■*— - -S " Terms of PabUcgtlj&i «jjg TIOGAVCOUNTY,AOP^T:tai*. pnbliehed teir ff’t'ihpsipy Stprntng, *ndniilfiM riuoß*bl« prion of "-l^wsr 1 oss dollar per AN^pia,^p(f■ ■ ; *doo*6<.'ll liln hotifyoTery 'Jt-iibetfwlie.n the .term far which Pehsa paid shall k»r» expired, b'y.ihafgateion the-pri ilidjabolon the. each’ paper-, _ Thopaperwill tbpn'be stopped, a farther remittance £o reoeiy tdji > By this ar fi’l»ment -hi l hub oan lje htodghtlidebVto the «£»»»• • ■v ’ ' . • , £ : :V frijAatUMu isthe Official BipoeiSfltbe County, nth a large apd steadily Increasing pi rteratjon reach* iti IPtO 1 P t0 BV,r 7 neighborhood in the Coiwtj. It is sent /,,, of po«laj«' to any subscriber wVth«n>;tfce ootutty U«Uk hat Wbose moat oon'Tonientpiish-cifioe may be Uan-»;;..vi Brpprietpr. Biu(i to aod from tbs'Depot i.roegof charge. *w®w¥/'i; 1 i • . 1 TtORNET ASV COUNSELOR' ,AT tAW ,A_ ffdlWioro, Tioga Co., Pa. bln eioluaiMlj to.ths practise of ImiV,;, jfcoUecVionn atdt in »nj of tto -Noribetn copntie?.# Psnnsjl- Ynla. • PEJIBBYLVASIA , getter •} Main Street end the AerMt, s'&ttivro, Pa. 3. yr. BiaonY, pbop^xet#., IkU p»pol« Hotel, h&Ting been *nil r ®' ViraiibeiHlironghouV, U now open to th'f. u a front*- . r M‘\. ‘’tos *Uspr~ ISAAK WALTOS B#^E, M..*.'VSRXn TEA, PROPWXTOR. : ; Oafcttea, Tioga County, ICjtt. grants li ehew hotel located within Mnjj . aocess o "beat fishing and banting grri ♦ jitseHont ad-' urtiiing medium. Addrtss as abowe.', - 'K.v; WEbIiSBORO HCtll., YTBLIiSBOBOTJ6H, ?i- 111) 1 . ' ' J, I. Ik**, - - -; - - : proprietor. [Femitrlj »f ih* United State* Itrlif \«*M this well known and pop (J& Honee, the patrpnage of the public, iWi ul •blijing whiten, together with. the rwpnetor** kievledg* pf ihe buaineis, he hope* to;mshslhe »Uy •if these whe etop with him both and WtlUbero, Why 31, W«* - E. B. BEPDICT, M- Js. WOULD inform thOanie(, Tab, it, 1888. . , ' ']% WANTED! rffe .. m THOUSAND BUSHELS WHS# i • • .ONE THOUSAND BUSHELS CQlp! ONE THOUSAND BUSHELS Oi^S! ONE THOUSAND BUSUELB||YE! 3« niieh we will pay CASH! } i |* - WRIGHT Rwbythe poind, uek or barrel, | - [ Teed by the pound or ton, I Bran in any quantities, ’ ;• , i»le cheap at Wright ft Bailey’s new, E q* ar ■*‘l Iwt Store. ' fork ebeep et onr Store. -A ill good. delivered FBEE OF Ifwithin he Cerporalion. ' FRED K. W t^HT.- ELD SELECT. L. DP, STEBBINS, - ■ Teei<|er. It* Tali Term will commence August 26; and •uttnot 12 weeks. , 1 i'Sh TVITIOK. ' ■ .Vjk 'frimerj Department 'Ceaaon English. W Cwmon English and. one branch ®y ‘Ceaoon English and two or morehighei',. rJ* 00 Sededactioni in tuition, only in , No effort will be spared to make tligscbool '•Wltesoj in this county. Public oxct ,rnetion» J® he held monthly. Vocal Mpsto tWjifet free, j • Sl wd,hoom« ftc.,,for the accommodation of'iH-ndeDts be had in the Tillage at low |L yg> ! /the W.stSeld'VUlege School ha* been '»]Ur the Action of C.P. Stebbine,-for.the last d|Jh*en totbo rapid advancement#! etudentSi tnd an- , hKeatiefaetionof the people. Joly 20,. 1862. '■ ~ 1 !-rfl - A EMINISTKATOR’S NOTICB.—Le‘ te, # f “J’ dX uiinistration having'been granted to wt euDr ?|nber*n tbc estate of Mathew Evens, into Bloss •**»ship,dec’d„ nodee is hereby given to;. Wse m to said estate, to jMfre immediate iKw? D6Dt, those baTicg to present them pTOjPfv al ** for settlement to tbfc subscriber^' I H. Kl I HUBTEP»:iF®» r * * wobtßond, Augtwt‘l3,lB62. , ' r j>, QUICK, - ronstantly on hand a general Bsadrtme| |jojf fiSBION. SILK AND CASSIMEBE AIiTS. hinds of Soft Hate and Cape, Bate made to order. Call and leave Jd'dt mcae o_tsd then you can-have a’Hat to.fit you);j j,Prlo< » l£l. * Bobs. Qnality warranted, ' 'lit ' March'l9,lB62. : ' ■ il ■ If HE AGIT ATOR . . - J 1 " _ ' ' ~ " 1 ‘ w, ‘ l * ‘f < s' —l—a w—l, »- —_ ■ iw « ■ — ~~ *- ■ Stfcoteu to tfce Mtxinniim of tfle £m of J'm&om ao# Vbt SjirraO of &ealt&£ Btform* VOL. IX. I read the secret veil, darling, Upon your brow: and shank, . Ah ■ the roses and the 1 lilies. How plainly do they speak. Ton tried to bids your trembling heart. Beneath-a proud repose; : But all the bidden thoughts earns oat And blossomed in the rose. , I saw tbs quivering lashes droop, fflei he was.by your aide; The little rosebud lips were curled ( With half affected pride. I I heard the breathed sigh, - That straggled to he fine; r And knew the heart was Battering like > A leaf upon a. tree. I knew seme tender hand had loosed The roses bright and fair, That twined around your towered heart And made his temple there ; - And all day long be wooed the flowers With rippling songs and aigba, Until the roses kissed yonr cheeks. The riolets kissed your eyes. Ah! yes, I read the secret. As plain as words cenld speak; In the deep silence of the eye, And on'the blushing cheek. Ah! little prisoned bird, the heart , Is caged and never may . It beat against its golden bars. And long to fly away. [Correspondence of the N. T. Tribune.] THE BATTIiE OF BHA-BFBBUBCK B'attls-mspd or Sbabpsbcbs, 1 Wednesday evening, Sept. 17, 1862. j Fierce and desperate battle between 200,00 ft men has raged since daylight, yet night closes.’ on an uncertain field.- It is the greatest fight] since Waterloo—all over the field contested with an obstinacy equal even to Waterloo. |f not wholly a victory to night, I believe it is the pre lude to a victory 1 to-morrow. But what can be foretold of the future of a fight in which from sin the morning'till 7at night the best troops of the continent have fought without decisive result ? I have no time for speculation—no time even to gather details of the battle—only time to state its broadest features—then mount and spur for New York. After the brilltant victory near Middletown, Gen. McClellan pushed forward bis army- rap idly, and reached Keedysville with three corps on Monday night. That march has already been described. On the day following the two armies faced each other idly, until night. Ar tillery was busy at intervals; once in the morn ing opening with spirit, and continuing for half an hour with vigor, till the Rebel battery, as usual, was silenced. ' McClellan was on the hill where Benjamin’s battery was stationed and found himself sud denly under ahe ivy fire. It was still uncer tain-whether the' Rebels were retreating or re enforcing—their batteries would remain in position in either case, and as they had with drawn nearly all their troops from view, there was only the doubtful indications of columns of dust to the rear. On the evening of Tuesday, Hooker was or dered to cross the Antietam Creek with his corps, and, feeling the left of the enemy, to be ready to attack nest morning. During the day of apparent inactivity; McClellan had been ma turing his plan of battle, of which Hooker’s movement was one development. The position on either side was peculiar.— When Richardson advanced on Monday he found the enemy deployed end displayed in force on a crescent-shaped ridge, the outline of which followed mpr or leas exactly the course of Antietam Creek. Their lines were then farming, and the revelation.of force in front of the ground which they really intended to hold, was probably meant to delay our attack until their arrangements to receive it were complete. ' • During that day they kept their troops ex posed and did not move them even to avoid the artillery fire, which must have been, occasion ally annoying. Nest morning the lines and columns which had darkened cornfields nnHhill crests, had been withdrawn. Broken and wooded" ground behind the sheltering hills con cealed the Rebel masses. What from our‘front looked like only a harrow summit fringed with woods was a broad table-land of forest and ra vine; cover for troops everywhere, nowhere easy access for an enemy. The smotbly .slo ping surface in front and the sweeping cres cent of slowly mingling lines was only a delu sion. It was all a-Rebel stronglfold beyond. Under the base of these hills runs the deep stream called Antietam Creek, fordable only at distant points. Three bridges cross it, one on the Hagerstown road, one on the Sharpsburg pike, one to the left in a deep recess of steeply falling bills. Hooker passed the first to reach the ford by which he crossed, and it was'held by Pleasanton with a reserve of cavalry during the battle. The second woe close nnder'the Rebel center, and no way important to yester day's fight.- At the third, Burnside attacked and finally crossed. Between the first land third lay’ most of the battle lines. They four mites from right to left. i Unaided attack in front was impossible. 'Me-- Clellan’s forces lay behind low, disconnected ridges. in front of the Rebel summits, all or nearly all onwooded. They gave some cover for artillery, and guns were therefore massed on the center. The enemy had the Shepherds ’town road and the Hagerstown and Williams port road both open to him In rear for retreat. Along one or the other, if beaten, be must fly. This, among other reasons', determined, [per haps, the plan of battle which McClellan finally resolved on. . j • Tho plan was generally ns follows t Hooker was to cross on the right, establish himself on the enemy’s left if -possible, flanking his posi tion,-and to open the fight. -Sumner, Franklin, and Mansfield were to send their forces tolthe right; co-bperating with and sustaining Hook er’s attack while advancing also nearer the-cen ter. 