InlUc Same ana hf tlio Aui riarity . (if thn Co inmonweallii ot rcrfii. i sylvan la. ANDREW G, CURTIN, fO VEHNOIi OP TBS SAW COMMON ! WALT IT. A PROCLAMATION. -, "Whereas, for some time past it j iaa been known that persons, professing to bef igents of other-States, bare been busily tampri ing with -our citizens at boms and in the arifi r t endov A’nrihgjpby false representations, to iti l|ice indi viduals to enter or re-enter the sertAV from Ahose States, and remonstrances have been in ■vein 1 made against the continuance'of this pal try system, of seduction ; : And whereas, information has noV been re tired that one of the regiments of Pennsylva nia has'enlisted almost bodily as from another State ; and it appears to be necessary to take some public means to pnt our citizens on their guard against the arts by which results so dis astrous to the men and their familii s may be effected in-others of her regiments r?I ich Penn sylvania has delighted to honor; • Hbnf, therefore, I, Andrew G. Ci} f n. Gover nor of the Commonwealth of Penn I; Ivnnia, do issue this, my proclamation, addn Sued to nil •citizens of the Commonwealth, bu i especially and emphatically to her veterans 5 I the army, cautioning them against allowing ti lemselyes to seduced from her service. By. enlisting in wgiroents of Other-States, they their families at home of that generous; and liberal aid which our law has provided for them as a right, and riot as a charity ; they fjll not enjoy the right of suffrage which an 'Jpproaching iimendment of the Constitution w( (give to our absent volunteers ; they cut the! selves loose • from the ties which bind them to their homes, and which bind Pennsylvania to g ve them con stant care and assistance in the fir td—an obli gation which our State has never t selected. I f wounded or sick, they will no longfr be fostered by our agents, arid received tppjause and consideration, as men who have dine honor to Pennsylvania ; they bring the hiitory of their regiments to an abrupt close ; thfiir names will no longer be entered on our rolls t all the glo-' j jiVuß recollections of their valor Aid sufferings will Tie sickened by the fact tb }t they have abandoned their native State; des‘Tted the great Commonwealth under whose banter they have earned for themselves and for her. the highest reputation for courage and all thei martial vir tiiesj and that they have done tl « under in ducements which are in fact unfoß ided, and at the very time when their friends a-,d neighbors mt home were preparing for themjijnnties pro bably larger than those offered bother States, and certainly much larger, if the iipport affor ded their families be taken into amount. I therefore appeal to our nobleilplunteers not to abandon the Commonwealth. "She has been proud of the glory which their d "urse hitherto has shed abundantly on her. A{ a mother, she hos a right to the honors to be nin future by bcrnbiJilren, Stand by her, ana she will stand by yon; and yon will have the tf cheat reward, iu the grateful affections and sympathies of families, your friends, your, teighbora, and your fellow -citizens. Brit if yon leave her for the st twice of other States, you throw atvay all these —for ikeir peo ple will regard you merely as nOrjeharies, and when they hake fulfilled ibeirbargaina, will leaveyou and your families, to - j)ifc for your selves. Recollect yohr homes ol i your fami lies, and your friends, and ,ihe 1 tinners which the Commonwealth, first bestow id. upon you, which you have .carried so gloriof ily upon many a bloody field, and which, defac d by shot and shell, but still bearing the namj. of the battles in which yon have been disting isbed, she has provided for receiving at the,ch ie of , the war, , and preserving as holy relics of .our patriotism nnd devotion to the cause of an common coun try. These things are worth' n bre to you and to your children than money. ; Do not grieve and disappoint your friends Joy abandoning them all. < ■ I take this occasion to enjoin rriporj all magis trates, district attorneys Jjiy-t ,bAl*r officers, ft strict vigilance in enforcin'® tl laws* of this Commonwealth, against all ,pe» ana who shall within this State attempt to rc-c. nit volunteers fw other States. , , , -* 5 \ ' ■[t,. s-3 Given under my bfluiland the great seal of the State," at HarrisV fg, tfee twenty fourth day of February, i(j- he year of our -Lord one thousand -eight ho dred and sixty dour, and of the,Commonwealth the eighty eighth, . A 0. CURTIN. Bn Slifer, ■ Secretary of thikT imtoonwealth.