Viiitoiii — gleiiiiiiiii. A. J. GEBEITSON, Editor. !ONTROSE, - TEEMS. 'l4 NOV. 12, 1867. THE NOVEMBER ELECTIONS Have ilpsultecl in a Waterloo defeat for the negro party—the Democracy: having swept the field. Neat York gives lover 42,000 Demo. cratic majnrity on the State ticket, with a Democratic Legislature. New Jersey is "Democratic all over," every couut y but one being reported Dem- ocratic. Maryland breaks the Radical chains in which she has been bound, and gives an almost solid vote for the white ticket.— Not a* Republican town office has been saved by the negro bureau tyrants. All over the 'Vest the immense major ities which the Radicals have held for years, are melting away like frost before the summer sun. . . Kansas, Wisconsin, &c. repudiate ne grn suffrage., The reaction is beyond all precedent, and insures the certain election of a Dem ocratic President in 1808. Let Democrats take . heart—rally their forces for; one more,,,, contest with fanati cism, and victory will perch upon their Banner! Reid the list of Democratic gains for 'November : New York, 55,000! Kansas, ...10,0001 Missouri, 20,000! Michigan, 20,000 ! Wisconsin, 21,000! New Sersey, 11,000! Illinois, 40,000! Maryland, 50,000! Minnesota, 6,000! Massachusetts, 40,000! Democratic gains in one day, 275,000! The detaits and corrected Spires can be given vilien-full returns are received. OHIO. INDIANA. NEC YORK. MONTANA. MARYLAND. NEW JERSEY. KENTUCKY. CALIFORNIA. CONINECTICUT. PENNST LVANIA. " A Coward's Fate !" The Plii'adelphia _Morning Post (i't adi- 6n Q, in ren:renee to the late election " Sic t ri as I am, t take this occasion to thank God for our laic defeat. The Re. publicaus have been acting a cowardly part, auJ have met a coward's fate." Thad thinks his party was beaten and (iesercedly beaten, because they did not more fully advocate negro equality. Let them make that issue plainer next year, and the people will teach Thad a lesson. " The monstron% sent invent of disunion is no longer tolerated." So B ays Governor Geary in his Thanks gi% ing Proclamation; which expression was no doubt prompted by the recent em phatic condemnation, by the people of this State and others, of the sentiments of the Radicals •who advocated practical dispn ion, ever since the close of the war; and the late elections fully demonstrate that they And their sentiments are "no longer tolerated" by the people. Republican Electioneering, The appended quotation will show how desperately the negro party sought to scare the people into sustaining it : "If Pennsylvania casts her vote for Sharsw•ood, Andrea• Johttson will send au army of rebels 'lnto Pennsylvania. He has an army waiting for encouragement to pass the border to sack and burn another Chambersburg."—Harri.sbury Telegraph, Oct. 7,1867 . The State did cast its vote for Sbars wpod ; and no doubt the Radical dupes sere immensely terrified. But that little fright will disnppear on heating the tons , ing news from New York, New Jersey, Maryland, ligrA Radical German paper in St. Louis concludes that since slavery is abol ished there is no longer any identity of interest between the Germans and the Radical party. So,. it proposes a general transfer of theirrvotes to the DemCieratic party. Let them come. They will be just infitne to swell the sweeping majori ty by which -we -will elect the next Presi dent. • - Tie 'radio - Lb :cairieel4ext - ate - r fry& ..vo*g.' The following are some of . the peculiar beauties and most noticeable 'points of. Republican financiering, which the Radi cal press are urging the country to up hold : 1. Borrowing GradeCks for the Govern ment when gold is at 250 or 280 premi um, and then paying the lenders in gold, thus paying back two or three times as much money as they received. 