'The heavy work in the center wm [left mosUy 'to the batteries. Porter massing his infantry, rapports in the hollows. On the left jturroide was to Carry the bridge already jh ferred to, advancing then by a road which al tecs the-pike at Sharpsburg, turning at once Rebel left-flank and-destroying bis line of treat. Porter and Sykes were held in reeel ■ltda obvious that the complete "success-t ■plan 'Contemplating widely divergent on *, WHILE THBEB SHALL BB A WRONG TWBIGHTHD, AND UNTIL "MAN’S INHUMANITY TO MAN” SHALL DBASE, AGITATION -MUST CONTIS UE. WELLSBORO, TIOGA COUNTY. TA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 1, 1861 THE S|C».£T, LouinilU Journal, moots of separate corps, moat lately depend pn aocarate timing, that the attacks aboold be aimultaDeoos and sot anecegsiTe.- Hooker moved on Tuesday afternoon at four, crowing the creek et a ford above the bridge and veil to the right, without opposition. Frost ing soatb-west’faia line advanced not quit* on the Rebel flank bat overlapping and threaten ing it.' Turniogoff from the road after paw ing the stream, he seat forward cavalry skir mishers straight into the .woods end over the fields beyond. Rebel pickets withdrew slowly, before them, firing .Scattering and harmless shots. Turning again to the left, the cavalry went down on the Rebel flank, coming sodden* ly close to a battery which met them with un expected grape and eknister. It being the na ture of cavalry to retire before .batteries, this company loyally followed the law of its being, and came swiftly back without pursuit. Artillery was sent-to the front, infantry was rapidly deployed and skirmishers went out in front'and on either flank; The corps moved forward completely. Hooker as usual reconnoi taring in person. They came at last to an open grass-town field inclosed on two sides with, woods, protected on the right by a bill, and en tered tbrouglr* com field in the rear. Skirmish ers entering these woods were instantly met by Rebel shots, but held their ground, and as soon as supported advanced and. cleared the timber. Beyond, on the left and in front, volleys of musketry opened heavily, and a battle seemed to have began a little sooner than it was ex pected. Gen. Hooker formed his lines with precision end without hesitation. Ricketts’s Division went into the woods on the left in force. Meade, with the Pennsylvania Reserves, formed in the center. Doubleday was sent out on the right, planting batteries on (he hilt, and opening at once on a Rebel battery that began to enfilade the central line. It was already dark, and'tbe Rebel position could only be discovered by the flashes of their guns. They pushed forward boldly on the right, after losing ground on the other flank but made no attempt to regain their first hold on the woods. .The fight flashed, and glimmered, and faded, and finally went out in the dark. - Hooker had found qut what be wanted to know. When the firing oeased the hostile lines lay close to each other—their pickets so near that eix Rebels were captured during the night. It was inevitable that the fight should recom mence at daylight. Neither side had suffered considerable lose; it was a skirmish, not a batr. tie. " We are through for to-night, gentlemen,” remarked the General, “ but to-morrow we fight the battle that will decide the fate of the Republic." Not long after the firing ceased, it sprang up again on the left. Gen. Hooker, who had taken up his headquarters in a barn, which had been nearly the focus of the Rebel artillery, was ont at once. First came rapid and unusually fre quent picket shots, then, several heavy volleys. The General listened A moment and smiled grimly. We have no troops.there. The Reb els are shooting each-other. It is Fair Oaks over again.” So everybody lay down again, but ail the night through there were frequent alarms. MtClellan had been informed of the nights work, and of the certainties awaiting the dawn. Sumner was ordered to more his corps at once, and was expected to be on the ground at day light. From the extent of the Rebel lines de veloped in the evening, it was plain that they had