- (Credit ok .the Draft . A treat mistake is hieing made with refference ta he credit on the (trait, and many districts, aCajT having expend ed large sums of money to fis£ up their quotas, will find that they hare notin icality furnished n soldier, to secure exempts l ion the present call. The error is n this manner Agents arc now in this city i rons nlf/parts of ,the,State, looking after the v. terans who have jqst returned on furlough. 'ljiese agents make it.a huisncss to bargain veterans, pay ing each soldier a certain suD. ;of money to al low : hitnself to be credited te a’certain district, when that veteran has already been credited end received a bounty. Thojocnlity of the en listment of the veteran—wl.flre he was first credited—cannot be and waf tot changed when he re-enlisted. Hence the < ;ong of tempting these men into allowing tl;e"p .names to be cred ited to the localities only nffr ■ offering bounties. In all eaces, such .oredita wf: be disallowed by the Provost .Marshals in tl • several districts.' The people will at once set (lint if the double" credit wefo allowed, the Government would get no soldiers, while the people would be enor mously tirxed- , * This is an important «:>ject, and we trust that great care will be take? to prevent the in jury likely to result through, it, from becoming general,— Jlarrisbwff Telegraph. Tge EsiisTRENT of Yet^baks. — Some time since Captain J. Herron Pctjter addressed a let ter to Col-J. F, Bumford, <|. A. Provost Mar shal General cf PennsyJvniia, inquiring as to' the right of crediting the ,'eterans re-enlisting to certain districts in the £ ate. Colonel Bum ford didi not reply to that i itter, but referred it to the Provost Marshal General at Washington, from which -Department the following reply was directed to be issued s War Deparjk sst, Provost Marshal General's Office; Wasihkgtos City, b. (!•, Feb. 28, 1864. Capl. J. Hrrron Foster, Provost Marshal 22d Putrid, Penn’a. —Sir; Yoi > letter of the 28tb ult., asking what assurance can be given nom tnitteeg in paying bounties p veterans that they will, receive credit for, bus been received. It it not in the poicey.a f the Provost Marshal Oeneralto give ang ami ranee of the kind; as tilt. n>eo art; already enlijtea and mustered into the service. This tolls are in tha custody of the Adjutant General, and no thcmgS can .fie made in them without producing 'conTufeion nnd errors. The veterans have tiirertdyfeceiced frbe eminent bounty and enlisted by Virtue of it , i Very respectfully,. Your obedient serv’f, HENRY E.MAYNADIER, - , Captain D, S. Army. —We notified the people on this subject some weeks since, so that the districts suffer ing from such credits have no right Jo sympa thy. Thousands of dollars have been lost in this way—paid by districts for veterans who have been already credited to the Government liererafter it must be plainly understood, that the veterans were credited to the Government before they returned home on furlough, and that two credits cannot be made for one soldier. —Harrisburg Telegraph, THE AGITATOR. M, H. COBB, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. WEX.X.SBOKOXTGB, PENN’A: WEDNESDAY, ; : : MARCH 2. 1864. From tho Washington Chronicle. BEWARE OF THE BOGI Whert party leaders display unwonted regard for and devotion-To principles or the joommon welfare, they will hear watching. It will he remembered that, up to the very eve of his fa mous, or rather infamous, coup d'etat, Louis Napoleon exhibited a.daily increasing zeal in the work of .enfranchising the .French people. So, down to the very withdrawal of Jefferson Davis,and his compeers from the Congress nnd the departments, none were louder in their lau dations of “ the palladium of our liberties”— the Constitution—or more zealous in their ad vocacy of popular rights. It is common for men when meditating treason, either social or political, to distinguish, their last moments bf formal loyalty by extraordinary devotion to the object they are about to betray. These facts are brought to mind very often now-a-daye, and particularly on perusal Congressional proceedings. .Among the increa sing multitude of schemes for obstructing ;the difficult but still mensurable progress of public affairs by the opponents of the Administration, one of the most remarkable is that concocted by Mr. Dawson, of Pennsylvania. Eager to show the fervor of his regard for the gallant men who man our ships of war, ha proposes to pay them in gold, or its equivalent. is recently that he found material for a harangue in this novel'ffTo positjon. On the face of it, the proposition certainly betokens a most generous regard for the men who fight our battles on the sea, and along our rivers; and