ICXX i 111 OCINGRESS—StOOND UMW saluerr., Feb. 11.—The joint resolution of Mankato Maj.-Gen , Thomas was favorably reported. The Freed. man's Bill .was made the special order for Monday. General Grant appeared on the floor of tbetlenares. and was introduced to the members genera/It:" Tine credentials of Mr. Cragin, the new Senator trete New Hampshire. were presented and referred. The Appropriation Bill was taken up and an aniendment adopted increasing the salaries of the Aeslitent See retariea of Departments to :3 500 . per yehr. iAu amendment appropriating £OO,OOO for therenlargee ment of the Cougreeslonal Library was adoeited. and the bill, es amended, was then passed. Adjourned. 0de11,, , 0f New-York, presented me- Morlinstram the - Neiv Yeekthamber of Commerce to tax sales nf Ifferehandlee, to construct n hip al.betweeleataireErlb mid 'Outtilite-inii tit 'etitabltele ca an line of mall steamers to Japan and China from Son Francisco. Mr, Rice, of Maesacheteette, recta to a question Of privilege, and caused to be read an ar ticle from the New Fork- Ecetting /hit, 'charging bled withteing s paper usnulhetuter, and therefore voting to' emteriarierin hie tswd pocket, when he voted againerreduceng the tax on paper.- ilederded the harpies emphatlcally;lmildenouteeithe author of them. Mr. Stevens pr oposed- to. rule out the re porter of that paper , front the' privileges or the House, but subsequently - withdrew his resolution. Oen-. Grant appeared on the floor of the Rouse, and • nem wet tairen'for the purpose of congratulating and reeelelng hire: The tai bill was then taken up, and the Cmendment, to put en additional tax of fifty emits per -barrel upon beer and other malt liquors was teleeted. After further consideration the Rowe adjourned: fhowre, Feb. 15.—After a number of petitions for "rations (Meets had bete presented, the bill to tetale lish a steamship line between the United States and China was taken up end passed.. The report of the Conference Commltthv on the Freedman's' Sarum "Bill was then received, tint rm action was taken on 'the bill, Its consideration being postponed to give way for Mr. Sherman's motion to take up the Rouse joint resolution reducing the duty on imported pa per. A motion; to postpone the suhject Indefinitely - was defeated, and the amendment to make the , duty 15 per cent., instead of 3 per cent., was passed. The question was then taken on the final pesage of, the resolution pu t amended, n and It was dsrided in the affirmative. House—A resolution was adopts, by a small majority, appropriating 333,000 par a naval picture by Mr. Powell. A eceoiutiOnAtstreeting the Mili tary Committee to inquire into the condition of the freedmen in Maryland, was adopted. A peace reso lution, Introduced hy Mr. Dawson, of Pennsylvanis, was laid on the table by a decUive vote, The same disposition was made of several war reeolntlons of fered by Mr. Williams, also of Pennsvitemla. The Howe then : took up the .Amendatory Revenue Bill Amendments were agreed to exempting Bibles and Testaments, or volumes containing only parts of either, end prayer books front any duty or Tax. School-books, and all hooks printed exelusirely for Sunday Schools were also exempted from duty or tax. ficsTlt., Feb. 14.—Mr. Ullson, of Massachusetts, reported from the Military Committee a joint reso lution =commending the appointmtut of honorably diteharged soldiers and sailors to mnumendive po sitions under Goverement, In prefeNetett to other persons. It was ordered to be printed. A resolu tion was adopted to inquire what inereaae el the army ration is necessary for the comfort of the sol dier and the good of the service A resolution was adopted calling noon the President for a report of the Court of inquiry npan the sul.je t of the elpio. elan of the Peterebure toine. l'ne rote granting authority for the construction of a bridge across the Ohio at Louisville was reconsidered, and Mr. Cowan moved to amend by selling out "two handfed and forty feet span." This was disagreed to. The bUI was passed as It stood originally Tte hill to regu late commerce between Cl.- several States was then taken rip, and after some discussion was postponed till Thursday. The Senate then adjourned, to meet In the evening for ]Executive business- House.—The Military Committee were Instneted to Inquire what legislation is necessary to secure the muster out of such men us enlisted for the ttnex eared terms of their regiments with the understand ing that they should he mustered out with the reuirnetita. The Senate bill, giro,4 lands in Wis consin for the construction of a ship canal, was re jected by the House. The Amendatory international Revenue Bill was then taken up. Various amend ments were discussed, rir.d the•provistnes in relation to tobacco were amended 150 . 111 , to recd as follows: •tOe smoking tobacco of all kink's, not otherwise herein provided tor, thirty five cent• per ;weed.", The Senate bill recognizing as Yost routes the bridges to be built over the Ohio at Cincitmatt and Louis ville, were passed, and the House adjourned, SIMATA, Feb. 13.—Mr. Johnson, of Maryland, an aenonueel the death of Senator Hicks, and con cluded his remarks by offering the customary es.e . o- - Intions of respect, which were adopted and sent to the House. Eiticiales on the deceased were also de-. livered by Mr Wiley, of West Virebsia, and Mr., Hale, of New Hautirsitire. ' At 12 o'clock the body of the deceased was brought lobo the Senate Chamber, and after the funeral service of the Masonic Order bad been performed, Ray. De. :Nadal delivered so eloquent discourse on th- character of t lie deceased. President Lincoln, several member of the Cabinet, and many other distinguished gentlemen were pres ent At 3:30 o'clock the tody of the deceased Syria- Henri.—A Nies•are was received from President Lincoln in relation to two innervational exhibitions, one or which is to be held in Norway, and one in Portugal in the course of the present year. A rmo 'talon was adopted. instruelnz the Committee on Invalid Pensions to inquire wtat farther legislation. if any, is necessary to secure to minor children of deceased ealdiem their rights under the law as heirs, in the case of the death or marriage of their widOws. A resolution was offered, and referred to the Library Committee, proposing to buy for the pnr trait of Lient-General Grant now on exbibition Ih the Rotunda. The bill es - tending the titne for the construction of the railroad from Marquette to the Wisconsin State line, was rejected. A licsvve was received from the Senate announcing the action taken by that body respecting the death of Senator Hicks. Eloquent and touching eulogies on the character of the deceased were delivered by MeArs. Webster, Cress well and others, after which the members of the Rouse proceeded to the Senate Chamber to attend the obsequies ot the deceased Senator, end when they returned the Howe adjourned. Szsuggr., February 16.—The report of General Herron on the condition of the ileteirtment at Ar kansaswas received. A bill teas parsed t o au thoriz e the settlement of claims of the AnTericzn Colonize tioe Society for the support of recaptured Africans in Liberia. A bill was passed extending the boun daries of the port of entry and delivery of Philadel phia A bill was Introduced and referred to the Military Committee to increase the eflielener of the staff of the army. The Navy Appropriation Sill was taken np, and all the-amendments of the Finance Committee, effect lag appropriations, were concurred , In. An amendment to postpone the time for the restoration of the Naval Academy was voted down. Amendment was a.topted appropriating elOO,OOO for additions and improvements to the Naval Asylum at Philadelphia An amendment creating a Board of Admiralty was, , proposed. Pending the discussion of this onestion the Senate edlourned. Horae.