GENERAL NEW& ITEMS. A Dijioceatic editor in Ncvcd a territory say* of the defeat in tie city; “We met the, enemy yesterday and are, oat-on parole I this morning." . ' : ’ Judo* Woodwabo has reftgned —not, hit Judgeship, bat the post of vestryman of Epiph any church. He couldn’t stahd praying for the President of the United States. Janos Dean .was hissed at a “ Democratic” meeting,in New York Tuesday evening for say ing that he was for the .prevention of the war nnti) the Union was restored.”* “ God has said, ‘ when the wicked yule the people monro.’ Register. ! ■And when the people rule, |he wicked mourn, at we can see all about here since election.— Scranton Republican. , Tbs muskrats in Minesota-have double-lined their nests, and the trout liajvC; already left the small creeks for deep indications, says the St. Paul Press, of as Winter as that of 1857, when the same, occurrence were observed. - ' ‘ .. Toe .Cincinnati Comtneraiat says .that the, venerable Catholic Arcb.bism>j> Purcell, accom panied, by; Bishop ißosecrarje, appeared at the polls in that city at the TatOjelection, for. the first, time 'for twenty-five yeafs, and voted the Unifth ticket. -. That veteran iDemqerat,‘‘Daniel S. Dickin son, in a recent speech,' said"that in the war of JBl2 Mr; Madison made tel I ( mistakes where Abraham Lincoln has made yet the Dem ocratic party sustained the iSrtcutive then and made their fortunes os a party .by their patri otic course. , '. =■ Altered Greenbacks. — are in circula tion greenbacks of the one dollar denomination altered to tens. The work is not badly done, but as the pleasantcountenAnce of Mr. Chase ie not changed for that of llreaideiU Lincoln, persons- accustomed to handli are not likely to bo deceived by It. , The .difference between.at). Abolitionist and a rebel ram is, that one goes;for the Union with an if and the other goes against the Union with a but.— Register. And the only difference; between those two end a regular Copperhead isi that ;he goes a gainst the Union without an tf'or a lut.—Scran ton Republican. 1 • Foe? or five Irisbmen-lately opened a pork store at Fordingbridge, Hampshire, England, and selling their meat at £Jd.' (5c.) a pound, almost, destroyed the trade. 1 of the beef butch ers, whose beef costTd. a pound. The latter got over the difficulty gravely, telling an old wo man (he pork was hpd beep fat tened upon dead soldiers, .who wpre always picked up atyer battles and,given to the pigs. Tub enlistment of colored troops in 'Mary land causelagreat amount pf discontent among the slaveholders in that State, so much, indeed, that adepatajlon was sept to the President to reepiest a tvilhdrawl of the.,recruiting.officers. I'hh President replied that the country needed ’soldiers, and- if the reoruitng officers did any thing contrary, to the law they 1 Would be super seded,. hut the recruiting must go on. A -Coal Old. QoAßnv- £t Santa Cruz, in California, thetfc are oVer-i. thousand acres cov- ered .with a substance nslembiing nsphaltum, -from one to ten feet thick,: is iri reality s species of petroleum, easily melted, and susceptible of bej|ng purified and refined 1 into excellent burn ing fluid. A company ha}.been formed, and a' retort secured sufficient tojrefioe fourteen hun dred gallons per'week. - ' ■Soldiers’ SENTUiEXra-ptEitraot of a, letter to the editor from a friem.in the Army in Vir ginia. , “I never could hate believed until I saw the returns from the electron}’ th*t there were eo . many rebels, r alias C'uppirheads, alias demo crats, in the old Keystonj| but thank heaven ther are still enough loVt l men there to defeat them at'lbe*polls, and hsybey are too cowardly to light for disunion, thejffcan never do us any serious harm. . ■ TniMoos.—Professor Phillips, of England, has succeeded in obtaining drawings, of the • moon seen "through a new telescepe with a six inch object 1 glass. They.