2. Greenbacks are a_legal tender to dis charge debts contracted in gold by pri vate citizens, but are not a legal tender to pay obligations that the Government contracted in greenbacks! • 3. We have , now a debt of $4OO 000- 000 or $5OO 000 400 in currency, bearing no interest and costing the people noth ing for its use. We have also a debt of $2 000 000 000, which bears an interest in gold at six per cent;, or about nine per cent. in currency. The Secretary of the Treasury, with assent of the R.ical .Con gress, is regularly reducing, at the rate of $4 000 000. a month, the dkt that bears no interest, and adding it oul'o the debt bearing interest! In other words, he adds, every thirty days, $240 000 in gold to our taxes for interest, or $4OO - in legal tenders, by this process of changing a non-interest-bearing debt in to a interest-bearing one. This is called brilliant'financiering. Da not the people see it in that light ? 4. 1 000 National banks are created to issue s4oo'ooo 000 of bluebacks as cur rency for the people. For this currency the banks get frog the government who collect it in taxes, some $24 000 000 a year. Now, thek government could issue the same amount of greenbacks; and not cost the people one cent. The $24 000- 000 a year are simply thrown away, for the greenback currency is much better than the blneback, being a legal tender for debts, which the National bank notes are not. No one need receive a National bank note for debt unless he chooses.— Yet for this issue we are taxed half as much as it cost to run the,whole Govern ment a quarter' of a century ago. Ought the people to -indorse the party which susTains this policy? 5. Another beauty of Republican finan ciering is that government money is not good enough to pay Government debts, and that we have two kinds of money, - one for the people, but another and bet ter one still for the bondholder. 6, As the great cliMax of the matter, we have an interest debt of more than 2 000 000 000 of dollars, and the hold era of which do not pay one cent of State or local taxes upon it, for the support of the Government that prottcts their lives, liberty, and property. The aim of the I Radicals is to make this debt a perpetu -Ist institution, a millstone, to hang upon the necks of the people, bearing them to the earth. Every sixteen years we are to pay enough in interest to discharge the principal, bat; the latter is to remain en tirely undiminished, the source of fresh and annually'recurring burdens to come. This, we repeat, is the financial policy of the Radicals. , Is it possible that, it will not, erelong, be swept away by the good ' sense and intelligeUce of the people?— Cincinna tii Enquirer. The action of thio State authorities at Harrisburg, yesterday, furnishes matter for serious comment, In the returns officially announced the fraudulent vote at Fort Delaware is rep resented and counted as • 118 majority fin. Judge Williams. Excluding the fraud, Judge Sharswood's majority is 1,045. Yet Governor Geary has included the spurious vote in his proclamation. We had hoped that the sober t+econd thought of Governor Geary vould have prompted him to withhold his official signature to a proclamation which recognized a vote pal pably unlawful. There is no excuse that the returns justify the act, because the Philadelphia returns, on their face, specify the Fort Delaware vote, and it, was not a bit more the duty of the Governor to re cognize it than, as his Honor Judge Thompson expresSes it, "a return of votes from Louisiana or any other State." The Radical journals are studiously about the great fraud perpetrated at Fort Delaware by their especial friends. According to an officer at that military post, and an eye witness of the outrage, only thirty-three illegal votes were really cast, which number grew into over a hun- dred before they reached the Return Judges. These frandOlent votes were all count ed, and the bulk of them given to the Radical eatididates,A, few being credited to the Democratic nominees- for mere-ap pearace -Nov. 2. Offecil Announcement of Sharswood's Election, riAREisBuRG,; Nov. s.