were such a generous re gird and appreciation consistent with the record made by the faction to which that gentleman belongs, during the years of this war, and for many years previous, it would become no man to go behind the proposition in search of un worthy motives. » • But the proposition is not nt all consistent with the record made by Mr. Dawson and his fellow factiohists. Bor years he and they have been most servile apologists for and strenuous advocates of a system which can exist onlv through the cruelest abasement of tbe soul and the bitterest degradation of honest labor. They have connived at the wholesale robbery of mil liotys of men and women, ast well as at the per petuation of the condition which puts one man at tbe mercy of another, and constitutes him a fit satject for robbery.- When the autberats of this system demanded more room for it to ope rate —more room for a system,which operated to make dependence instead of independence the unvarying reward of labor—neither Mr. Dawson ribrhis’ friends hastened to demand a certain and adequate compensation for honest s :rvice. ’On the contrary, they ignored the principle involved, and voted unlimited field for the diffusion of slavery. ■But the question takes on still another objec tionable aspect. Why pay in gold, or its equiv-’ nlent, when the public evidences of- debt are as available to satisfy judgments and mortgages, and to lift minor evidences of debt, as gold it- - self? One hundred dollars in greenbacks will satisfy a judgment for one hundred dollars as fully, and as legally, as so much gold." So, for j all business and legal purposes, jpaper Is "as good ; ns gold. ■ The matter, then, draws itself into the domain of simple purchase in the markets. It is plain that here a gold dollar will purchase more than a paper one. But why make- distinctions in labor? Why not propose that the man who makes your coat or your boots shall also re ceive from yon gold or its equivalent ? Or the .women who make clothes for sailors and sol diers—why not propose a similar payment of gold, or its equivalent, for such labor ? ' What, in good part, produces the present depreciation of paper? Is it.not because of the inflation of the circulating medium ? If that medium were suddenly expanded half as much more, would not gold sell for still more thjn it does to-day ? The object is now to prevent any greater infla tion of the currency, and so prevent further ap preciation of values. Were onr soldiers and sailors paid in the equivalent of gold, it would) not reduce the price of a single article of pur chase, or a single necessary of life. "So long as the extraordinary financial strain continues, the cost of things roust appreciate to a certain point. But the appreciation of values can ne ver, in a free-country, exceed the appreciation of wages. In this country no working man Starves because flour is ten dollars a barrel. He strikes for a corresponding-rise in wages, , and not in vain. . But gold is ho longer n circulating medium. During the last war with Great Britain, it occu pied substantially the same position. In 1837 it again almost disappeared, save from brokers’ windows. So the financial situation isnot un THE TXO«A precedented.. And if it were, there is that which is equally unprecedented! in the demands of the times. But wo forgot." Neither Mr-. Dawson nor his friends care tha toss of ft copper about justice to labor. They desire to bring tha jcurrcncy into discredit, apd thus assure Jefferson Davis -that, altliough absent, he ia never forgotten. - ■ ’ :m. n. c. EDITORIAL ICOBEESBOKDEBTCB. - Washington,' February 25,1864, •, If yon will go into a large school-room during the mid-day intermission, you may got a fair idea W the condition of things in the House of Representatives during a session. ' If there be no school-room convenient, wait until next May, and kick over one of your liveliest beehives. You may gain a tolerably just idea' of “the House in session,” in that way. But- if you wish to ieam something of primeval chaos, you can nowhere do it so weiras in the galleries of the House after the morninghour. There, it is not ari'upusual thing to see a hundred forms uprise,, a'hundred arms . outstretched, and to hear a hundred voices crying, in all gradations of sound, from thunderous bass to piping fal setto, "Mr. Speaker!” Of these one hundred cries the Speaker can recognize but one. When this recognition's made, the remaining ninety nine subside into differing degrees of quies cence; but he mustbeaman of mark, who can command a hearing even after recognition by the Chair. Looking over the turbulent sea