-exbibit many new ’ and striking features, showing a volcanic action of’whioh we of this wofld have.no conception. What .would we think if oar whole continent was a collection of cratersj with bills rising'out of iheir midst and divided by. radiating ravines of awful depth.? The cnly approach to any ih our wdtlds is to.be found in -the. Cordilleras of g!ld regions. President Lincoln-A One Idea Man, —The 5 London Tiihes-An commenting upon President Lincoln’s Sprlgfield litter remarks, that the President is ‘”4 man or but one idea. He .has iiut-one cry—the'maintenance of the Union. He seems able to see no other object, .and htf measures every 'measure solely by its fetation to this •> • is the lungungerif'ealogy 7 No friend obald -say more in his-favur. Tbe loyal peo pleof the United States;nre''proud of their one idea President, let faiotadhere to it, and they trill adhere to him. • ■ * - . W* liabn from a. ftfind, says the Ilnrris 'hnfg- Telegraph, that whgh ex Governor P.icker visited- tlie pulls,, at to vote, he boastfully h#ld up hU ticket, exclaiming " Uere is d ticket which is cojtjjw all ocerl" Imme diately behind Puuker oiuiie a’jolly Hibernian, also in the aut of vothrt;,' who cried nut, in a Justy 'voice, “Be y'oderi,! here in a ballot to kill ■yaiirsnake!” We do notjehty William F. Pack er. thei fueling, while ‘We despise tbe motive, which prompted him td his vote and his excla mation. Tbe honest irishman is the better ' 'man and the purer patriut of tbe two citizens.— UeKean Miner: . |'i: 1 t Bain THis.- 1 -“ The j real civilization of a country isinits aristocracy. The masses are , moulded into soldiers and ' artisans by intellect j.ast as matter .and the elements of nature are node into telegraphs airii steam engines. Tbe poor, who wo -k all daycare' too tired at night to study. If you masu.them learned, they soon forget all that Is.-'Beeessary in tbe com mon trmnaaotioos of lifft,* To make an aristo-' crat in the future, wi hirst sacrifice a thousand .paupers. Yet we by all means make then permanent, ioofby -the laws of entail and 'X*™°pcmtnre, The'right to govern resides in a very small minority: (h'e.dutyto obey is in herent in the great.masses of mankind. All government begins and it con doned by force. . There i» nothing to which the eoUrtaini sthgreata dislike as nniveif ai suffrage. Whertter foHigniri 'sttili together in iarge numbers, there universal suffrage will ex ill"—£>« Bow’s THE AGITATOR. M. H. COBB, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. WEU.SBOBODOB, PBIW’Ai NOVEMBER 4. 1863. WEDNESDAY, Gov. Cußiitt has appointed Thursday, 26th of the present month, as a day of Thanksgiv ing and prater., Having been unavoidably absent from home during the ten days ending Monday, we have not been able to bestow usual attention upon this department this week. Our correspond ence is nlso'behindhand. Friends'and patrons will please bear with us until past and una voidable neglects can be repaired. MELANCHOLY S„dl fell upon his own sword; Judas bang ed himself upon a tree ; Socrates drank hem lock ; Cartius rode full-armed into the gulf that cleft the Forum; Cleopatra submitted to the venomed tooth of an asp. Other worthies of ancient time songht refuge in voluntary death from the sting of disappointment -or morse, or from the infamy of selfishness, or from the persecutions of the wicked, in more or less noble ways. The suicides of modern times fairly take precedence of their predecessors. Bonaparte fell paralysed by the rage of an ignoble ambi tion ; the' First Charles, earlier, rushed against “ the bossy shield ” of popular Bight, and was dashed in pieces; sod James Buchanan, in our own times, died from a thrust of the bare bod kin of cowardly indecision. - This should have finished the catalogue of suicide ; but it did mot.. It was reserved for Geo. B. McClellan|to stand lost and least in suicidal annals. On the 12th of October, 1863, if we. mistake not, this unfortunate gentleman—who bad accepted the championship of such scoundrels as Fer nando Wood and James Brooks, yet feebly sur vived—rushed into print, and out of political existence, at one and the same moment. To be more explicit, Gen. McClellan, having con stantly in view his candidacy for the Presiden- - cy in 1864, and believing Mr. Woodward’s 1 po litical calling and election sore, abandoned the solid land upon which be stood, and took to the single, rotten plank occupied by_Mr. Wood ward, Mr. Vallandigham, and Jefferson Davis. This