—According to law, the Secretary of State opened the election returns to-day in the Hall of the House of Representatives, and Governor Geary issued his proclamation declaring Judge Sharswood elected. The official count was as follows : For George Sharswood, 267,751 For Heary W. Williams, 266,824 Majority for Shara wood, Total vote of the State, —lt is curious to notice the distinctians of color as applied to disease. There are the yellow fever, the black . vomit, the bide death, the green sickness, the white swelling, the yellow jaundice, and, as Charity Grinder says, the "hrown•creet ere." . . Theßepulilican party died of a com pound dkeaste-=blaci voila, and • white rSrelting)- • Alfitilliiiitlatre) -Changed - - ---- A short time ago the Evening Telegraph, of Philadelphia, a Radical -newspaper, contained the following damaging taste men "Later - than those days of her pride and power, when supposed to be , mourning the martyrdom of her husband, the hor ror of which shook to its centre the heart of the nation, Mrs. Lincoln managed, by circulating the report that she wss about to becomi a mother, to retain for many weeks the possession of the presidental mansion, excluding Mr. Johnson and his family whilst she was packing up and appropri , ating to her own use all the portable val uables the house contained, including the gold forks, spoons, etc., which were no-, more the property of the President's widow, than the crown jewels ,of Eng land are the property of the queen of England. To so great an extent was the plundeP carried on that it became neces sary to refurnish the executive mansion , entirely upon Mrs. Lincoln's evacuation of it, to render it fit for the occupancy of the present incumbent." Had such charges as the above been brought three years ago, by any paper in the land, instant suppression would have followed, as well as the imprison mont of the editors and publishers in a Federal basilic. For less grave offences than this hundreds of men have lain for months in dark loathsome dungeons and lousy guard-houses, pleading in vain for freedom or trial. Then the President was "The Government," and his wile the "first lady in the land," to say a word against whom disparagingly or disapprov ingly was unanimously denounced by the Radical press as a crime akin to treason and deserving of the severest punishment. How times have changed ! The King is dead. His wife—"the first lady in the land"—is now a "poor lone woman," whose power and influence have depart ed ; whose voice is no longer potent to I secure cotton permits and shoddy con tracts. Shame on the spaniels that once crawled in the dust at her feet ter favors and that now snap at her heels because she has nothing to bestow. The Dead Party. A correspondent furnishes the follow ing dialogue which he says he overheard, a few days ago, between a Democrat and a prominent Radical : Radical—How are you, Mr. D—? You Democrats have rather worsted us this year. Democrat—Fee, rather so. Don't you think we have done pretty well for a dead party ? Radical—Dead, the deli!. I told our smart men some time since, that if they were deper.ding on success on the ground that the Democratic party was dead,they would find themselves mistaken. Democral—Then you don't think we are dead ? Radical—Dead! If the party is dead it fights the best battle of any corpse I ever heard of', and I don't like to acknowledge that. our party has been whipped all over the country by a corpse. Democrat—You are rnistsken. You beat us in Louisiana and Virginia. • Radical—Yes, the niggers beat the • f r aigrit is the way things are going, there will be d—d few white people in the Republi can party in another year; and it. will be a manhood cot;pse. But. I won't be there. rr The NVashington correspondent of the New-York Wort? says: • The government has dispatched Special Agent Speer to Charleston, S. C., to in- , vestigate the bounty frauds upon colored soldiers, and particularly the cases of governor Venton's loyal bounty agents, - Messrs. Cook and Sherwood. Exadju-, , tans-General Irvin, of New-York, ha#l been here to help the latter out of their trouble, but he has evidently failed, for the officers have been instructed to pro ceed to prosecute eases with vigor, The government is confident of i',ts ability to