of honorahles, one may see every form of bead and face, and every expression of countenance. Nearly front ing the Speaker, on the main aisle, you may no tice a “ square built” man, with brown hair, low, broad forehead, and a not unpleasing face. If there is anything positively wrong in the contour of that face, it must be in the under jaw, which is massive and firm ; too massive, too heavy, for the npper.face. You might not, probably would not, pick this man in a crowd; and really there are few public men who would be distinguished in a crowd. But having your attention drawn to this face; you would study it. This man has great firmness and tenacity of purpose. The lower face indicates great ener gy, and considerable intellectual strength. The face pleases, yet repels. You feel that the owner is wilfully conscious of power. He is self-poised. He is all self-assertion, lie can not be intimidated by trifles. If ho enlists for the right, he will fight a good fight. That is in the constitution of the man. If he gets-wrong, ■ his obstinacy will cause him to make a heavy battle for the wrong. Ho Is not a diplomatist, but a bold, frank, unconcealed enemy, if an enemy at all. . He does not care to be thought better than he is; he cares little whether the world gives him credit for even the good'that is in him. When you examine his head, you see that it.is broad at the base, but not high. . In deed, it is rather fiat on the top, showing eiency in the moral faculties. 110 is no splitter of hairs on questions involving nice distinctions of morality, either in publicor private business. His intellect is clear, but not cold, because he baa strong passions. He is an impetuous man. Opposition does not discourage, but inflames him. That is Jame| Brooks, of the New York Express, and one of ,'the most dangerous sympa thizers with rebellion in the North. More dan gerous than. Fernando Wood, (though not as able,) because Fernando Wood carries the seal of villainy on his forehead, and he who runs may read. Behind James Brooks sits, a man whose head and face indicate great benevolence of heart. The head is large, the forehead high, and prom inent in the center, the brow and nose Grecian in contour., With a better and more versatile intellect than Brooks, you at onco feel that the impetuosity of the latter will carry him further into public notice. This man shows culture and fineness of feeling, rather than force. lie would be found binding up wounds, rather than giving them. As you pursue the study of his face, you arrive at the conclusion, that while he is quite fallible, he is not the man to plot a wrong. Convince him of the right, and be will adhere to it to the end. 'When the wrong be comes defined to hia mind, no man will more scrupulously avoid it. This man will not suc ceed ns a politician. lie lacks daring, has no great and vaulting ambitions, like Wood and Brooks; them, ho has a conscience, This man is James T. Hale. I might prolong these studies until the sub ject was exhausted. But time and space ad monish to brevity. So good night. M. 11. C. W.vsbibgton, Feb. 20, IBQ-{. If I nm to credit common report, there is now in this city a very wonderful man indeed. This is Mr. C. 11. Foster, of Salem, Mass., in whose presence aro said to occur most over whelming demonstrations of occult power, and intelligence. Mr. Foster is a young man, lately returned from the tour of Europe, where ho was honored by the patronage of crowned heads, pripces, dukes, marshals, nobles of all grades, and by the most notable scientific and literary men of the continent and in Great Britain, As he produces tho most positive evidence of such patronage, I conclude that plain republicans may venture to go and see him, without dam age. At all events, his rooms are now crowded poorly with patrons, representing all the pro fessions, and every class of respectability and position. Unfortunately, or otherwise, as peo ple may View the fact, none but the well-to-do can afford the costly luxury of an interview with Mr. Foster. y I am informed by men and women, whose veracity will not be questioned when they are known, that the demonstrations of power and intelligence in Mr. Foster’s presence, are ut terly ioexplainahle by any laws now known in the domain of science. I hare seen and talked with sev?rql qool, clear-headed, intelligent per COUNTY 'A-GIT ATO R. sons; who have visited Mr. Foster, and their re port is—“ very wonderful and very satisfac tory?! ‘ ' The order .of proceeding''aeems very simple. Mr. F. prefers that visitors should write the names of persons on slips of paper at home, and so roll or fold