was on the eve Of the election. After drifting nt the mercy of the waves of popular indignation all through tbp memorable 13th day of October, the rotten plank and its freight went down at precisely, 7 P. M., to be ho more seen among aspirants for public favor. Had this constituted the first and only exhi bition of boyish folly on the part of the illus trious departed, bis fate might well excite emo tions of pity and compassion. But alas 1 from the hour that his indiscreet friends put him for ward us a Piesidential candidate, his course became a series of stupendous blunders. In fact, be was slaughtered in the house of bis friends. Had ha been possessed of all the ex cellences and abilities claimed for him by bis indiscreet friends, still he must have failed to escape the doom he lately sought and received. By nature cautious and hesitating when he should be daring and decided, end only daring and decided when it is wisdom to be reticent and discreet, this man needed the often nurs ing and constant admonitions parents bestow upon tbeir wayward children. But -all experiments are valuable, without reference to their individual results. The let ter written by Gen. McClellan endorsing Geo. W. Woodward and urging his election, bad a two-fold object. He, the writer, was reputed the idol of the army of the Potomac, whose in valid, soldiers were about returning home to vote. "H was natural enough, then, assuming his popularity with the, Potomac army to be a fact, to suppose that this last and argent ap peal for Woodward by 1 the “ idol of the army” would operate favorably for Woodward on the presumed idolaters. Thus, it will at once be seen, Gen. McClellan’s letter was intended to, tost his power over the Potomac army, and so measure his strength for the campaign of 1864, not less than to benefit Woodward. What was the effect of. that appeal? Prob ably do man will claim that it influenced one hundred Totes, either way. ■ The effect, then, was, to explode the notion - that Gen. McClellan is now, in any extended sense, a special favor ite with the soldiers of the Potomac army, and through this, to ruin him with the scoundrely politicians who bad hoped to work out the sal vation of treason through bis instrumentality. We rejoice, that all issues are-in the hands.of a just and beneficent Deity, to whom the mach inations of bad men are an abomination. As fur Man the be succeed or fail, whether he survive o t perish, it matters little, save to himself. All our labors and sac rifices should be with reference to the Race;- and the labor sacrifices addressed to any other end, must ever turn to ashes. Tne statement that the Woodward soldiers were not permitted to come homo to vote, is a sheer fabrication. All soldiers in hospital were furloughed without questions as to their polit ical leanings. The fact is that Woodward and bis faction are as utterly obnoxious to a good soldier as Jeff.. Davis and bis faction. We think that very few Woodward men were fur loughed,' but the reason was that there were very few to furlough. It must be known that no Pennsylvania soldiers were' furloughed from the front. None but those in hospitals or on detached service were permitted to go home. I Geptlemen Coppers—you cannot craaa yonr lies down the throats of soldiers. They under stand yeofttndhate you with a.heal thy hatred. . Thanksgiving Day occurs ou the ; 26th thro’- Swtlhefree States, T'HE TIOG A C 01) is xYAh by uur.troops, under Gen.' Hooker, with the Eleventh Corps and a portion of the Twelfth, and Palmer’s division of the Fourth Corps. There was no serious oppo sition. Tberiverisnow open to Chattanooga and the Army of the Cumberland is relieved from any danger threatened by interrupted communica tions. Gen. Palmer has been promoted to the com mand of the Fourteenth Corps over Bosseau, Reynolds and Sheridan. Baltimore, Oct. 30—The following letter was received this morning by the American from a responsible correspondent: “Annapolis, Mn., Oct. 29—The flag of truce boat New i York arrived at the Naval Sshool wharf this morning, from City Point, with 181 paroled men. Eight of that number died on the boat, on- its way hither. They actually starred to death. “ Never in the whole course of my life hire I sedn such a scene as these men presented. They were living skeletons. Every man of them had to ■ be sent to the hospitals', and-lhe surgeons’ opinion is that more than one third of them must die] being beyond the reach of nourishment or medicine.' 