—The Senate bill to eitablhli steam mail communication between the United States and China was passed by a „large majority The House also passed a bill extending the jute for the emupletioa of certain railroads .iu Mitmesota, which laud been granted public lands. A joint resolution was re ported relative to mustenng out volunteers who enlisted for the uutxpired terms of their regiments. The House then resumed the couaideration of the .Amendatory Internal revenue Lill, alien a debate took place on en amendment heretofore offered by Mr. Trooper. proposing to increase the rates of taxa tion on notes of circulation, to order to restrain overissues The amendment was disagreed to. In The evening seesiou, the House passed the Senati bill extending the pert. of curry and delivery of the District of Philadelphia. The Revenue old was again taken up and an utneutltuctri was offered by Mr. Stevens, striking out the words " payable in cola" from the seettou itrockling a duty on cotton, was adopted. The bill vine still under discussion when the House adjuumed. Smaterg, Feb. 17.—The credentials of Mr. Joseph Leger, Senator elect from the old State of Virginia, were presented, and bathe debate which arcese, the whole question of Vlrgirlan status in the Union was discussed by Messrs. Sumner, Foster, Trumbull, Howard, Willey, Wilson and Sherman, when the Credo/Mahe were laid on the table. Mr. Sumner in troduced a. concurrent resolution declaring the rebel debtor loan simply an agent of the rebeltion..which can never In any way be recognized by the -United Stales. The introduction of the resolution was ob jected to. The Naval Appropriation bill was taken pp when another long discussion oat-erred between Messrs. Hale, Grimes, Doolittle and Saulsbury. At She evening session of the Senate Me. Stunuer's res olutions on the rebel debt was passed. The Navid Appropriation Bill came up and Mr.. Nye made a long speech in reply to Mr. Saulsbury's remarks of - .the afternoon. Messrs. fitalsbury, Grimesand Wade also participated - in the debate, when several minor ontan - tdments were made, mid the bid passed. HOVOB.—Mr. Dswca, from the Committee on Elections . , reported a reaolu i tu to admit itr. A. P. Fieldto a scat from the Second, and Mr. Mann from the Third tbngreasional lbstriet or LgUiSiloll. Mr. Dawes alseareperted In favor of admitting Air. Jack from the. First,: and Mr. Johnson from the Tntrd .Congresaional District of Arkansas. The Internal Eevenue bill came up for consideration. The I amendment to tar sales oneelialf of one per cent, was discussed at length, and at length adopted by the close vote of CS to 50 :Thu - bunk-tar anatmd recut of Mr.- Hooper was rejected-6i to CM Mr. Wilson, of /Owl; Offered as un nutondment that ev ict,. National Ranking Association and State Dank or VElsta Banking, Aseoclailen,p a y a tar at ten per cent. on the amount of any State notes puld out by thetti Idler the 'IMO January, 1ta.15. This agreed/ -• eyrie «4' "rya Si- The effort to increase the tax on -ands .petroleum was detailed Mr. Stevens, of pinnsylvants, offered a new section remeiring event boillon , broker to take out a liesmse and pay one - Montan& dollars therefor, whet her onerating at the ,Brokers' Butt= or - elsewhere. All sales of gold,ex ceptlng for Importation and to pay duty on imports and Interest on the ,pphlle,,debt—ure to be taxed ten per ceofeam «eh percher: gni ecte The amend -tnwitt.-.wit.s,saiopteri, by a SCii-cl a 3/ Yeas agaluat 411 Virrwo toms/red and etventy-Ore perms bait Ml 3 rUn -over and killtd walliimg *flying ;rpm 3lie.nilin4ad tacks in 4ißiattunits.dcuip' g tee tut, Ugleses;"- - Tbt largest twaber is any oucyalx icas raillgOls 4iAtt.6 auiraletruiti Cu /SOL) the indept4a4,stintbliatt "A talon of lakea sad a trnton of lands, A, Union of Statesman° am sever; A Union of hearts. and a Union of hands, And the Fling of our Union tomer." CIRCULATION 3,100. H. H. FRAZIER EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR Montrose,Pa., Tuesday, Feb. 21, 1865. OLORIOVS NEWS. Sherman is triumphantly marching through South Carolina. Columbia, B. C., is evacuated. Beauregard retreating as our forces entered tht town. Large quantities of materials and stores were destroyed by the Rebels. The evacuation of Charleston is a military necessity. Sherman lives nn the country as he advances. A NEW EXPEDITION TO THE NORTH POLE. While our countryman Captain C. F. Rail is attempting, by a novel and extraordinarily ad venturous way, to obtain further accounts of the fate of Sir John Franklin and his men, Captain 'Sherrard Osborne, of the British navy, proposes a new and final expedition to the North Pole. Captain Osborne's object, which enjoys the fa vor of all tlaeleading Arctic voyagers, and the op position of the London Tuna, was laid before the Royal Geographical Society on the ;.3d of January; and it is probable that the society will recommend the government to furnish the yes sels, and grant leave of absence to the officers and men required for the purpose. There will be no difficulty in getting volunteers. Captain: Kane's man Morton has probab'y stood nearer to the Pole than any white mat before or since. Re reached a point named by hint Cape Constitution. That point was located by him, in latitude 80' 56', five hundred and fat ty four miles from the Pole. Sixty miles north ward he saw land, which he called Cape Parry this would be four hundred and eighty-four miles from the Pole; and Captain Osborne pro poses to take this as his point of departure. He asks for two small screw steamers and one hundred and twenty men, which should be rea dy by the spring of 1866. "They would nail for Baffin's Bay and reach Cape Tork In August— One vessel would then be secured in or about Cape Isabella, leaving, only twenty-five persons in charge; the other, with ninety-five men, wo'd be pressed op the western shore in the direction of Cape Parry, taking care not to exceed a dis tance of 300 miles from her consort. Du ring the same autumn the southern ship would connect herself by depots with the northern ves sel, and the northern vessel would place out de pots towards the Pole ready for spring opera tions. In the two following years—lB67---0 sledge and boat operations should be directed rnwqrds the Bala and relrelhhetr'Woulil Fetfre. thus spending only two winters and three sum mers in the Artie zone." The chief peculiarity of Captain Osbome's plan is that he will make his sledge journeys in the winter season, and not In summer as Artie voyagers pave done hitherto. It is a pity tha. such an expedition could not have the aid of the thorough knowledge of Esquemanx habits ane character which was acquired by Captain dering his first voyage to and stay In the Arctic region, and which he is now using so courage ously and nobly for the prosecution of his searcL after Siir John Franklin's men. THE GREAT AMENDMENT 'According to the provisions of the Federal Constitution, amendments may be made to it up on being proposed by Congress and ratified by the Legislatures of three-fourths of the States The present number of States in the Union I. thirty-six. It will therefore, require twenty-sev en to ratify. Of these there is no doubt of 'ob taining twenty-two, viz :—Maine, New Hamp shire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island. Connecticut, New York, Pennsylvania, Mary land, West Virginia, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Wisronsin,Minnesota, lowa, Missouri. Kansas, California, Oregon, and Nevada, the legislatures of all these being loyal andanti-slav ery. Three States—New Jersey, Delaware and Kentucky—will probably vote against the A mendment, though - Kentucky is not certain. If we add it we have twenty-three, and Tennessee. Arkansas, • and Louisiana will soon be added through their loyal Legislatures, making twen 'psis, and only lacking one. All this will be accomplished inside of a year. Macb of it will be done in a month,—a number of States have already voted. In Order then to ratify this glorious step of the National Congress, we have only to add one more State. No one doubte the easy practicahil ity of this. We have the ten territories of the West growing np, and several nearly ready to ask