expose a most gigantic fraud. The same men who .are clamoring for negro sufferage and equality, and up hold• inn a system under which the Southern States will be turned over to the govern ment of black men, do not scruple to rob a negro soldier of his bounty. Alas; the poor ,, negro. The papers from all parts pf the coun try are full of the most revolting outrag es upon women and children by negroes. A brutal, sensual race, and within the first year of the agitation of the question of their right to suffrage, we find them rioting in licentious violence. We fear that the white people-will become so in censed, if these abominable crimes are much more increased, that they will exe cute a most terrible vengeance on such atrocity. The pronounced friends of this people must bend their highest energies to correct these practices, and so train them that their licentiousness shall be repressed—not be left to run riot. Qom'"" Cometh Up as a Flower," is the title of an autobiographical story of the richest kind, jest issued by D. Appleton it Co., New York. The London Times speaks of ie with groat praise. Its chief merits consist of the powerful and vigor ous manner in which it is told, in the ex ceeding beauty and poetry of its sketches of scenery, and in tho soliloquies, some times quaintly humorous, sometimes cyn ically bitter, sometimes plaintive and mel ancholy, which are uttered by the heroine. It is written by a lady—a new hand—and is said to be so extraordinarily good, that whenever yon begin it you cannot lay it down' again, hardly even when it is fin ished. New York: D. Appleton d Co. BOeert9 534,575 Negro Outrages. zninstras - o- —ln Tyburn, Pennsylvania, a negro named Brown sold a load of cop; belong ing to another negro named Hogan, and then murdered him for demanding the proceeds. —A birth is found recorded in an old family Bible at West Haven Conn., as follows: ''Eliz•rbeth Jimes, born op' the 20111 of November, 1785, according to the best. of her recollection." —The storm which raged along our coat during the first part of the week proved very severe upon all coasting ves sels. Large numbers of sailing vessels and steamers have put into Hanuiton Roads, Virginia, more or less disabled by the effects of the gale. Jacksonville (Oregon) telegraph states that General Crook was defeated by the Indians on the 19th ult. The fi!fht lasted two days. Lieutenant Mani gat and six men were killed and twenty wounded. The savages are' supposed to have lost twenty killed, which is all guess work. —The Hartford Times says, apropos of the discussion whether Newton "discov ered gravity," that if he had lived to this time he might have discovered it in the countenances of Radical politicans. —Two men recently died- suddenlv at a Canadian tavern after drinking a cup of coffee. The landlady called the police, who sispected her of poisoning the men. She protested she had not, and to prove the harmlessness of the coffee, drank a cm) herselr, when she also fell down dead. An examination of the coffee pot showed that a bunch of matches had been boil ing with the coffee. —Greyly says that smoking is the "vilest and most detestable abuse of his corrupted sensual appetites whereof de praved man is capable." And yet Gree ly tells us in his antobie:, -, ,raphy that his mother smoked a pipe. —But ono hundred and five sabre wounds and one hundred and forty-three bayonet wounds were reported from 'the field during the first three years of the war. —An awful boiler explosion cord( place in Pittsburg yesterday morning, at Messrs. Reese, Graff, & mill, by which twenty men were killed and a large number severly injured. —A hand organ-grinder was lately no ticed turning away in disgust from the font of a Deaf and Dumb Asyintn, Hart ford. His audience, so to speak, consist ed of one little boy, and he a deaf one, intently curious to see what he was turn ing the handle for. —A Mithesome Connecticut editor saw, a few days ago, a young, girl of seraph like beauty, who bad no teeth. He ex plains by adding that she was only six months old. —The Georgia State Road is prepared to liquidate its entire debt 4,f 8400 000 to the Federal government, and that, in a few days it will make the remittance to Washington. —Republicans who are scalding at "heavy tales" should remember that the way to lighten them is to restore the ,- *442, 1 444 . 