1 questioned sever al of them, and all state that their coodion has been brought on by the treatment they have received at the hands of the Rebels. “ They have been kept without food, nnd ex posed a large portion of the time without shel ter of any. kind. To look at these poor meu and hear their- tales of woe, as to how they have been treated, one would not suppose they had fallen into the hands of the Southern chiv alry, but rather into the hands of savage bar barians, destitute of all humanity or feeling.” From the sth Pennsylvania Reserves. Camp Near Auburn, Va., 1 Oct. 29tb, 1863. J Dear Agitator ; ■ Here we are,' after a series of Sank movements, and countermarching*, re treats, and advnjnoes, the design of which is better understood by our Worthy commander, than by his veteran followers. It became a by word among the| boys, that our numerous evo lutions were only feints to cover the real de sign, which, was supposed to be a general ad vance, or a general retreat. After maneuver ing, and ret/eating, until we bad readied the fortifications/of Oentreville, it was conjectured that Meade ind fallen back for the purpose of sending more troops to Tennessee, butbefore one week had elapsed the order was given “ forward 1" Judge of onr surprise at thus see ing the unanimous opinion of all scattered id the winds, and the army of the Potomac ad vancing in battle array, on, toward the mem orable field of Bull Run. A superstitious hor ror was prevalent among the troops os we ap proached the theater of former disasters and we were certain, from onr cautious advance, that we were to have another round with the Rebels on the old ground. Night came, and the sth Corps rested on the old battle ground, the Reserves bivonseked on the same ground that they fought oh during the retreat of Mc- Clellan' and Pope. Graves, and fragments of Shell scattered here and thebe gave evidence of an earnest and fearful conteit, while the un covered bones of (alien comrades brought sor rowful rec ullectiuns to mind. A private of f e Is; Regt. j itched hi* tent near a gtave; the next morning be found that it was the resting place of an old comrade and messmate, who had been reported as missing, but whose actual fate was unknown, until his grave wasAis covered. We were c» lei el forward in "the morning, and were halted and moved around until we retched our present place of encamp ment, which is sbont eight miles from Warren ton,and near.Cedsr Run. The Rebels are os tbit aide of the River in oomideraWe force, and bate thro wh op earth works; " There baa-been aomeCavnlry-fightW «aaaed by -anattemptbf the Rebel* tM*bn noitre LUCY A. BERNADER, ] Adm f s> : Westfield, Nov. 4, 1303.-6 t.» 1’ ADBIMISTBATOB’S SALE; IX pursuance 6f an order of. the Orphan's Court of Tioga county, the undersigned Administrators of tne estate of Amos Bixby, deceased, will expose to public sale on .Wednesday, Nov. 2Mb. at 2 o'clock P. M., of said day, ihc following described real estate, on the premises, tojwit: A certain piece or parcel of land in Richmond township, Tioga county, Penna., bounded on the west by the Williamson road, on the north by lands of Lo- ( ren Butte and Voorfaees, on the east by, Loren Butts and 'Dyer Butts, on the south by lands of Lloyd Gil* letter—containing IX9 acres more or less, about 105 acres improved, with two barns, plaster mill, and saw mill thereon, and water privilege belonging thereto, and reserving therefrom the horse barn and lot ad joining. WM. C. RIPLEY, ) ... - ! LYDIA Q. BIXBT, } Mansfield* Nov. 4, 1863. « LISTTOI) LjETTERS remaining in the Post Office nt Wellsboro, Nov. 3, 1863: Allen, Elton* Rorick, Jacob H, Blue, Cyrus Willson, Hannah Clark, Agflcs 2 Wilcox, Benajah Dobbin, Daniel Willard, Jos. Herrot, Julietta Warriner, Lueretia 2 Mitchell, Maria C. Warriner, Hiram Potter, Chas. 1 Wheeler, Eliza Phillips, E. 11. Persons calling for any