fop admission. Two of these will settle the mattet. The old State of Virginia, and others of those that have been in rebellion, will soon be back with loyal governments. Delaware will change front in a year or two from her present benighted position. The "Great Amendment" Is not a "Ptve's bull against the Comet." It 'rein he ratified and ful fill its great mission of redemption and regenera tiom GROWTH OF THE HEPTBLICAN PARTY The political statistics of the Tribune Alma nac furnish materials tor many instructive and useful comparisons and calculations.. The steady and healthy growth of the republican party from year to year cannot fall to strike one who studies these: statistic?. The"republican Presidential vote, , it will he observed, in 1856 cm 1,341, 873; in 1860 it was 1,864,523, and in 1804 it was 2,223035. The natural increase by additions to the opting population Is idulnit 10 per, cent in four years. The actual increase Of the republi can vote from 185 1 3 to 1860 was 89 per cent. and fromlB66 to 1834 it was over 10 per cent; for the whole period of eight years over 06 per cent. The democratic party, counting with it the know nothings and other fuetkins, increased bn't 2 per cent From 1856 to 1869, and decreased nearly 10 per einit fr6m 1860 to 1864. The more rapid growth of the republiCan. Oar': ty into be accounted for, it is true, from itialsei that tobtained the largest share_of the priliM'or BellXveMttParty of 1860, and a consitierable numher Of the Douglas Tatars. And many who are deninciatiand-wia so Tote in any ordinary division orpartles;iroted for Kr. Lincoln's re-a -' 'maim hecausethey&liested the equiyoml po eistion of their oimpuityltm the war question. While,thercrore, the grovith of the republican pa.r tyMOintmtherhopearits pe*enentattacess it Wing) from such rkstreeit tlutt It s tiPait. tian margin for presumpturala experimenting or fbr easy coutpenrs in its botdemon palm It can very easily reduce its 40,000 majOrity,:in a vow of tea times that sum*. It' can maintain its hold quits the:people only by dernmistrating Its supreme fidelity to the intermix atthemition. and by its relentless hostility' to the cormorants who seek to' - fasten themselves opals_ the treasury. No loyalty to a great idea can savelkfrom over ' throw if allows itself to become thelustmment of the public thieves. WOOING VP THE WAR. The great public need of the time is a Medi. cal realization of the fact that the rebellion can, be crushed out to Its last spark of We by the Spring campaign, and a fiXed deteirdnation that it shall be done. Jost the same exerase of the reason and the will is demanded that is eser-1 eked by every business man is finishing np any business enterprise, the end of which is within his reach. Nay, that but very inadequately ex presses it. The obligations to make an end of this war at the very earliest day possible, are im measurably beyond any motive which the man of business can feel. They involve human life. Every month of the war entails the sacrifice, by battle and disease, of thousands of brave men. Its needless prolongation for a single month, or a single day, would be unpardonable homicide. The crime would be greater if, by our neglect, we should leave a work to be done by active campaigning through the miasmatic months of the Summer and Autumn. No human duty ever rested more weightily than that now de volved upon the loyal people of the land to make an end forever of this war within the. pe riod to which military stience, if armed with proper means, limits it. Human will and ener gy have never been more solemnly invoked. The practical shape which this duty has now taken, is a q'iick response to the pending requi sition of the President for men. Government has done, and is doing, its part of the work. The Lieutenant-General stands ready to do his part of the work. It is for :the people to do their part of the work. The public will every where should assume a new force, and, in every mode of efficient action, should stimulate the volunteering of men who will make the most serviceable soldiers. It should no longer toler ate the pitiful tricks and evasions by which quo tas have often heretofore been dodged altogether, or been supplied with material which proved utterly worthless. In those localities wherevol unteering falls short, it should sustain the Gov ernment in a rigorous enforcement of the draft. The popular determination everywhere she* he set like steel in respect to that prompt supply of fit men required by the Government for the quick finishing up of the war. EMPLOYMENT FOR DISABLED SOLDIERS Petitions have been put to circulation in near ly all the Miles, and are freely signed by the leading citizens, irrespective of party, asking Congress to take some action by which honor tbly discharged soldiers may obtain govern ment employment in preference to those who have for so many years been subsisting on gov ernment " pap." There are large numbers of patriotic young men everywhere who have been honorably discharged from the army on account of wounds, sickness, imprisonment, etc., who are unable to work at their trades or any hard labor, have no means of subsistence except that furnished by charity, and who are perfectly competent to fill almost any civil appointment or clerkship. Let the people further this noble oltlect—it would be but a small return for the gallant services rendered by our soldiers. FROM EUROPE. The steamship Mirth American, from Liver pool on the 2d, via Greencastle on the 3d, arriv ni4B. Tlie intelligence of the all of Fort Plitt er depressed the Rebel sympathizers in Eng land very much, and elated the friends of the North. The rebel loan suffered another decline, and American securities swain advanced. The brokers reported an active and excited market (or American securities. Cotton was flat and depressed, cons quence of the continual Fed eral success. News of the conditional cession of 3onera to France, as payment of the French war debt, has reached England from Mexico.— llinister Adams had a long interview with Earl Russel on the 28th uIL, and the fact attracted comment. sprint Gorr pondenee of the Independent Republican. OUR DANGER AND ITS REMEDY. Weal:um:mos, D. C., Feb. 13th, 1885. After conducting the present war for th,3 Union to the successful end which we now see draining noir, the most Important quastlon which can arise is that of national finance. Upon this will parties be divid ed, and the position which the Republican patty takes will, more than any other one thing, deter mine whether it shall contlnae to guide the desti nies of the nation, or leave them in other, and, I fear, worse hands. The antagonism of capital and labor Is not a nor mal condition, but Is the result of the unwise legisla tion which destroy their equilibrium. Whenever nature's equilibrium is artificially destroyed, a con flict of forces results which ends only when the nat ural conditions are resumed. Wrongful laws de prived a portion of God's creatures of their Inherent rights ; capital owned labor. The irrepressible con• flict then began ; and it will not end until all are equal before the law. But inking and unwise legisla tion may deprive labor of other rights. Chartered monopolies and unequal taxation are instan.ats.