them up that no one can read what is written. These slips ;nrr laid;, before ‘ Mr. F., and he selects, seemingly at random, a roll, which he tosses to the visitor. Before the latter opens tjie ballot, the name therein is gen erally written by Mr. F,, or dictated through him. But sometimes a still more marvelous thing happens, to wit—the name, or the initials, are seen to appear in bright red, and well formed capitals, upon his arm. A variety of messages usually follow, some in the nature of extraordinary tests, end some of a general na ture. - ■ One gentleman, who went to see the “ won der-worker,” two days ago, received a rather, singular demonstration. He had prepared a series of questions, bn a clean sheet ol*white paper, leaving a wide margin upon one side, up and down the sheet, Upon which to register such answers os migh t-be received. This paper he folded carefully before leaving home, and gave into Mr. Fetter’s hands. The latter closed his fingers upon it a moment." and then threw it down before the visitor, remarking that there seemed to be no reply. The visitor put the pa per in his pocket, and soon after returned home. On taking the paper nut, just as he received it from Foster, folded precisely as he folded it be fore going, he fdnnd,| occupying the entire blank space'up and down) the page, a finely drawn oak leaf, —draiwn in) pencil. . “Now the visitor never lost sight of the paper while Mr. Foster h eld it, nor was it unfolded at all until he returned. How came the drawing upon the inner sur face of the sheet? That is a question I do not propose to an swer. I only know that I saw the drawing, and listened to the gentleman’s story as above rela ted. His veracity is entirely above suspicion; and he is very unlike the sort of men who can be humbugged by any common hocus-pocus. I mention these facts, because they are cre ating considerable stir hereabout, and because Fosteris all the rage among the ion. I under- stand! that he declines to theorize, but-leaves the visitor to carry pff the facts and construct any theory he pleases. One thing is certain : Ihai investigations are being prosecuted by a class of men who will not grope blindly, ignorant of scientific laws, and who will escape the charge of a too credulous habit of mind. The air, at present, is redolent of spring.— Daring the past week, however, we have had extreme cold and high winds, the mercury sink ing lower than at any lime in twenty-five yeSrs, in this city. Its lowest declension was zero, where it stood at daylight at the crisis of the cold term. The Potomac was frozen over for the second time this season. M. H. C. Advices from North Carolina state that the Rebels will.undoubtedly make another efibrt to drive Gen. Peck’s forces out of the s f a(e. They have three iron-dads nearly ready to move down the Neuse, Roanoke, and Tar Riv ers, Our late raid troubled them-greatly, by destroying a vast amount of commissary stores.' It is said that Gov. Yance demands the expul sion of the Union forces from the State troops in confederate service. Hence, it is theorized, the Rebels will abandon Virginia and plan their next battle-field in North Carolina. \ The battle of Olnstce, Fla.; was fought on the afternoon of the 29th inst. , Onr troops, un der Gen. Seymore, met the enemy, 15,000 strong, 55 miles beyond Jacksonville and Tal lahassee Railroad. The battle was liesperately fought during three hours, and then, at sunset, onr forces, overpowered by numbers; retired to Sanderson, taking with them the greater part of the wounded. The 7th Connecticut, 7th New Hampshire, 40th. Massachusetts, 48th and 150th New-York, and Bth United States, were engaged. Col. Pribiey of the Bth Uni ted States was left dead upon the field. Col. Reed, a Hungarian officer, was mortally wound ed. All the officers of Hamilton’s Buttery were wounded. Col. Guy Henry of the 40th Massachusetts had three horse? shot under him, but escaped unhurt. A dispatch from Memphis", dated Friday, ro asserts tho statement that Selma, Ala., is in possession of Gen. Sherman. The reports from Gen. Smith’s co-operating column of cav alry are not favorable. Strnglers say- that the Rebel forces nnder Forrest, Bhoddy, Lee, and Adams have been concentrated against him, and that at West Point Miss., a severe battle had been fought, in which Smith was driven back. Smith’s reverse is attributed to tho slow movement of one of thp brigades, which de layed the expedition eight days. A report that the entire expedition was slowly falling back toward Memphis was discredited. There is news of importance from tho Army of the Potomac,-bdt it is merely the