist of a two story and basement Stone MilllHOrSE, nearly new, Log and other outbuildings; j an old and young Apple Orchard, cherries, peaches, and pears. Neighborhood good —I of a mile from schoolliouse, 1 mile from store and mill. The above is offer ed cheap and on accommodating terms. ap24-;;i GEO. ROTHROCK. ST AT E VOTIC E.—Notice is hereby -J given that letters of administration on the estate of Abraham Mutthcrs bough, late of Decatur township, Mif flin county, deceased, have been granted i to the undersigned, residing in said town ship. All persons indebted to said estate are hereby notified to make payment without delay, and those having claims to present them, duly authenticated, forset i tlement. JEMIMA MUTTHER3BOUGH, J OHXSTON M UTTHERSBO UGH jylo.6t* Administrators. ffILT msm SHADES. vT Plain and richlv Gilt, at 1.60 per pair at F. G. FRANCTSC'US'. OORCHTM HACHKIBBT lO of all kinds, on hand may 29 F. G. FRANCISC'US, Agt. pARPET SWEEPERS, v. Best in use, for sale by may2G F. G. FRANCISC'US, V'*" fill REDUCTION in prices of OO.Ulf COOKING STOVES. my 29 F. G. FRANCISC'US. O - tA FOR Children's Carriages. A i|)y.yU new stock just received. my 29 F. G. FRANCISC'US. "VTOTICE. —All those knowing them jJV selves indebted to P. F. Loop will please call at once and Settle their ac counts, as I have bills to pay and must have money. P. F. LOOP. Lewistown, July 10, '67. REFINED SAPONIFIER. IpOR 25 cents you can procure what will make 20 gallons GOOD SOAP, at marJOtf I)R. R. MARTIN'S. pESI'ISE SCOTCH ALE, in original bottles, ' T manufactured in Ediuburo. for sale by 1 jylo NATHAN KENNEDY. S. O- M'CURDY, with Benson, Campbell & Co., Commission Merchants h Wholesale Grocers, 5U7 Market Street, Philadelphia. PARTICULAR attention given to sales of Ginseng, Woo!, Woolen Yarn, Fur Skins, Deer Skins, Sheep Skins, Flaxseed.Cloverseed, Featliers. Leather, Roots, ; Dried Fruit, Butter, Beeswax. Eggs, Ac. Ail goods warranted to give entire satisfaction, and | sold at the lowest city prices. Please call and be convinced. Also, u full lino of Tobacco kept constantly on i hand. jvle-' .n* NEW OPENING. tr. nvr. NOLTE HAS purchased the stock of Boots and Shoes of P. F. Loop, who will carry on the business at the well | known old stand. He will keep a large assortment of ; home and eastern made goods, and Will continue to make woik to order in all styles and in the best and neatest manner. He invites all to give him a call ai : he will sell goods very low, but lor cash onlv. jylO J.M NOLTE. SHOEMAKERS, TIIE best qualities of SOLE LEATHER, KIP, UPPER and CALFSKINS, on hand ; also, all kinds of LININGS, TOOLS, &c., &0., which 1 am selling low. apr3 J. B. SELIIEIMER. nvi ilro "y WOOLEN MILLS, MILROY, MIFFLIN COUNTY, PA. HAVING resumed the manolacture of Woolen Gooda. the undersigned will keep con- Mtantly on hand and for sale, an assortment of Wool en Goods, exclusively of their own manu facture, such as CASSIMERES, Plaid and Fancy, Common and Fine, Light and Heavy. DOESKINS, OVERCOATINGS, TWEEDS, Ac. FX J^3STIsrEIL.S, Plain and Barred, Heavy, Medium and Light, White, Gray and Colored, JEANS, SATINETS. BLANKETS, &c., STOCKING YARNS Germantown Zephyrs, &c. Made to order, of three ply, all wool chain. RTurvvil" aro made with especial reference to bl KLNuI H and DURABILITY, being put up in the u-.n h SU f 1 ) 1111 "' planner and of the be-t material.and ,'i , so, d at prices as low as thev can be manufae \v l or ' a fl,i " retain these desirable qualities. u " a ye wagons out from which persons eau obtain ur goods at their own doors at the same prices that ■ i a -o 80 d for at thl> factory. __ —Sylboof, Soap and Lard taken in exchanqr for goods. mayls- om JAMES THOMPSON* A*SONS.