— On the other hand agrarian or communist laws might infringe the rights of capital ; all such are dangerous to the common weal. I now propose to show a few of the evils of our present financial system, viewed from this istand-point The floating wealth of a country Is, in great part, represented by its currency, which passe from nand to hand In commercial transactions. Thla al. Ways, mainly, and In our country at present, wholly, consists of paper representatives ref value, principal ly bank notes. Upon all bank paper the capitalist who issues it by virtue of his charter receives the interest, although, really, it is the property of the community who use it. Suppose the paper circula tion of the country to be $500,000,000. The Interest upon this is 100,000,000, annually, and this amount is taken by - the system of legislation which permits private banking, from the pockets of the people etch year—tending directly to the concentration of wealth, which In ail times and all countries la a public evil, resulting in poverty of the mavies, and ending In Ignorance, degradation, and crime. The only reme dy for this Is to make legal•teuder, or bettor frinsi specie phymenta can be resumed, demand notes, the only paper carnency--giving to the Gov ernment, and thus to the people, by diminished tu ition, the interest upon the floating capital of the nation. The amount of paper circulation will incomes in proportion to the wealth and population of the coun try, thus requiring yearly issues In excess of the amount brought back for redemption, and to sup ply the placeof notes lost byaceidenta of are, water, and wear. This would constitute a shaking fend for the reduction and gradual absorption of the public dew, tt• the original $500,000,000 alums would new er be redeemed, being, in fact, a perpetual loan, without interest, from thopeople to the Govesumezt, of their floating capital. The national banking system sccomplishee but one good-4 uniform currency which is better than the old State bank paper; but was an unlncky change from the Treasury note Arm, giving, as 'lt does, to individuals the emoluments which ought to belong to the Government only. It gives to capitalists, or to speculators who do business on borrowed capital, an opportunity of doubling u*ll trebling Metro:Ohl at the common expense, and of Intl flog and , depne. dating the currency to an extent whose only Mgt is the amount of loans n bleb the Treasury must' make to Intel its enormous expenses. Let us M. SOP row $200,000; Invest it in Government bonds, sand them to the Treasury Departmeoand reretro PA- M tA.CSunt(PY- —Ran, s* . . imdtilliandsma may nftrtt youj gugWYLW. 63906% and bra on your credit, the Government kindly guaranteeing your drculation t ,Or establish a bank In Idaho, wlthAespiteltit titG,Pop:---kerchatie Wilda t° the asn6l4o4sso,o3oaml449lo,Giani for cur maw', Riad* your tarmacY tbrgTritrinka and buy morn boadvand exchange far Currency nettle. Seep up tlstai . ,tstem Of permutation nail !ki r alter caw of tetiper cent on each nhelnitoli!tlae:a UP your 'Vital. then apply forint Increase to; 1p1X),000, or more. ,Ttrant - - nosps. Lt Operation '' P 50,000 vein give 2,4 45,000 40,50 0 80,500 " 88, 1 0 0 29,500 Z 1,500 " 23,800 " 21,400 " 4th " sth " 615 " 4th Bth " 9tt , I. v 06,000 With 00,000 of capital son can get Interest on MOW of Government bonds. Your en •rency will be In circulation all over the country, yuu havine sent It to New York to purchase the bonds ; and you can redeem It (when It contest at your banking huuac In Idaho. Evert la Mb sprinftime of folly any one must see that *him hitch a system as this is in operation the time has come when the interests of cannel are op. posted to the interests of the people who labor, and of the country, and that bonor . and safety alike re quire the curtailment of such privileges. The con tinuance of such a system must rheult in comentmt- Mg In the bands of capitalists all the money that can be wrung out of the country by taxation. We can not go on Indefinitely, paving fifteen per cent., or more, Interest on the great maga of •the public debt, and an enormous premium on what we are borrow ing from day to day since the Interest-in-gold Idei I has died out from exhaustion. It is f o r the profit of capitalists who hold gold bearing bonds to depre ciate the currency, as It enhances their rate of inter eat., but la by no means air the profit of thu people who delve, or the soldiers who tight to save the country u an heritage for those who come atter them. In presenting them ideas I have not aimed at on Inality either in substance or form. These reflec tions will not be new to thoughtful man. I only wish to Impress upon the people the necessity al compelling their representatives, by the tame of public opinion, to provide an adequate remedy for r state of things which cannot last without culmina hog in national bankruptcy and dishonor. With all deference to the eminent citizen who 1: now at the bead of the Supreme bench, it Is now too late to hold that the management of our tinatirts hitherto has been anything more than a changeable, experimental, make-ahift policy. We have gone from demand notes to legal tender, from legal-tender to private taisues of national currency, and from gold bearing to currency-bearing bonds. Let on now hope that the intelligence of a tree people will compel a repeal of capital privileges and the adoption of a flnancLyl policy which will not bring upon us Venn only less In magnitude than the great cause of the war, of which we luridly hone 10 ' hear no more forever—a system which will not end in bringing the Government to repudiation and the laboring people to beirgary. Then can we look with pride upon a Government so benetleent, that we shall knnw that oar heroic men who fought for it, and who have gone to juin " the many" have not vainly died. From Gen. Sherman. firrAva:s Hann, Friday, Feh, 10th, 1505. The latest intelligence from the right wing of Sher man's army is to the effect that it wa slowly but steadily advancing In the direction of Charleston.— On tba Rd Inst., the Seventeenth Corps I,A the col am In crossing the Salkehatchie River. A strong force of rebel pickets was posted on the Dolt h bank, and offered some resistance to the Union mo7emeto. A skirmish ensued, which, however, was of short to ration, and which resulted In the complete dispersion of the enemy. He leil his dead on the field. The posltlon thus taken was the strongest yet discovered between Savannah and the Salkehatchie The works were mounted with field pieces. which the enemy succeeded In getting off ots his retreat Our casual ties numbored about eighty: the enemy's net so many. The Union wounded were taken to the Beaufort hospitals the first of the week. Since the movement over the Salkehatchle, we have not heard of any fighting on the right portion of the line, al though it does not seen, possible that the Column can advance much further without effccting some very brilloOrtant ....0.....50500 reports twat the rebels are strengthening their works on James and John's Islands, and arc putting up additional tents. This certainly looks as If they did not menu to evacuate Charleston at present, although no doubt Is expressed that the city will fall within a short BMA. REBEL. REPORTS CHARLE-qTalf, S. C., Friday, Feb. 10th, 14'15. A force of the enemy, believed to be from 2,0(t) to 3,000 strong, landed et Grlmball's, dames 1-laud, at 8 o'clock this morning, and drove In our plcko. tkome ekirralsking took plw.e, but no general engsve,e ment. Gritaball's Is on the Stono River, about two miles smattered. of Charleston, the Ashley River, 2,000 yards wide, intervedlec. The enemy are making active demonstrations at variotts points, but they are believed to he feints. A twee attacked our troops on the Salkahatehle thin morning. but were easily repulsed. The enemy also advanced upon the Charleston road, near the Blue House, and opened with unlit a ry, but made no Impression on our The enemy are now moving on Edisto. Prom the CharleNton Courier, Feb. 6th We team that on Saturday one transport and tuir of the enemy's barges landed troops at Littie Brit ain, and about as many at Secret Post Abnut .;<i e'. IL they advanced to King's Creek, and after :kir wishing for a short time they retired, aria our et line was reestablbstuut. The enemy threw two shell at the city (Charleston) on Saturday. 