announce ment of q forward movement. On Thursday night about 100 Rebels crossed near Raccoon Ford, but speedily returned witboutdoing dam age. About a dozan took the occasion to de sert, and come within our lines. A reconnois sance made from Fairfax to Wulf Run, on Thursday last, found a strong force of Rebel cavalry at that place. It was reported, but without confirmation, on Saturday, that a por tion of Gen. Lee’s army was moving down on the west side of the mountains toward Harper’s Ferry. Tbo Richmond Enquirer of the 27th says that if Grant defeats Johnston, Georgia and Alabama are qpen to him, and Mobile will fall without a struggle. The Examiner says : The fate ot Mobile is inevitable in the affair of Grant and Johnston, and the enemy wofild naturally await the resolution of that crisis rather than incur a needless hazzard in attacking Mobilelat this time. A Washington dispatch says that Gon. Sher man never intended to go to Mobile, and is npw iq a safe position. ' . WAR MEWS. [For the Agitator.! COMMON SCHOOLS. ■ Since the tenth of "June last, all the schools in the county, except those that have been tem porarily suspended, have been visited an aver age of an hour and a half each. Frequent, storms and the bad state of the roads during the winter, have somewhat interfered with the progress of my visitations. I spent one week at Harrisburg, attending the State Convention of county Superintendents; and lest this week may be deemed by some'misspent time, and so much lost to the schools, I insert here an ex tract from a letter received from the State Su perintendent : “If the teachers and directors complain that it (the convention) will take you from your du ties, you can free yourself from all blame in the case, by saying that you go in compliance with the requirements of the Department, and for the purpose of preparing yourself more fully for the discharge of yoor duties in yonr'county,” The proceedings of this Convention will pro bably be published in the February number of the School Journal, and will contain much that is important and interesting to directors and teachers. From the character of many of the school j houses in different parts of the county, I judge I it will be necessary to levy taxes for “ building ! purposes” for several years to come. I know i directors do not like to inenr the responsibility of raising heavy taxes these " war times” but let them only take care that the money be judi ciously expended, and they will be sustained. We want substantial, comfortable houses, well finished and painted, but neither fanciful nor extravagant. I remarked, as the result of my first month’s observation of schools and school houses; “ There does not seem to be enough attention paid to the arrangement of desks and seats.” Five months more in the school room, have only served to confirm this opinion. Al low me to make a few suggestions to school di rectors es to the arrangement of school furni ture ; Long desks and scats, extending around the room, next to the wall, are abominable.— They serve as runways to mischievous boys, while the teacher to occupy the center, over the stove, and to keep constantly turning round like a top, in order to keep “ an eye” to the conduct of the pupils. As a ren eral rule, the seats should face the tenclier’s desk, and they should be made long enough to accommodate only two pupils. The best kind of a teacher’s desk, consists of a chair and a table, with a drawer, lock and key. These should be placed on a platform;- six inches in height, at the end of the room opposite the en trance and the stove. The, teacher does not need to be as near the fire as* her scholars ; for she is more actively engaged than they are.— The teacher’s desk should be so placed, that the necessary noise occasioned by scholars running in and warming themselves by the fire, will not interrupt recitations. The wall of the school room, back of the'teacher’s desk, should con tain no windows; it should he reservei for blackboard surface. Light enough can be ob tained through side windows. I regret to say that many of these particulars have been disre garded in the construction of school bouses, in the past. Will directors be more carefnl in the future? These suggestions will be found to correspond with the instructions of the “ Penn sylvania School Architecture,” page 32. A copy of this work has been sent to every dis trict in the State, and wav designed to he kept as the property of the school district, in the hands of the Secretary of the board. ’ There are now two hundred and forty-one schools in the county. I have no hesitation in saying that the