gathered their whole army behind the bights and were waiting for the .shock. The battle began with the dawn. Morning found both armies just as they had slept, almost close enough to look into each others eyes. The left of Meade's reserves and the right of Rickett's line became engaged at nearly, the same moment, one with artillery, the other with infantry. A battery was almost immediately pushed forward beyond the central woods, over a plowed field, near the top of the slope where the corn-field began. On this open field, in the corn beyond, and in the ' woods which stretched forward into the broad fields, like a promontory .into the ocean, wars the hardest and deadliest struggles of the day. For half an boar after the battle had grown to its full strength, the line of fire swsyed neither way. Hooker’s men were folly op to their work. They saw their General every where in front, never away from .the Sre, and all the troops believed in their commander, end fought with a will. Two-thirds of them were the same men who under McDowell had broken at Manassas. The half boor passed, the Bebels.began to give way a little, only a little, hot at the first indication of a receding fire, Forward, was the word, and on went the line with a cheer and a rash. Back across the corn-field, leaving dead and wounded behind them, over the fence, and across the road, and (ben back.again into the dark woode which closed around them, went the retreating Rebels. Meade and bis Pennsylvanians followed hard and fast—followed till they oame within easy range of the woods, among which they saw their beaten enemy disappearing—followed still, with another cheer, and flung themselves against the cover. Bat out of those gloomy woods came sudden ly and heavily terrible volleys—volleys which emote, and bent, and broke Id a moment that eager front, and hurled , them swiftly back for half the distance they bad won. Not swiftly nor in panic, any fnrthur. Closing up their shattered lines, they,came,slowly away—a reg iment where a brigade bad been, hardly a brig ade where a wholedivisioahadbecn. victorious. They had met from tbs woods the first volleys of musketry from fresh troops —had met them and returned, them till their line bad yielded and 1 gone down before the weight of fire, and till their ammunition was exhausted. In ten minutes the fortunes of the day seemed to hove changed l —it was the Rebels now who were advancing, pouring out of the woods in endless lines,, sweeping through the corn-held from which their -comrades bad just fled. . Hooker sent in his nearest, brigade -to meet them, hot it canid not do the work. He called for another. There was nothing close ■enough, unlcss.be tonk .it from his tight. His right might be 'in danger .if 4l was weakened. 4 but bis center was already threatened with an nihilation. Not hesitating one moment, he sent to DouhleSay ’‘Give me yonr best brigade in stantly.” The best brigade came down the bill to the right on the run, went through the timber-in front through a storm of shot and banting ■hell end crashing limbs, over the open field be yond, and straight into the corn-field, passing as they went the fragments of three brigades shattered! Sy the Rebel fire, and streaming to the.rear. They passed by Hooker, whose eyes lighted as be saw these veteran troops led by a soldier whom he knew he could trust. “I think they will hold it.” be said. Gen. Hartotuff took his troops very steadily; bat, now that they were - under fire, not hur riedly, up the bill from which the corn-field begins to descend, and formed them on the crest. Not a man who was not in full view— 'not one who bent before the storm. Firing at first in volleys, they fired then at will with.won derful rapidity and effect. The whole line crowned the bill and stood out darkly against the sky, but lighted and shrouded over in flame and smoke. , There were the 12th and 13th Massachusetts and another regiment which I cannot remember—old troops all of them. There for half an hour they held the ridge unyielding in purpose, exhaustless in courage. There were gaps In the'Nioe, but it nowhere quailed. Their General was wounded badly early in the fighi, but they fought on. Their supports did not come—they determined to win without them. They began to go down the bill and into the corn, they did not stop to think that their-'ammunition was nearly gone, they were there to win that field and they won it. The Rebel line for the second time fled through the corn and into