4.A`itv.etk. --ARilecw9fl47, at the North. There is every prospect of a hard winter for 'Northern mechanics ; but it might have been a }profitable one if the Radicals bad not destroyed our Southern market. —Now is the time for young men to join the Democratic party. The tide ih turning against Federalism, Niggerism, and Despotism, and the tide is with the Democracy. All young men who have been so mihguided as to vote the black ticket this year, should at once abandon the 'lost cause,' and come out in favor 'of a White Men's Government. —The Ohio Legislature stands: Sen ate—Democrats 19 ; Rads. 18 ; House— Democrats 56 ; Rads. 40 ; DeturrAtie majority 7—a gain of 53 on joint ballot. Heigho ! —At Waynesboro', Augusta County, ViTinia, on "election" day, a negro who voted the ConsTryative ticket was at tacked and beaten nearly to .death by a mob of Radical niggers. Racy are complaining about "general apathy" in New-York. The "general" is the only soldier who dri , ls now with the "loyal" party of negroism. —A band of robbers was broken up at Little Neck, Long Island, the other day. The loft of an Episcopal church had been used by them as a rendezvous and store room for about three years. They had stoves there and did cooking. About $15,000 worth of property was found in the place—such as-carpets, cushions, sol id silver ware, hard ware,, •guns, swords, pistols, and even groceries. —ln the lowa election, on the largest vote ever polled, the Radicals lost 4 204, and the Democrats gained 7 164 votes, making a net Democrat gain of 11 428. —The Radical Congressional Commit tee who have been inquiring whethOr Maryland has a Republican form of gov ernment, have Made but little headway in that matter. But they have been con vinced that Baltimore City had a Repub• lican Mayor during the war. It was clear ly proven before the Committee that May or Chapman had been guilty of practices usual with Republican oTicials ' and that the CityrTreasury bad suffered largely in consequence. We do pot suppose that part of the testimony will appear in the published report. It will most, likely smothered. —The. Freedman's Bureau, of Vicks burg, has a practical way of settling ques tions of ownership. They are first allow ed to be -regularly tried an then the gal lant chief reverses the deision, aid- ad judicates the property' to the first black env thAt -applies for:it, - -1..: •-• Isi •• • • '' -. "liiiiltilititiiiiiiiiiti. " -' NEW HOLIDAY BOOKS. G. W. CARLTON & CO. PUBLISHERS. LOVE LETTERIE-A selection of the most absorbing character and 1 ittere.t „from correspondence of celehrt led and uutorious men and women, Film, (>2 00 Wlnow Spam:sm.—A new comic r Mame, by the au thor or •• Widow Itedott " Illustrated. $1 75 A hoot: naorrr LawrznA.—A reprint ofthe intense cnrioas London woik, just published, 62 00 EPISTLES or Conn O'LAsua.—An Irrealstablyinngh able book of comic ophdons. IllastratCd. 6if 50 .WO/lAICB STIIATEOY.—A splendid new English Love Story. Beautifully and profusely Illustrated. tl p 0 Cos onaistp Norima, an other Comic and BarleNua Papers. By Bret. 11iirte. Illustrated. $1 50 Tut CAnuenfri. PRIDE —A most delightful new home n0v.141. By Mery J. 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XWI:031; wARTIM:.AN AGENT—Onechanee to each test, worthy the attention business to take he a-eney for the saatle o m f Bscare man, radstreet's Rabbet Moulding and Weather Strips, applied to the sides, top beyond and centre of doors and windows. agentle Is curbing ever offered before to an and from $lO to $22 per day can be made. Send for agents circular. The first wbo apply secure a bargain. Terms for moulding. cash. J. lif.l3nensrmtac & Co., Boston, Mass. 