'MERMAN'S LEFT WING PIIGLADELPIIIA, Wednesday, F h. 15th, 1865. The Evening Bullet Washington special says Richmond parrs omdirm the report of Sherman', occupationo Branchvide and Orangebureb. An ad. Vance on Columbia was anticipated. Wheeler's car airy appear to be the only force operating aguiubt Sherman In thts direction. LATER FROM SHERMAN WASHINGTON, Thursday, Feb. 16th,18C5. Richmond papers of the 15th indicate that Sher man's advancol cavaby are actually as far north a. Florehce, the second boportant ndlroad junction on the borders of North Carolina. . _ They also announce all telegraphic and railroad cornmttnieatlon with Charleston dra3troyed, thu• showing that Sherman's left column must hare struck the North Eastern Railroad running from Charleston to Florence. The Richmond papers of the 14th, received to day, how that the question of arming slaves has been temporarily laid aside in the Rebel Congress. [Florence is in the Dariluvou District of South Carolina border. It is the point of junction of threw• railroad lines—the North Eastern, the Wilmington and Manchester, and the Cheraw and Darlington.] WAIIIIINGTON, Thursday, Feb. 16th, 18:15. Major Blo'baud, Chief of Artillery or the Fifteenth Corps of Gen. Sherman's Army, has arr:veli here, bringing dispatches to the Goverutnent. lie Nip , G. Sherman's plans are notgeneNlly known his own army, althount he has Ira entire contideumi. It wee General Biair's division which defeated the enemy at Bitter's Bridge, the soldiera wading to their waist. to make this attack It is clear that Sherman is moving large eol omen to the tight and left, or east and west, of Branchville. A little to the northward of that point is a tine, high, fertile and productive section of co.ntry, vas By traversed, with good roads, and abounding in supplies. If be Is aiming at Columbia he will traverse the districts of Orangeburg sod Richland--a reatOO nn surpassed in the whole land for wealth and ahead- Knee. 1 4 1083 COWING BY STasst.—George J. Wardwell, II WOO Yankee, who sharpened Ids genius by set • end years' labor and obs , rvation us a mechanic at Lowell. and then went to Rutland, Vt.,determined to perfect a machine t`rt would proftably quarry state by steam. Ile failed in his tirat effort but per iteverW ,• obtained a pecuniary Aid; and dually made a machine that would work—that it workin,e• and is now matting stone to his heart's potent. His Rest perfected machine Is now in practical operation at Sutherland's Falls. VL, lunning night and day, and doing by the help of two men and a boy, the work of thirtrets men. lie has four more completed, Many ordered, and more are wanted faster than they can be made. All kinds of stone can tons be done better, smoother, and with kw waste of Material, than by band, and at leas than half the cost. This machine 4 evidently destined to revolutionize the stonecutting busine.s, as well as to make some one's fortune. It drat began to do remoter work about eighteen months ago. Rr" Gen. Grant was In waAblngton -on Saturday, Poo. 11th, and testified before the ettinnaiLlee en the Conduct of the War In regard to the exchange of prisoners, in regard to which he said that the matter was now entirely in be hands; that Liu had mode un arrangement for the-exchange Logo on, man for man, until the entire number held by ono aide or the oth• ef should be exhausted ; and that the delivery of our men would nowpo on et the rate or three th ousand or more per week, the Salisbury and Danville pris orierseoming drat. gen. - Grant ,atteroard visited trothle P.PC imershis: and area .rgusgr: 0 0 arsite4 wal Henry S. Foote Gone to 'Elisions. Robson% Choke" Presented ftlin...elltslnttre of the Rebel Illtuntloweedrbe .IColerraerner • on the Eve of DltenintolkLunitteta Leaving the Sinlitaollo".T he Late -Peace Cathy. 'e• -•1t strap of Pertinent linstary.' • • Mr. IL S. Foote,. late Member of the Gebel °in gress, and who came through our lines In the Stienan 6 drab Valley, left on Saturday In the City of Cork for Liverpool. He was sent here underguant from Gen. Sheridan's command, to report. ) to - Major-General Dix, and was most of the tint. ;luring his sojourn In this city the guest of Col. Ludlow, of General DWG staff. It Is understood that the alternative was pre sented by our authorities to Mr. Foote of returning to Richmond, or going abroad, and be chose the latter. Mr. Foote repiosehts the " Confederacy" to bean the eve of disruption, and that the struggle on the part of the rebels is nearly over. High military authority in Richmond admits that the capture of Branetreine most compel the evacuation of Charles ton, Wilmington, and even of Richmond itself. Desperate battles would probably be fought before this latter evacuation taketrplace; but if Grant and Sherman wereattecessfulln them,.Lee, with his army, would fall back to Lynchburg, and there endeavor to mike a stand. lilts army, however. would In such ease become demoralited, and could not be held to gether. atel could not be supplied. Mr. Foote thinks that the leaders will endeavor to leave the country, and the camraign on the part of the rebels would descend to guerrilla fighting. C , ocen Goes will be held by the people of the dif ferent Southern States, for the purpose of issuing a call for the ces , atlon of fighting, and for the with drawal of their State troops from the Confedcratt armies, and they will throw themselves upon the fasgnanhuity of the United States Government. Mr. Foote is pre2ared to Issue 20 address to the people GI the South, urging them to cease fighting, to give up the contest, which is so clearly for them a hope-. less one, and as no terms but unconditional surren der can be obtained, to promptly accept such terms. Mr. Foote also represents that the unpopularity of Jell DA , is at the South la very great; that the peo ple have lost all confidence in him, and In his ability to accomplish the objects of thelrar, and their form of goverutnent is rapidly approaching an absolute despotinn; that the questions of slavery and of emancipation have been settled by the operations of our mink,: and that the South would gladly assent, as u condition of peace, to a scheme of gradual emancipation. That the mission of Stephens, Hun ter and Campbell, was only a ruse on the part of Jett Davis, and a forced concession to the peace toot of the Smth, who are admitted by the Rich mond papers to he in formidable strength. That Davis knew there was no prospect of any agree- mead upon terms with Mr. Lincoln, and wished only to n.c , weir repwt and want of success "to tire the Southern heart" to renewed resistance; that In this he would temporarily succeed, but a reaction would set in. and Davis would be swept away by It. Shall no disaster befal Sherman and Grant, the 11011r3 of the Confederacy are near at hand. To, rt.! arn 01 Mr S'epbens to Georgia without par ie,pal ion in the war meeting, held at Richmond, in dicates to Mr. Foote's mind an intention ou his part to prepare the people of that State for the ado ption or the policy recommended by Mr. Foote. These views of a man who has had ample opportunity of aseertainiaz the temper of the Southern people are mid y ~ ..atirmatory of what is believed by thought. ful people everywhere at the North. I Cl:6l:6Escr. „ SA,OOO 40,500 roo 32,600 2%500 211.500 33,5(N) 19 200 $375,200 The Peace Negotiations- President Lincoln's account of the late peace ne got int ions it of considerable length, and is very com Hoc in Its details, nerrutlng the circumstances of Mr. ill air's to Richmon d and supplying all the despatches preliminary to the meeting of the Presi dent with the rebel commissioners In Hampton Roads, as well as giving a report or the pro cee dings of the Con fr nil,: itself. Theugh Mr. Blair went 'o Richmond with the consent of the Government, ha bad no authority to spunk or act for it. Jeff. Davis sent t 1 letter bvbim expressing his willing ness to send or receive commissioners, and Mr. idoettlu subsequently stated his willingness to re cent u.vhttemen Informally chosen on behalf of the ',bets alit, the objcet of securing peace on the basis of an undivided country Before the rebel commis sioners were met by thi Prenideut they were given to understand that the negotiations were to ho In formal, and that no proposition wltieb in the slight est degree contemplated a recognition of the so caned °Confederate States" could be for a moment anti Li il. During: the conference