the woods. I cannot tell how few of HartsufTs brigade when the work was done, hut it 'was done. There was no more gallant, determined, beroio fighting in all this desperate day. Gen. Hartsuff is very severely wounded, but I do not believe be coupts his success too dearly purchased. The crisis of the fight at this point bad ar rived ; Rickett's division, vainly endeavoring to advance, and exhausted by the effort, had fallen back. Part of Mansfield’s corps was ordered in to their relief, but Mansfield’s troops came back again, sod their General was mor tally wounded. The left nevertheless was too extended to be turned, and too strong to he broken. Ricketts sent word that he could not advance, but could hold his ground. Double day had kept his guns at work on the right, and had finally silenced a Rebel battery that for half an hoar had ponred in a galling enfila ding fire along Hooker’s central line. There were woods in front of Doobleday’s hill which the Rebels held, but so long as those guns pointed that way they did not care to at tack. With his left then able to take care of itself, with his right impregnable with two brigades of Mansfield still fresh and coming rapidly up, and with his center a second time victorious, Gen. Hooker determined to advance. Orders were sent to Crawford, and Gordon— the two Mansfield brigades—to move directly forward at once, the batteries in tbs center were ordered on, the whole line was called on, and the General himself went forward. To the right of the corn-field and beyond it was a point of woods. Once carried and firmly held, it was the key to the position. .Hooker determined to take it. He rode out in front of bis furthest troops on a bill to examine the ground for a battery. At the top he dismount ed and went forward on foot, completed bis w oonnissance, returned and remounted. The musketry fire from the point of woods .was all the while extremely hot. As he put bis foot in the stirrup a fresh volley of rifle bullets came whining by. The tall soldierly figure of the General, the white horse which he rode, the elevated place where he was—all made him a most dangerously conspicuous mark. So ho had been all day, riding without a staff officer or an orderly near him—all sent off on urgent duty—visible everywhere on the field. The Rebel ballets bad followed faim all day, but they had not bit him, and be would not regard them. Remounting on this hill be had not rid den five steps when be was struck in the foot by a ball. Three men were shot down at the same mo ment by bis side. Tbe air was alive with bul lets. He kept on his horse for a few moments, though the wound was severe and excessively painful, and would not dismount till he bad given hia last order to advance. He was him self in the very front. Swaying unsteadily on bis horse, heturned in bis .seat to look about him. “ There is a regiment to the right. On der it forward 1 Crawford and Gordon sre coming up. Tell them to carry these. woods and bold them—and it is our fight 1” It was found that tbe bullet had passed com pletely throughjhis foot. The surgeon who ex amined it on the spot could give no opinion Whether bones were broken, but it was after ward ascertained that though grazed they were not fractured. Of course the severity of the wound made it impossible for him to keep the field which be believed already won, so far as it belonged to him to win it. It was nine •’clock; The fight had been furious sinbe five. A large part ot bis command' was broken, but with hieright still untouched and -with Craw ford’s and Gordon’s brigades' just up, above all, with the advance'of the whole central line which the men had beard ordered with cheers, with a regiment already on the edge of tbe woods be wanted, be might well leave (be field, thinking tbe battle was won—that his battle was won, for 1 am writing of course, only about the attack on the Rebel left. * I see no reason why 1 shonld disguise my admiration of Gen. Huoker’e bravery and Sol dierly ability. Remaining nearly all the morn ing on the right, I could not help seeing the sa gacity and promptness of his manosuvera, how completely bis troops were' kept in band, bow devotedly they trusted to him, how keen was bis insight into the battle; how every opportu nity was seised and every reverse was checked and turned, into -another success, 1 say this Hie more unreservedly, because I bave.no per sonal -relation whatever with him, never, saw .him till the day before tfas-Bgbt.