of the above letters, will please say advertised. HUGH YO.I7XG, P. M. LIST OF LETTERS remaining in the Posl Office at Tioga, Nov. 2, 1863: Artley, George McCullough, Wn?. Blanchard, J. 8. Martin, Mrs. Elizabeth Berkley, P. B. Macumber, David Clark, Rabeo Mncnel, Mrs. T. P. Cross, Fanny ! Norton, Edward Cnllam, John 2 Platt, Chs. > Dtltin, F. O. Quinlan, John Genrnsey, Hon. H. A. Scofield, Mrs. E. 8. Gerger, Emili. Btrigetmarr, Jacob Fred Hilt. Miss Mamonda Shaw. Tbomni Ham !aer, D. H. Sheehan, John Jackson, Miss E. M. Tremain, Mrs. Elisabeth Kelley, John Williams, Elies Keller, Mrs. Catheren Woodfield, Danel Persons calling for any of the above letters, wii please say they arc advertised. LEWIS DAGGETT, P. M. Eye and Ear Institute. DR, UP IDE GRAFF, OCULIST, ADRIST & GEN’L SURGEON/ ELMIUA, N, r. TREATS ALL DISEASES OF THE EYE, EAR AND THROAT. THE EY&—He will operate upon Cataract, Arti ficial Pupil, Cross Eyes, Lachrymal Fistula, Pterygium, Eutropion, (inversion of the eye lid,) and treats nil forms of Sore Eyes, such as Granulated Lids, Purulent Ophthalmia, Opacities of (be Cornea, Scrofulous Diseases of the Eye, and all diseases to which the Eye is subject. ; • THE EAR.—Treats successfully Discharges from the Ear, Noises in the Ear, Difficulty of Hearing, Deafness, (even when the nnuu is entirely destroyed, will insert dn artificial one, answering nearly all the purposes of the natural). \ THE THROAT.—Ulcerated Throat, Enlarged Ton sils, together with CATARRH, In all its forms, permanently cored. GENERAL SURGERY.—He will operate upon Club Feet, Hare Lip, Cleft Palate, Tumors, Cancers, Morbid Growths, Deformities from Borns, HERNIA, Operated upon by a new mode with entire success; end performs PLASTIC OPERATIONS; where the Nose, Lip, or any portion of the face is destroyed through disease or otherwise, by healing them on anew. Will attend to tho Amputation of Limbs, and Gen eral Surgery in all its branches. INSERTS ARTIFICIAL EYES.—Giving them all the motion add expression of (he natural, defying de tection. They are inserted without removing the old one, or producing pain. The Doctor's collection of Instruments comprises all the latest improvements, and is the largest la the State. The superior advantages he has.had in per fecting himself in-all that is new and valuable in Sur gery, warrants him in saying that every thing within the bounds of the profession may be expected of him. The Institute has been greatly enlarged, so that wo can now accommodate an increased number of pa tients from a distance. Comfortable Boarding Hou see attached to the establishment. 11 No incurable Ca»e» received for treatmeni~or opera tions. IP a case is incurable, he will be so informed. Institute upon Water-street, opposite the Brainard House, Elmira, N. Y. Elmira, N. Nov. 4,1863.-ly. CAtT^W. TTrUERBAS. my wife CORNELIA, has left my VY bed and board without any just cause or prov ocation, I hereby forbid all persons harboring, of trusting her or her child, as I shall; pay no debts of her contracting after this date. JAMES E. PLUMLEY. Delmar, Oct. 26, 1863-31* * NOTICE. TO the Stockholders of the Tioga County Bank. There will bo an Election held at ike Bank on MONDAY, Nov. 16th, for the purpose of electing Directors for said Bank the ensuing year. All are invited to aftend* B, C, WICKHAM, President* OcL 14, 1863. CIDER VINEGAR at RAY'S DRUG STORE. TT EROSINB LAMPS-at ’ A ROY’S DRUG STORE. Baking soda a salekatus at - DRUG SIQBB/ NOT A RUM DRINKj A HIGHLY CONCENTRATED VEGETABLE EXTRACT, A PURE TONIC, THAT WILL BELIEVE THE AFFLICTED, AUS» NOT MAKE DRUNKARDS.- Xftl. HOOFLAND’g GERMAN BITTER^ PREPARED B¥ DR. O. M. JACKSON/ PHILADELPHIA, PA. WILL EFFECT DALLY AND MOST CERTAINE*' CURE ALU DISEASED ARISING FROM A DISORDERED LIVER, STOMACH, ■ o* EIDNEtS. SOOFLAND'B OJERMAN BITTERS WILL CURB EVERT CASE OP Ciironic or Nervous DebllitT, Dli. ease of tile Kldncjs, and Diaea. ses arising from a Disordered Stomach. OBSERVE THE FOLLOWING SYMPTOMS Jiesutiing from Disorders ■of the DigesUn Organs : . Constipation, Inward Filn, Fulnetw or. Blood to tbi EnA Acidity of the Stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgun for food, Falne«s or Weight in the Stomach Soar Eructations, Slaking or Flatter-' taring at the Pit of the Stomach, Swimming of tb* Head, Hnr- Hnrrled and Difficult Breathing. Flutter logut the Heart; . Choking or .