educational interests of the peo ple would be far better provided for, if there were'but twd hnndred. Less teachers am] less taxes —less number of schools and larger and better houses—houses better filled and teachers better paid,—these are the maxims by which the actions of school officers should be gov erned. But it will he nrged that vety small children cannot go so far to school. The reply is: ray small children ought not to go to school. True, the school law admits into the common schools children at the ago of five. But very few children are benefitted by going to school at that ngc ; and I think none ever become any better scholars for the tuition they receive so young. They cannot study,—it can hardly be said they learn. They are merely taught ; and they scarcely remembefi a single idea from one terra to another. They get false notions of schools, for the reason that they are not capaci tated to go forward in the path of knowledge with alacrity and pleasure; and as they grow up, thejy become disgusted in what they cannot excel ;]and thus it is that wo have in our schools! j so manly thoughtless, heedless, mischievous boys | and girls, who eventually ripen into blockheads j or rogues. Children learn to be bold, impu- j dent and ungovernable, if sent to school too' young. Better keep them at homo for a while, ] even though they should be a little green and awkward on entering school for the first time. They will bo the more studious for it—and. will eventually become the better Scholars and the | more useful men and women. j By the time this appears in print, I shall have sept to each district Secretary not already supplied, blanks for affidavit and annual dis trict report. Directors are 1 reminded that the Department will not receive affidavits for the Stafc appropriation, unless a five cent revenue stamp is affixed and cancelled by the President of the board. JKSW The spring session of the county insti tute will bo held at Osceola, March 15, IG, 17 and 18. It is appointed at this time, to accom modate Hon. C. H. Coburn, State Superinten dent, who is expected to be in attendance. I Y. A. ELLIOTT. Co. Sup’t. Cherry Flatis, Pa. Feb. 24, IBG4. A Strange Phenomenon,— The Trumpet pub lished at Elizabethtown, this county, relates the following singular phenomenon;— An unnatural phenomenon took place in Ra pho township, three miles east of Mount Joy on Thursday last, at the residence of Martin Inly. Ills daughter, aged 18 years died a quar ter before So’elock. After the usual ceremo nies were attended to, towards morning the at tention of the mother Was drawn to the corpse, when she discerned something unusual on the lips of the deceased; 'attempting to remove it, apparently a voice seemed to say, let it remain. Astonishment caused an examination, and tlje fact was, there appeared in the middle of the lips and teeth, a complete rose hud ready to open, on the left side of the bad a full bloomed rose (what florists call a double levy rose). On close examination it was ascertained that the, bud and rose were a hard substance to the touch, and in appearance like ivory. It was percepti ble that from the first and last nights of the phenomenon it enlarged. Thoughts were en-‘ tertained that the remloval of the body to the burying-ground (which was in a hearse and oyer a iqilo of rough Jroad) might cause a sep- ination, but the bud aud still remained as ■when first seen, only increased perceptibly j B size. Ths rose and bud was as white as ivory and supposed equally hard. ’ , Many persons were eye-witnesses of-ths fact. /The rose was very natural, and those not know ing the Tact, felt satisfied that it was a natural rose and bod placed there as an ornament; and reports caused many to witness the fact. The disease of the deceased, was measels, a relapse took place attended with a cold, which caused her death. —Lancaster Examiner, Op General McClellan’s report, tha Cincin nati Gazette speaks in no smooth terms: “It is the whimpering plea of a lubberly lout, ac cusing others of the nuisances in which he has been detected. It is no military report}- No such document ever emanated from a soldier. - And it is false as a military history." Mercantile Appaiscment FOB TIOGA COUNTY, FOR THE YEAR ISM. Class. Tax. biossbuko. A L Bodine. gro. 14 $7 00 John U Martin, gro. & cat’ng house, 14 700 J C Erwin, •14 700 J P 3fonell, groc’jr, 14 700 Smith & Swan, boot and f»hoo 14 7 00 JMos It 7 On James Gernon, 14 7 00 BROOKTOLD. Wm-Simmons, 14 7 00 corntoTOX G F Baker, groc’y, 1-4 7 off WmVife. grocery, 14 700 Bennett 4 Willson, 13 10 00 S S Packard, 13 13 50 T 'V* Tiiomas, 14 700 CHARI ESTOX. L Cummings, 14 7 00 T\'m Adams, 34 ,700 CT.T3TEB, Thomas Stone, Jr. gro- cery. 14 7 00 Wm O Bristol. 