'he Richest Man in the World. Extractor n Letter from Baron Solomon Rothnebild, dated PilrlB, Bth April, 1881, tr, Rue Fauby, bt. llonore. will yon be kind enough to have forwarded to m a here 'bill bottle: , of your Indian Liniment; if you will at the Fame time time vend the account, I will forward you the,!onotint tbrongh Mews. Belmont & Co., New York. • B a ron Solomon rtothfmhild having: recommended to many o r too friends ?Major Lone'e Liniment. and they being degirous t o oroonre It, be shonld advise Ideate eetablishat depot in Ferie. THE INDIAN LINIMENT, Aust relief. escr rend" ;ow.u killer of ipain, taken In wardly, or outwardry applied. has no Croat. For the relief and cure of Rheumatic and Neuralgic Affections, Sprains. liruicus . &e. it is 'lncome led. It Is also most efficacious taken inwardly. in the cure or Cholera, Cramps. and Pain. In the Stomach. Diarrhcea, Dyeents• ry, Cholera Morbns, Cholera Infantnm..,,te , and is wit out exception the most wonderful Panacea the world afford.. No Fondly should be without it Eve r , Traveler by land or Fell should have a bottle Min er , and Farmers residing at a distance from Physicianer should keep it constantly on hand in care of Acci dents or sudden attacks or Stomach 'Complaints. its value cannct he estimated. inquire for Major Lane's Indian Liniment. nod take no other. Price 50 tent, per bottle. For sale at wholesale and retail by Denies ))dunes & Co . a Park Row, N. Y..; Gale & Robinson, lee llreenw•ieit et. N Y. ; F C. Neils it Co. In Fulton st , N. Y. ; Chas. N. Crittenden, 38 Gth Avenue. N. and by respectable Druggists tbronghont the world.— None genuine unless signed by Jona Triostss (seas, anti t "illiteraiff,nrd by J. T. LANE it; CO.. Proprietors, ies Groadway, N. Y. ver - Senil for Circular. Consumption can be Cured. The t re' mt•d at last discovered. Upbsm's Puma MEAT C . 1 7 OE, prelartwL Irma Inc formula or Prpz. Trour• 1.,01 It Or Ca ris, cures eoustimptunt, - Long n.t.n F Bronchitis, Dyspep.M. Marasmus.t:enersi Debility and all morbid conditions of the system dependent on dd. ei ency or veal force. It is preasant to taste, rind a silt• I.ls bottle will coos lute the most skeptical of the titles of tho great healing remedy of the age. St a bottle. or six bottles for !,Li. Sent. by Express. Sold by S. C. up. ILI NI. No. `XS south Sth et.. Philadelphia, and principal Druggists. Circulars sent free. A PHYSIOLOGICAL VIEW OF MARRIAGE, The Cheapest Book ever publishea. Containing nearly three hundred pages, Aud 130 fine plates and engravings of the Anatomy of the Unman Organs in a state of Ilealt h and Disease, ce•th a treatise on Early Errors,its Deplorable censequences upon the mind and body, with the au thor's Plan of Treatment—the only rational and ear eessful niode of cure, as Pim wn by the report of caora treated. A trotbful adviser to the married and tho, comernplatine,matriage, who entertain doubts of their physical rOndition. sent free of postage to any ad dress. on receipt of 25 CV/112i in stamp• or trot tienal cur reuey. by addressing Pit LA CROIX, No: 31 Maiden Lane, Albany. N. 1. The author may be eoe.ulted .m any of the diseases npon which this book treats. d. t hor personally or by mall. Medicines sent to any part. of the world. WE ARE COM/NG, And vrill pre-cut to any per-on 1... n (I Ivg us a club to our Uri— t One. Price Sale. of Dry and Fair cy Good". A.., a Sill: Dreiis Pattern. Piec• of •Stwetirg... Watch. .tc , tree iacniq. entalcozue orgoodoi.tmd sample. scut to any aildrezA free. Address J. S. Haives sr. Cu., 30 tleover st.. toston, Masa. P. 0. Box, 5125, Ladies and Gentlemen, You can have a beautiful Card Phetomph, free nfex pense, (with circulars of otir greot Dry and Fancy Load+ sale) by sending stamp for return postage to iASI'MAN ct, KENDALL. liannver St.. Boston. alas•, b toM (0, (t i.; the lesst. eiutnee ever offered to agents. (;:;, or two glays' time will ,• ccure a i!onil sewing klachine,,l s. n " itch. Silk Dress, or Revolver: or •mille 010Scr talk ot elitnil %line. Free of Coat r A.,:itn. 'wanted ese. ' ere, tale And f. male. for thi, hest One Dollar Pawn , le broker's Sale in the country.