Messrs. Ste molts. II utter and Campbell endeavored to effect an ,;:r. Ilt for an armistice, but were informed by Mr. Libeoln that there could be no suspension of I,o,diuti.. till the rebels had disbanded their tarries vii ash eon !edged their allegiance to the national tore:tomtit ; atd: also that there could be no re -ii-. on the shivery question. Gen. Grant had bee. pre; lonely instructed not to allow the presence of llie rebel ugents within his lines to cans. any de lay in Lis military operations. The President con cludes 144 report by sating that the " conference ended wlthont re-nit." Mr. Seward has sent a dis patch to Mr. Adam,. our Minister in London, stating the facts announced in the negotiations. PENS/OVER. The Fairs of the 7 30 loan on February 13th and 14th be Cooke, the (subscription 'agent, amount ••,( tn Tee wite of one of oar distinguished citizens yeMentey gave birth to a fine, hearty boy. and the , father !its determined to name him Constitutional Amendment '"—Lkoton Trapeller. llhook has already repealed her "bla^k law," and new luiliAns is going to follow her example. A bill for this purpose has been introduced Into the Senate w Jersey is nut of debt, and claims a balance lwr :r •ci the United States of s94ogs7. Her t•Ionopoly pays the expenses of her State ii , runi-iii, and her people are not barthened with local tat, s. It is atimated that th. all produce of Venaogo count y, Ys ,is at leaFa 10,000 barrels daily. Tills at tLe aver:l4, price of :tit) at the wells, which Is a low aceraze, will give $lOO,OOO a day, or over .i 1,000,000 a year. A very dangerous fifty cent counterfeit note la In circulation. The iTeahington Chronicle says that good judzes are unable to detect the difference with out very riwe examination The paper is somewhat thinner and that la, probably, the best teat to try them by. General Winder, the notorious beast and keeper of rebel prisons, died in Richmond a few days since. Ile way ttie tit tool of a brutal conspiracy, treated prisoner- like dogs, and will ever be remetn ls-r,d as 11.- most beastly development of the slave holders' rebellion. Under the policy of concentration which Grant t. ei g p r ou.le peAeeutine, it it expeofrd that he will dra. around Richmond, under Mende, Sherman. and S.ierhlan, not less than two hundred thousand ef t...elk, men. It ie. said that General Couch's corn ni.ind is arnona the reinforcements sent to Grant by lieueral Thomas. roe incomes of the leading tax payers of Albany ri• : E.-001,1A Corning, $lOl :300: Emelt us Corning, jr., ; Tburlow Weed, $21,..01; George Dawson, Posi NI .1, te r oml prineipai proprietor of 1100Erening Jour L.,11 Peter Cogger the Deinoorstle poi ; I I .:; IPi J. 'fweadle, 14.14;,606 ; A Vau taut vu,rd. 1 he Pcnobscott Indians now number 260 males and f•neties. More than one fifth of their voting vo pnwion h.,ce cone to :he war, and consumption, a disease formerly unknown, la eatrylng off many of the tribe ymriy. TIIOSO that remain gain a sa.ten• t.) httlin4 and fishing, and also by the ham pthhilve occupations of farming and basket-making. The Loni,svil le /Wu, of the 10th, .ays that Qum- I rell, the noted Kansas guerrilla who has tong oven ..upp•t-<d to be dead, is now operating to that state. It wca h dou ,t leas Intends to make Kentucky, in fu u re, the the Are of bid murderous, thieving opera tion• II.• and wen of Li+ gang have been recognized at ditneent points in the State. - 7 . Toe report of the cession of Sonora and other Nl , tican Wales to L.mis Napoleon, and the appoint ment of Dr. Garin as Governor of the ceded provin ces, with the title of Duke tit Sonora. Is contradirted by the Havana correspondent of the associated Pow. Dr. t, sin, he states, id In Havana, on his way to France. to press his claims upon the Emperor, hav ing entirely lailt.d at the Imperial Court of Mexico. The Philadelphia ATAS is publishing the Income Returns made to the Asse.sors of Internal Revenue by taxable persons in Philadelphia. Dr. D. Jayne, the great • Mt-dicitle 3dan' appears to stand at the herd of the het. His taxahle income is net down at the efonfprtnble sum of $112,219. The Doctor ought to start u newt-paper to relieve him of Ids super abundant means. The Nt.w York Alily :Vent, of which Mr. Ben. Wood 6 cditor, condemns and repudiates the recent war declaration of Fernando Wood " as inconsistent won tue true prineiples supported by the peace men of the North.' The iVres adds that it "cannot an. derstand the motive that has oecildoned this sudden change of have upon the part of one upon whose enustaney, met, and energy we relied to vindicate the cause to which we are devoted." As I was standing In the Capitol Park, watching the tiring or the cannon, a lady, draped In deep black, stopped and asked, " If they were tiring on an•ount or the Constitutional Amendment?" she was told " r-s !" "Oh !" sald she, " let me tiro one juu btr I'rre America r , She pulled the string with out Illuchlos, and walked quietly away. It struck me that she might be wearing black fur some dear one who had hie life for ids country:and If so, she would enjoy the satisfaction that it hell not been given in valu.—Abe. Journal. The Int&nal Revenue for the monthofJsnuary just poet amounted to gin enormous sum of $31,070,- tan U9--over 'a million of dollars a day, Including. dunday I And yet confessedly the machinery fur collecting this branch of the native's income is im perfect and undergoing change. Vast as is that sum of internal revenue, daily and monthly, how light a i.urden 16 It to ihe business of this rich and vizor oas nation! And with what patriotic chnerfaineas and acquiescence the People pay this tax to preserve their nation and to malclAln Democracy. John C. Breckinridge, formerly Vice President of the 1J.,it,,,1 States, nod a Democratic candidate for President to into, has been appointed Secretary of W4r in the Rawl ormils4tion. Ineeklnridge has (mt.!, in the war as a General ever since the consum mation of lib treason in the sturdier of Mil, and al though he tuts not been brilliantly successful as a euldicr, he is uriquertlonably amongst the ablest of Um rn•hel leaders. But it is too touch for even his abilities to trtaiptalq a.dellant front against the pees. atiru which oar armle• asetnaldog fronton, got tar aphid tits silted sal %tat cIIMPL News Items. atv 4dvatiottunto. 4.•• =OT. •iviciostp xcrutnlie. reb.tiovs.,ur. • • AWAY --• FR°llthe mgreribrik,' inn atom lintrtirnnottl neeimteett on year s. Tble Is to netin sll C.-ni."h" o "t" " " 4 " him GI 'n on my =mat after 113.151 Misdate. (11/.1.11.TT. February 3.—.lerp CAUTION. NOtUIS V arrebv Oran 144 I persona not to Iron 1.1 oaa on my anramat without a Initial order rtom me. for I win may WY 4 0 ta thus cont•acted. OBILLION TUSTI3I,. Ttridsmratrr, Vebroary 10.1.0.6.1-51 r. Dim°lotion of Coparinenblp. TUE earnattecablp 11.-taime ealatlo¢ ncder tn. Arm name of W. b. Medina a‘. o. b. We day bern cilorAvod by tont.' ireSeet pU pens, Ir debled 1011 p raw all on N. L. Illuding at Itialtelea store and !ettle vp snout Orley., LL lIARDMI3 CO._ Fore RENT. T . E well boarnsu sld desirable Tavern S•and and Foroltme be longing therein eluded la nouttall 13ortmaitt lacerates with about tne hundred acres of loprovcd lad. A least of Ilse yaw- 2 will be evert If ranu , red. For plateaus Inquire b lbw prenasea. Dun&ff. Feb.03.194.--arlp. UKtiJAMIN AY11.6.1. Administrator's Sale. Ma It undersigned will offer for!sleast p9hllosinetion.o. Wsdre. a da..7,./tsso. , 1Z 44 . at .ee ricer.. a. m litho kou.e ecconi d by 13Ow IN B. SP r..Dßles4.miloa frerzn ti or trust Bnirot, tte fAnming properly. ate of Eli (lamina. d eras. d : Four hundred say , totek—pan us ve,-6 Purer Is Wes. •stp ivedem. Are.. 3! ca• 4., 4 marling helfms. f per. sea. 1 Orceleas.old &wham bull.. 1 Zhu &son bull baud elart Nur neater Is. 3 wetrema, •en minx Cf pork. se.kl , ak'Saft I mad Meet. fanning stigmata. 0 entre*. elm o d g porn. +l5 milk paao, ,d ait, dairy utensil., 1 ban.