-wnddon’tlike his polities or opinions in ..general- • 'tiaiAa [ AdTwrti»ment» will be charged 31 persqearv 6f 10 lines, one or three Unertloai, and 16 teat* for every subsequent Insertion. Ad vsrttssSMfnts of less tilt 10. Uiies oomldered u » square. TbesnijolDe4rute«»iU be charged for Quarter!/, Half-Sourly ut Ysvll It* rertisemonts: Square, - 3 . do. • do. - 7,00 , »M 10,00 i oolnom, • « 8,00 9,Sm 13,60 k 4*. - 18,00 30,88 UM Column, • . 38,00 W,O« s*,# . Advenliamests sot having thenamberof lna»r sealed. When McClellan arranged bis order of battle, it most have been upon information, or have been left to his corps and division com mander to discover for themselves.. Dp to 3 o’clock, Burnside had made little progress. His attack on tbo bridge bad been successful, but the delay bad been so great that to the observer it appeared a* if McClellan’* plane must have been seriously disarranged.— It is impossible not to suppose that the attack* on right and’ieft were met in* a measure to cor* respond, for, otherwise the enemy had only tf repel Hooker on the one band, then transfer bis troops, and burl them against Burttsid*. -Here was the difference between Smith and Burnside, The former* did hie work at onpyy and lost all bis men at once—that is, all whom be lost at all; Burnside seams to have cautiously in order to save his men, and espy ing -successively insufficient forces against a position of strength, distributed his less over a greater period of time, hut yet loet nop* the less in the end. Finally, at 4 o’clock, McClellan sent shptri taneons orders to Burnside and Franklin; is the former to advance and cany the batteries in his front at all hazards and any cost ; fg the latter to cany the woods next in front of bire to the right, which the rebels still held. The order to Franklin, however, was practically countermanded, in consequence of .a mesppgh from Gen. Sumner that if Franklin went'-on and was repulsed, his own corps was, not yet sufficiently reorganized to be.depended,on ,as a’- ; - reserve, Franklin, thereupon, was directed to run no risk of losing bis present position, and, instead of sending his infantry Into the wood, conten ted himself with advancing bis batteries over the breadth of the fields in front, supporting them with heavy columns of infantry, and at tacking with energy the rebel batteries imme diately opposed to him. fils movement wak a success, so far as it went, {be batteries main taining their new ground, and sensibly affect ing the steadiness of the rebel fire. I‘hat being once accomplished, and all hazard of the right being again forced back having been dispelled, the movement ef Burnside became at once the turning point of sueeesa, and rite fate of the day depended on him. How extraordinary the situation was, may be judged from a moment’s consideration of the facts. It ie understood that from the on Wet Burnside’s attack was expected to he decisive, as it certainly must have been if things went well elsewhere, and if he succeeded in estab lishinghimself oh the Sharps burg road In the rebel rear. Yet Hooker, Sooner, Franklin, and Mane field, were all sent to the right three mile* away, while Porter seems to bare done double duty with bis single corps in front, both supporting the batteries and holding himself in reserve.— With all this immense force op the'right, but 16,000 men were given to Burnside Cat tbs de cisive movement of tbe day. Still mure onfortunste in its results was tbe total failure of these separate attacks on&A,, right and left to sustain, or in any manner-oer operate with each other. Burnside hesitated for hours in front of tbe bridge which should have been carried at once by a coupde main.— Meantime Hooker had been fighting for four hours With various fortune, bat final success,— Sumner had cum up too late to join in-the de cisive attack which hie earlier arrivald would probably have converted into a complete suc cess; and Franklin reached tbe scene only when Sumner bad been repulsed. Probably before hie arrival the rebels had trui-u. red a considerable number of troops to tbeir r;ght to meet tbe attack of Burnside, the direction of 51 which was then suspected or developed. Attacking first with one regiment,' then with two, and delaying both for .artillery,- Burnside .was oof over the . bridge before "2 o’clock—per bapg-nut'tiH 3. f/e advanced slowly op tto dopes in bis fronts, bis batteries in jsar eortf- Hates of Admtist&g, S.uosni. 6 xeavtis. tj woata* . 93,88 *4,88 OM* 5,M M 8 MO