— Send for a cirttear. S. C. TlloAirlioN 0.. CO at Exchange Street, Bestial. Maio'. $7 5 , v A N p priced ' l i l t, : ' 73 Machine a t o ll c ever male—mther by the moldh 'or on rOmmi.sion. our machine will !sew, hem, Sell, tech and -embroider egma too high pr ce I machine Cut any third atiteh.and th.e. good,n %%ill tear before the seem will give oat. Frew itl7, to ,S-.olper month. expem•eh paid. Address BA KER SEWIN . 43 31ACIIINE CO., Cleveland, 0. SHERIFF'S SALES. - rop ut y virtue of a write is,ed by the , Comrt of Common l - 3 Picas of Susquehanna Gonad. and to me directed_ I x iii expose to vale bJ pnhlie vendne at the Court ilotNe, is 111ontri•e. on 15. 12,67. At 1 o'- Cock, p. m . the following described piece or parcel , of ii 1, to wit : Ar, that certain piece or parcel of land lying and he- Inr In the township of Br'dgewater. Snsquellanna Co. Pcnn 'a, h untied and deturibed as billows, to nit : On the north by lands of the bite J, W. Parker deceased, and F. T. Boyd. on the east by the highway.- known as thc: ch , •nango turnpike. and by lands of R. B. Little. on the %Nest by laarl, of James O'Brien and David B.Fan cher, on the south by of .1. P. Bush and David B. Fa ocher—con tai about 1119 acres, with one. fnimed house. two hcrne and outbuildings. Sc, one orchard, and about 70 aero• improved. (Taken in exeention St suit of Wm. E. lieator use of P. T. Fericeraun vs. George T. Koala: M 33331 All that certain piece or psreei of - land. situate lylne and bring' In the horough of Susquehanna, .1). pot. Stun *pleb coca meats. Penn'a, boanded and described as f0110w ,, , to wit r. Beginning nt a poet on this tn.rth side or itreatt street 0 , 4 , eallrik. thence by the wee live of a lot or 11. II north west lin A. 44 to past; thence by other lands of Wm. Dodsonottolb friM' welt to tic east I:ne of the lot known Re the Bushnell lot ; 1) , said ea-t line about 110 Lett to a pnkt on the north side of eald street ; thence by the „orui ode or ttaid street :math 57.,4,5" ent.t about 1 , ,5 feet to the place of beg i nni ng,--ron ra filing about 7=o . feet of land. end all Improved. 'Taken in execution at the, I , lli tof William Dodson vs. O. Hrnmone and I. L. lifentiwny. S. F. LANE, Sheritff Sheriff's Office, Oct. W,1867 TITS undersigned °Cora for ante his House, t.thop and Lot, located in the viliture of Wbson. tilbson tolvn hip,,Suaq'a co., Pa. Tertna made known pyenqhlribg of the subscriber on the premises. Ile will also Offer for sole on MONDAY, NOV, Vh. 1f , 47. at and o'clock. if not previously disposed - of. In which case notice will be given, the following property: I four years old mare, broke to hanaesa ; I set of sii ver.plated single harness, nearly now; 1 open Buggy, nearly new ;-I open Buggy, new ; I two- sated Pleasure Sleigh, new.; d on‘shori , e Lumber Sleigh, new; I cyliu del Uoat Stove, cooking. nearly new ; household articles too numerous to mention. Five monthic (Atli! with interest and approved security. Ail' sums under gs cacti down. J. S. HOW; LL. N. B.—All those haying unsettled - accounts With the undersigned are hereby notified to call and arrange the same Without farth.•r notice. J. S. Howatt- Gibson, Pa.; Sept, Id, 180.—Stm • • 9M1E31331 • NEW mi [f o ßD IN rata, BLAST: • - TIN undersigned woUld respectfully Inform the pee pie of New Milford end Vicinity that hie Foundry situate In the %Iliad° of New Milford, is now in opera tion, and that he is prepared to furnish Castings of all kinds on call, or will get them op to order. Or - Consult your interests by giving me a call. J. S. TINGLEY: Now Milford, Oct. 1, 1847.—tt . . . .. Sealed 'Proposals . , __... OR biilldlito a Stone Bridevacroue the Galt Stream, 11' near Wm. Ong's, In Print/Iln, wlllte received un til Nov_ 20th, 1007. Specifications can bo seen until that date by calling upon J. b Meiriman. J. A. WELOIL ' J. LAIERRIMAN, }Superyteora. ' 1: C, PAHA; Fra u ltitn, Oct. 29, 1861.z.-td . , . A BETS' TegRELLIS STORE,: • .r.L he USUAL ib toll of desirable 00o0s. Ohil tea iva c5 - u •• • •• '•