° sower thrasher and a cod os.ing apriFl4.. I 444 Mine 411111:2 mrn Bab b 4 4b.01a. Wye. ot Ws. i ear% thighs. sleds d.m. 1 mmer.sso listd..l hay. corn In tlx eta, pine. hemlock and 111.kory lumb.r, Lq halanom nada. and many other inlets'. Tesna.—On moan! ten dell= and o , ee, <ti canntla credit, with Int•nut . ad ausened enmity. E. A. W /STUN. Adsu'r. Brooklyn. 1. eh. 13. 15.43 AUCTION SALE. BY D. BRKW"TF:R, AIICY/ONEILII. On Friday, 'arch 10.1865. 10 Cows IBull and other STOCK. A Full Assortment of Farm ing Tools, And • variety of other %N la of rcrio.ll l Poverty% OD the IDOr • Lie - rue Farm. in Dimock. conamendng at ID. A. Y. A LSO, The valuable Grist Mill property at El': Lake, toleeock. Faso. Co.. Pa., at:. e. Y. of the same day. This Is one of the veer hest peopeltl.. Ia the runty. The Itllll being In CACCICOS MAU. 101 a aver fainna Vat, pow,. with about acr.• of haul, with all the lawns Gr cl.ang custom sad mvelawnt work Easy terms made known on day of sale gdelenm. KUL. PE , tttl V WELLS • • A. LaTIIIIAJP, Din:lock. February tl.lB6.—er. GET 13E1S'F. STILL IN THE FIELD AND MARCHING ON, IMI 4GII.CPVErt & 13A.ICEWS RIVALLED SEWIR MACIIIHS! (ROVER 6r. VIA/iER MAKE TWO KINDS OF MACHEVES, One *LL the GROVER & BAKER STITCH, The other the Shuttle or Lock Stitch. Tlair IPCIC STrIVEI linable Is tbs MOST SIMPLE, PERFECT, EFFICIENT. AND DURABLE Abl CLIME YET INTRODUCED. PP see rail on their Arent sled let mrnyleof Mutates or Wok and w 7• Infornatica 1 , 111 bo given with plcagove. Itb„ 18M - WHEEL HEADS ! WHEELS AND REELS_ A V6thitedlrt,'.`az=bV' 7 7f4e4:rh7..7.:1, VII. g',7.1.° °° 87". bayre BaytherP, at then Flat Wheels. Wool Wheels, Clock Reels pod Wheel.-1111eadt! Wholesale and Retail. I:ll . W ar heelts,:sing pr.4erly need presibly t e r i nd . c eanilzellsr Montrose. Jnous•V 1. 18r8, N. 13.—itepstrloir dune on short notice. C. M. 0. ANOTHER NEW FIRM. COX & MEEKER A TAr-V,T,'--.• rdwugb`V. "BfiV and Muth:rob, Whips. ac.„ 111/Ine biddies, a =lank:. call Vol WC thsm. Repairing Promptly Done. Thmaelul f.r many favors from a Mod pobllr, we hope to merit to-ir &caroms patom •se In the Muse. We oc,try the ahoy toe. oreuplsd by W. L too m" W. L. COX. • IL O. MELEES. Montrose., Jat.uar7 9, 18. 2 5 —em. A Chance to Make Money. TEL:y.2I6OSE FIALTIC ri te for a l e.Dn Idlns and U. IL DIMIOR6 ret Ix teas FOR %ALE OR RENT. A.STOTI.X. to Sauth Auburn. located In a funklogsectkul. Term* cery low fur War Unmet. For partu•mlars .ttp* to KolAb Auburn, Yap IVA, I NOTICE TO SCHOOL TEACHERS. BRIMItWATZR 8 1001. TESOII6II. sre requested to uneb Beenty4Wo days for ea.% month. or Ur- 8.0 ssiy •811 be lehltteld; as they base a..t held their .nstltuissarron.lseralsw. By order ur the Board. Ctldd. 8i BA) f. tiecretszy. Motawee, Feb. 1B U'5,21. FOR SALE. - 5tm1ia.,.1 , 2...v...tenz.L.4b-mairrm.Yll,77 Loov.ulo.t to =ono& = 1 . 014 . a., {O.IO. For term. lavers cf 11. Lolos. Fond Like, Feb. 61867.—t IF. v. ' GOODS FALLING. 'DWG in your 6lt LEN. 13.4 CIES. nr other innd swop. and 1.11 gel •anon. i. 4.1144,44 U.... 4. Jou WO, ISM REAL ESTATE AGENCY. H PHILLIPS, (banal) , of Stuointlanna Cowry, PA., Eau opened • All27lgT, In Warr...010.2n. Lurks Cuunty.Yo. lie boo un sod fur number of FINE IMPROVED FARMS Tbore n Inn to parciame .111 fad aparticular drys:pilau of th e =Mr, and • moor. of Wm, by •pplytng at the twocrasncrz Ittrvoutix utaq. Mammas ra, GT Wm Moir the eubeolber, II 11. felltLlAtli. Weaccrllln.bt.CluolesCo.,llo., Feb. it.b.18r•5.-4 Dissolution. Mtn Cppartt entdV of Lft& & JUNE la Ws day dladlinWLW 1111131111 AMAMI. 166 Ikxia, and =ovum left wlib Sd• ward tithe, fen calla:doh la Berme to et Lloyd h Webidesbatont. •11 who ado WOW to maid rhea as repeated to cad luat Rtt4 without faribee No tee. WILLIAM Ilth, llotaroae, Feb .d.1:63.4w EDWAktft CRACKERS; ' B OSrfiN. Bed& mad Caw Cracker& fuse %Vet arcrage...l&& 4A IKa . SOLDIERS' PENSIONS, BOUNTY 'AND BADE PAY. TR kon.lendined,LlOUNSlED AO ITT oT THE own= %ram Will give prompt Illtelltlol3 to alletoltaceatrusted to Ittscarc, • Charges L,OW oodituonuatlart 'gonna., lioretabe MCA. NEW GOODS AT -WiLeWitcaiririSibwastativa,, VALUABLE Emu, Ervin EOII,,SALE. . • lumber and word lot In . Lethal* smaddp. cr. • allb Sand deal. Innaentilz.. - 4.v . ,.. E = 6 lr•esea Ram ere'' te a lasteleawndll an mill capable Meld/14M mu led at matt pa year, Tye e r onbill wititto iwa mile* Metals= litegne. ou the D. L. W. Bel I toed. St.dood mad ruse t bmo&h It. whole T hem Is word d limber coma v g It to pee far 11 lericeldnen an chtmee...wl.ll be sold low. whtt lowa Alteutncu Row+. ram, - n Radio oltmor.My meaty, Pe,. multamiss smut AO aces, I from !Wham Milan. nn the , ' nntbenn net lama ; shoot BP acres of t the hasuto op tond—a Tom draftable wont,. ALSO. • Yarned& .11111 trutemy , one mile from Motrfrose, Y the m ale, We mnpl.llte fro ettesolll and suornull, and stout CO Area lantharlth wain pow. The irettatiat II le MOW dans alma' esoombtaltelOta t .selt Oared froi novetsat wort. ALM liv.luzble rm. nue naltaftaut Itotamee.rontalnlft dons mostres- Plitypensigth ate peed bold: the balance taigoe.d. TOL Wails well SW- Pod gad* trathatell wattle, and In s high meteor enhfratlon capable of kettle; hoot Italy to Orly enws-a eery draftable ttnpedr. ALSO a Mats OM let lathe !PAPA ar Illottetwo, frOedlatt du the voile " . a nus The lot =tem ono= 2% items of land, with s tarn sat choler. teat nod Age trees. ... - - m 1 orris The attention of ten= whtlsg to tarel7 l Witte to called t o thew properties.. es they an Oros] sod de le IluteAtm st the prices fi shed far them. Llbetetterma id ter efren. ' Par terms, Ir i t s gt ac tsitzt et Infoterttlz :, rall ,,,.. nns . nre 5 74.1,172,2;gel Montrose, Susquehanna CO. Pa, Jan. 26th. 1 %La . , Pastan int Bogart.., All claims carefully prepared idol woo W 7 rosin:did to. =fi n . fno par,seut. Tbtee menthe:de onortheaufltdne manila' men arenolostilledto Lowy. huo if a e tded re. Leo Ole In the SlAn'tee. any or Intl, nho One on •uto h d to P.m on to 111, tared *Mkt are CY titled to ixtoblous ot.d, the onto roles and redoladl. is so *to the land Net.. Comsolosioued oftlot.is are calltled to onnalon MVOS to tempt,. It Is a fat and tenet - ally kon•ra that the Iry Dooaftment in cars , : a lo.g prutmettdriclnio• Lf •soldleu or. ether. he too eged and ntroo p.reds dependent on blot toe topport„ wally in cestitute ckcornstnnet A dlothorde Loch odder , fron the retire.— Apieea. of this kind promove node out end the too non proot Lbled. lot.ema lon on all solLOhts mastedwith imertrfonent dams Om. All WU. akin, %nfLerruelon or moly Rind The reLulres of eokilenr who the Otto enllefnuers and belbre tee Ind antlered to ere Levitt* to refehea the me as If Ana Wass had Ova but the OKTVPS • N. tl. .1114 isloch Wing Moss3o . 13U handl /.1 Tu KNl,Alttrlne7lo AtAnnii. rer& mg. UnnEnnno. /An Onl. rORa Alm • 1111111311 PSSI9OIOL S, The London Quarterly Review (Conieradif 2 o The Edinburg Review ( Weio The Westminster Review (Wiwi) The North Britishne,,w (Fro - Church) Blackwood's Edinburg - Magazine (Tory.) The • fruutess ro t. continue to meet the above nammi p.rtodicas, but sm the per marly rummy., and tams, du it,. lices OM ittO.. unity. 