-■‘..i- Suffocating Sen sations when in a lying posture, Dimness of Vision, Dots or ■ Webs' fore the Sight, Fever, and Dnll Pain Pain in the Head, De ficiency of Perspiration, Yel lowness of the Skis and Byes, Pala in,the Side, Back, Chest, Limbs. Ac., Sud den Flushes, of Beat, Burning in the Fle&b, Con stant Imaginations of Evil, and great Depression •{ Spirits. HOOFLAND'S GERMAN BITTERS Witt GIVE TOU A. GOOD APPETITE, Witt GIVE YOU Strong Healthy Nerves, Witt CITE TOU BRISK AND ENERGETIC FEELINGS, Witt ENABLE TOU TO SLEEP WELL, AN© UU WSITITEtT P BIT ENT YELLOW FEVER, BIjLIOUS FEVER, ic. Tliosc Suffering from Broken down and Delicate From whatever cause, either In MALE OR FEMALE, will find in “ HOOFLAND’S GERMAN BITTERS, A REMEDY That will restore them to their usual health. Snch bu been the case in thousands of instances, and a fair trial ii but required to prove the assertion. From Her. J. Newton. Brown, D. D., Editor of the Encyclo pedia of Religions Knowledge. Although not disposed to favor or recommend'Patent Med icines in general, tbre-ugh distrust of ttfelr ingredients aud effects, I yet know of no sufficient reasons why a man may not testify, to the benefits he believes himself to have re ceived from any simple preparation, In the hope that he may thus contribute to the benefit of others. I do this the more readily lujegard to llooflauds German Bitters, prepared by Dr. C M. Jackson, of this citr, becanw I was prejudiced against them for many years, under lb* Impression that they were chiefly an alcoholic mixture. I am indebted to my friend Robert Shoemaker, Esq,, for the removal of this prejudice by proper tests, and for eseoar to try them, when suffering from great and long Continued debility. The use of three bottles of tbess Bit ters, at the beginning of the present year, was followed by evident relief, and restoration to a degree of bodilv and mental vigor which I bad not felt for,six months before, and had almost despaired of regaining, p therefore thank God and my friend for directing,me to the use of them. Philadelphia, June 20, Ifijei. J. NBWTdN BBOTTX , i DISEASES OP KIDNEYS AND BLADDER ' In Young or o/Femalb Are speedily removed, and the patient restored tVI/eslfb; DELICATE CHILDREN, Those suffering from MAEABIICS, wasting away, with scarcely any flesh on their bones, are cured in a very short time; one bottle in snch cases, will have a most surprising effect. PARENTS Having suffering children as above, and wishing to rsi* them, will never regret the day they commenced with these Bitters. w LITERARY MEN, STUDENTS, And those working hard with their brains, should slwsys keep a bottle of HUOFLAND’S BITTERS near them.M they will find much benefit from its use, to both mind and body,, invigorating and not depressing. IT IS NOT A LIQUOR STIItOX,SNT,. ■’ And leave* no prostration. ATTENTION, SOLDIERS I AND THE FRIENDS OF SOLDIERS. cnN the Attention of all baring relations or friend* io £" “2 *? ,h f f «‘ ,h « “ HooriiN&s will cure nine tenths of the disease* Induced bv ernortm ? n if P ri T a{lon * Incident to camp Ufo. In it* luSrwJ t new W«™. oo «» irrii A S 1 !?* ®® noticed that a very large Droooition are inf* d «^ lH i^'n Kvery CMe of kln|ctn be retdilT H > w a K 4 ,K Q ‘ lt BUtcr «- We btn no heaiutim A tb ,®?f ****** were freely u*ed wood* onr wouM te l“t f “ “ i * b ‘ •" “** ether.** Wie proprietor. »ro deity receirtne thankful letter. from toSth h. h t°h‘ riDy •” d .. ho *P , ‘«l». who bar. boon cellared Wo^l lh bj the ° f theM BUfm. sent to them By their beware OF COUNTERFEITS! See that the Sisnntnre »f “C. N JACESORo is on ibe WRAP* PER ot each Bottle. PWCE PER BOTTLE 75 CTS. OK HALF 808. FOR 84 00. Should yow peercat drnjgiat not have the article, tlo oo pot off by any of the Intoxicating preparation. that na? Principal Office 4c BtnnnfatMffi NO. 631 ARCH STREET. JONES & EVANS. (Smeenon to C. 11. JACKSON A C*>J> Ui/ . Proprietor* gby DraggMi and S«*l*n 1b mry !»•»■ S«jj. - 49-, ton BA) In >be United S B*f teabei t>,