100 creamed, they are CorOpoikd to advance their terms se follotme: TERMS FOR 1865. ,. :- Fur elm mem of the Rectors ft 00 per SLIM= For aormyorttte lievielYO 1.00 " Fur iwy them ur I he Seert.em 10,1 M p ot fuerof the ite.r.t. • • .1.0 for Rheekmooefs Idesemlne ILOO For Mimic •oott sod my RmOmr .COI F. , Blackwood yrid my moot the KOytywo.... tO 00 Furttiaceeromd mest mem , heck.... MOO '' Fur Llacksmod sod the trot Itesiewm ISM " The works srill be mins. d erestlylesPrnved (Manly et MIL srullytulArlintrir all tannTiCara kerlrelmn , ate cheat. snmnout In peke or redueed in tit`—and very generally bth—vre shall mde. or to give (Mihail vitaes n( all the mt• ter omtained In the cnitnad r 4,1- ti linnev• n_or Mama Orem mural as cheap. Kr On ~f matter lartitabed. aa those of any of the ore port. Whale in the country. Gennpared wan tbo mid 'film Wished 104012.1.mtlieh di the MM. rat pretalim on im .Dahl te Menu. 41 al a yea, otieet—Vs_. ate etcerdiegly him. Add to this the thett hat me Make oat al payment to tne 1111110 Pubilenern far early latets Ora a naby m. • Igol m crating twat OW time Qui mull Ras lat•ea...,—and we tatatiaat In 11.. a ate me ham ampted In 111.11 ne mutely petted by nor leading public. Ibe ~ , r.treet hese Perla& ale to AM dem resderab , rath.t tst. c - eual than ate:di/bled by tbe articles Ur oantaln. da Clell Who.and. though or mesimee Unreal With rtimiler.they ma, Mali ennsterring ttea abl,byarnt the different mead valeta Ram aLich they aro ',I ton, be read amd girded mitt advantage by lb penple of this unwary, of every chard and piny. THE FOUR REVIEWS FOR 1863. tinr eirlri or tlte above remain on tuaA and vitt sold at SS forth* .no Toon or 2. for way a2e. We ..lm pulAsh the FARMER'S GUIDE, tvw6ra . . Enerselace. PR Itt ST far the tin) volt:met—el pent peld. LEONARD SCOTT & CO., Publishen, No. 38 Walker Street. New York. GRAPE VINES 1 RIME ondesalerd Las tor Psis ROO Conerd, ason. =4 Des L rase .sm Vises. at ill ncr onsdrttl. or $9 pet Cbovess fur • noels plant. I has* rartolea, and oak floulsa hop nviay. rut the thJee we the herr:l.A Omen mat tr- left *WI il. R. Ell AMR IIftI2IPCMCP Ita sr =Joss kfllce Moornee ; O. W. LIS tg LS. LLnock ; a. Ll' •• Is her br ENOCH., L,,,,banutharan Co. Pa. 'o fatten reedy. ed isf•er op.lt oth. It4S. Wte..t:LAY. elatk't Green. LuzernoCo-• PL. Feb. Mb. 1113. Me? aiuntisttionts. MHZ on dershand. turdne be. appointed . Andsbat da Orphans' Cowl 0 , Stuquehunra , County. try dlatneets the Ihnde to the hatds of lb. A Qlllll4tllllor ri the Vale Teel . Oval nonce 921 2,2111 inlaid to the . Le. .m.lnrusrnr. at the odke el 3. El_ Meeollara Montrose. no Wtdatted , y. the tath day of Jatteb.lFlNet d . dak D• m- at which ittno.tod place all Demons Interested fa aid had may pre...nil ttelr el.art. or be (bream. lebtrred from e- mint on aald fued. D. W. BBARLQ. AcKthoz. Montrose. Feb.?O. td's.—tun. Auditor's Notice. worms I. hereby Prez that the tmderohmed.' an dram r). IN pointed by the f .rpharte Collet of ttnacothstna Cosa() Id mltYe of the Inn& In the hands of the aaffrAnt-trOce et the ryts.e a (babas-Ice Shp Intresnn.desessed.•lll attend tote) dnitre ef Lin eepolotment, at fte ...thee of J. P. Ifctollom In 11 re toss, on Tann&y, Hama talk 1863 at or' , cif m to, =bra aa pers. , a tote/est.:4 to sald Nods srlll Torrent (bets than a re la to ever d barred. D W. PIMPLE, Antlttn. Unnttnes. Ferbrratri (064 fil H E ueeternixted, Atzdttrr arMltald by tb. C"" 17301. Plie.s 0( tumnet sena a twin , to matt el./rite:lll , n nif funds n nod. at tae A4mittlewar of the at oe et MB o•da • mttb, d.e— neri, nr1:1 I , tend to the ektcaq Mt ear Stamen , nt bs i t , n bu,nd.c the , 11b day or lltnb.lNt,atl loelr. r. le, el which Vela end place all ;cm n.lblerrai d ht fund will meant their deltas ct be l oreeer tatad f..m rem Ins b on nate (tee d. A. O. WAILUZN. Meta. Motittote, Feb. 20, ISM I= trottnoteed an Antitor emeloted hi 'he ntrteheCottl tt , Stuquettanna meaty to dtedttot, the landata the tt . thdto the A enklnt..stnr to irtp. estate at alhew Putman?. deed_ wl3 e„. . attrod to she drolee of h 4 sior.• fatten!. at Eb. Elo. 10 Sontnar. on F !day tba 140 day of !lamb. 1505. at 1 Velock p.m., at .barb Me and pls+ an perm,. Inte,roed .111 rya thelt sttes4. sure or It fanner debazred hom coming In on es d ford. .0, WARallit. Atatar. Mout.tose, Feb. M. TA 6 anderAgard, harlrg been appointed an 6OdlteT b • th e no ohm,' f'4 , to • of 1.1.1010e1 , 11,01 , 013017.1111 n reettol - 00 rid Igo odmlnlgtra lent gee ant of Benjamin Glidden: EIICCWOr 01 Ile sauce of to.l SlA•Pard doom iggl..)me of the , d enurdr. .4 . dittrl but e the fat gfr Obi ra mile of the teal rites , f lbe sold decode .- t mooed thogg ralltke tbert.e.brerby Fits oo• tlee that I • mill =end to tr.. date.< f fidd sppolntreegi at at. omen. 10 Motto:mg, on Tonne.). are 6.•43 dam or Muth nett. al lu o'clock a.m. 01 toe same tlaY, whet nil prmnna bowls: n.rra there'll Can gt. et. e 4., or Moroi(' er 14.44gorred from muter Ig up Fe on .aldgry fund 11315.—.4 /4.• 6/14041.11.11L1fi. bru s. Sheriff'fi gales. DY virtue of a yrrit banal by the Court of „. I leommqn Pt, as of Elnaquelosana County, am) to we 5 directed, I will expose to sale, by public Tendu., at - e the Court House. In Montrose, on Saturday, Marsh IN. 1>;65, at l &dock p. m., the following described piece or parcel 01 land to wit : Au, that certain piece or parcel of land situate the township of Rush, County of Bresquebanna,bound ed. and described aa follows to wit : Beginning 11 1 hemlock stump standing near the old . road, thence west 37 perches to a post, thence north 40' east six tenths perches to • post et the road, 1 henee *hug the road north 30' west 11 perches to I post, thence •. north CO* east 34 perches, thence east St perches to a post, thence south 53 perches to a • post, thence west 72 perches to the beginning. Being the same land and premises which Wm. 1). Cope and wife by deed dated 10th of 7th month 1836, fur the consider stion therein expressec granted and confirmed unto Ernst°. Maynard ns In and by the In part recited deed recorded in the oMee for recording deeds Bock No. 20, page 23, relation being therrunto had atill fully appear. And the, said Erastus Maynard by his deed of the 321 of March. 1800, granted and convey ed the same to the said George tt Maynard record. ed In same °Mee in Book 53, pogo RA as by refer cone to the said lost mentioned deed gill fully ap pear; containing 60 aerie, be the same more or Ices, with the appurtenances, 1 framed house, one him, some fruit rte.'s, and mostly Improved. [Taken 13 execution at the salt or M. 8. Wilson, vs. O. W. Maynard.] • DAVID SUMMERS, Sheriff. • Sheriff's Office, Montrose, Pa., Feb. 13th,11305. J. P. BENNISEIZE • Execatoyei Notice. 11ZOTICIL Isbeeeby elv en to ellomons bares Reateiate Mel Vel the estate nt llarte , a ergot Ward, tote eteattemelnleoketeara that the aame tuna be wasted to the untlendpedtkvemescrao and peon*, todataed Wald edam are tuptested to mat:. hose r Alma larteeet. Z. A. PRaTr. 1111,114 Vat • [V. •• • *OA PTICSIi touliry elyva u. nil 66ronna been; demands ardmd ?„:.1 the totals of llamas Lnfrol.c. lan of J• bon tow .- t ts 4. that the am. mu .% bo 3nreldod to Ito andonkbun3 for or • ...P"'dnt• 6 6 , 1 di Manna Indotod t• mot town nro ronnoorod naafi adooodoet pentWAILS r1t16.1.%031,, adtal .hatlX3, yen. &tn. 1.63-6• . WirtnEhg letters testamentary to th e Salts StIIMCsa -TT ftlier, tom of hwp tornmip.deceamd, bat ban gruu ed to ate mutem , yoom atl /Amin iodated to tne odd reran • ars reqopaeo to mats tmadfate patron; and tia4Vill j or &numb aping 4 b. isolate of the AA &oolong arta meta too , . tn. moo on6.atdulat wirrltA VULIJI7II. Wu. !Ad. Oh. 1011.1.... Adualubtralorls iliblice. , 07111818 1111111111 T 0181010 8118•Toptif havingaser A s"7,7lgitaltge,r . Ll'l,l'°"%lll.V.;;;ZZ. , A 7 . gr i Ex:cut, and all maws* Inde4ll4lllB taste 81. eera t 0 e teaturdate papuent. - . .11. A... 18 lb 1014. l .1 . WNW/ 1 4 TO Lls th h60,41r Adminvitrators Notice. NOV O le II heron? Orin t , et mum, baying , demo & wail the udate of WA , Mae, law t , Vulted•tx •o 4 fonntely of Pne , &nutlet. thetthe tame twat to Pm. toad to the uodllistY. IA Air waatrapens, sod all prorate tutibt• ed to Itad Mat. reottftteti to emelt, Wm- dodo paument. Wen 114. d. Feb. Cb. 180.-.110 • • JUS. In 1101.1, *dot 1031110Elettentlyttottl to *Mors*** lorrtnidemaidayptaa sto goat* of Attain I)..**onary. 444* of Lathrop um* ship, &matt. thlttlh *Noss SRU4I to promoted to Ow auditilOP allperuntl.l*4o4l4 w tad foLotillte alpiitaq to sago totamittoto pato* 114110110 ft Juallilllo, '~.~~"~ Auditor's Notice. Auditor's Notice. Auditor's% ft o.ice; Auditor's 'Alotice4 Adistantslratoros Nonce. EseentelhOorliotlee. Adallalatrater's Notice. r] ea El 19 IN Ari ',Tit( Rpm lima Of th 01 ocam In th hope are. I Urn p_sep Thos Spra Jose] log 13 PR 011. It Dot was writ haat farm ibr lug c r o l z 6 r ektm I oel ~e
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