14 700 J U KusUmorc, 14 700 DQ MAR. J 9 Cole 4 Brother, 14 IXERJ-lEID, G W Brown, groc'y 14 J Stoddard, 14 ELXLAXD. Parkbnrst Sc Co., 33 10 00 FAR3HXGTOS. Hiram Merritt, 14 CAINES. A V On", S X BUlings, 14 7 00 14 7 W JACKSOTf. M K Retain, 14 700 David Chmcher, gro cery, 14 7J)O KXOXVTLLK. J & Son, 14 J Boorman, 14 O Vlioach, groc’y, 14 Giles Robots, bard- . warp, 14 7 00 VT D Knox, eating liow-c & grocery, 14 7CO J 1£ Stubbs, 14 7 (!0 Ll 5 Reynolds, * 14 700 Gc»> Abbott, groc'y,l4 C Parkbnrst, drags 14 Job n Potter, groc'y 14 B II Clark, groc’y, 14 C 9 Mather 4 Co. • 13 X&J \V Tubbs, 13 Vr G Miller, drugs, 14 Joel Adam*, Jmot and shoo, 14 James Kinsey, hard- 7 00 7 00| 7 00 7 00] lOOO: 10 0U 7 U 0 ware, 14 7 OC £ I) Welis, cabinet dealer, 14 T CO LIDERTT. Abraham Fnlkrod, 13 10 00 X,»rl**r A Moore, '33 10 0C Kiitbarr Boot, 13 10 Of Sami Hartman, gro- eery, .14 T CO O R Shcfßrr, groc'y 1 £ 7 ou Bemh.irU Seelemnp 14 7 00 jnpr*LETnniT. S Bennett l4 31C Putter, 14 Notice l*» hereby given thal Commissioner's Office in lIVI March m\t, between tho lion which time ami place all persor appraisement will be heart), am are deemed proi>rr anti Just: ai p‘‘ar at sud time and place wii defence, before me. TOMmro. March 2,I?Cf. AdaiinHtialor’i) Notice. LETTERS of Administration de InnU non having been granted to the subscribers on the estate of Kara Davis, Into of Mansfield, deceased, notice is hereby gixcn to thoso indebted to said estate to make immediate paymen*> and those having claims to pre sent thorn properly authenticated for settlement to the subscribers. WARREN S. DAVIS,) ~w . . JOUN A. HOLDEN, Mansfield, March 2 ; 1851-tit. ESTRAT. CAME into the enclosure of the subscriber in Del mar township, on the 14th of February, a Black Cow, with no artificial marks; the owner is requested to prove property, pay charges, and take her away. Delmar, Eeh. 25, ,1851-31* AMOS TYLER. LIST OF LETTERS remaining in the Post OfHpe at Wellsboro, Feb. 29,15G4: Bonnell,'Francis S. Knapp, Mrs. Wm. Borden, Mrs. Lucretia Knapp, Miss Earnum, David Little, Edward R. Clement, Mrs-Mary A. Mark?, George Carpenter, James D. McDonough, Ml?* Anna Cloason, Miss Emma Martin, Mrs, B. Makar, Mrs. Masy Doolittle, A. Beam, Zemon Dibble, John r Steward, Ed. If. Darlfc fc Cbauncey Steel, Wm. H. Evans, Miss H. L, Towner, Joseph Firman, Charley H. 1 Weodficld, James Furman, Levi Willard. Miss Jane A, Furman, Miss Eleanor Webster, 0 P French, Mrp.Sarah, E. \YUson, Misa Anna 2> How, Terry Wilson, Mrs Adalino 2 Holland, Mrs Finely Wilson, Mrs A D Impson. Ernest Persons calling for any of the above letter?, wils ploaso say they are advertised. , HUGH TOUNG, P, M. CAUTION. WHEREAS, my wife, SARAH WORDED, has left my bsd and board without any just cause or provocation, I hereby caution all persons against harboring or trusting her on my account, hs I shall pay no debts of her contracting after this date. t CHARLES WORDEN. East Charleston, March 2, 1884-31$ Administrators’ Notice, LETTERS of administration haring bct-r granted to the subscribers on the estate of Thomas B. Hoodcnough, Into of Covington, deceased, notice is hereby giren to those indebted to make immediate payment, and ihoso having claims to present them properly authenticated for settlement to * BUTLER SMITH, \ A(W - A. VT. WILSON, ’) Admrsfc Covington, March 2>.ISG4-6t* Administrator’s Notice. LETTERS of Administration having been granted to tJ* undersigned upon the estate of Horace Dam We* 1 Mansfield, decM, all persons indebted to said estate ate quested to make immediate payment, and those havio? claims against the same must present them duty cutfd for settlement, to -A. J. ROSS, Athn' T ’ Mansfield, Jau. 27,18&4-dt. CAUTION. WHEREAS, my wife, ANNA, has left my he-l and board without any just cause or provoca tion ,* X hereby forbid aft persons harboring or tnj**' iag hep on my account, as X will pay no debts oi contracting after this date- RICHARD ROBIXSO-V Covington, fob. 17, 1364,-3t c Molasses an* syeup-iuNo. i, articia of WtU at fair prices at MATHERS < - Cta4l. Tax. luntSßpßo. P D Parkharat, 14 700 Pan! Cud worth* 14 700 A Bobbins Jr. dx'gs 14 700 Fox ± Witter, 14 700 i S & U B Bnmsey, eat’g house A gro 14 7 00 MORRIS, T C BrOwa, groc’y* 14 jLUfsnnn, t. Cummings, IB 10 OO Wm. Adams, 13 10 00 U S Holden, groc’y 14 . 7ou Martin King, prorl »i«u, 14 700 E A Fuller, groc’y, 14 *7 on C V Elliott, drugs, H 7 o<> AJ4 E LI Webster, 14 700 J A Boss ACo 13 lo ou Kiff A WcCleanon, ' —hardware, 14 7QO SUSOJ, QII Baxter ACo 14 03CZOLA. II C Bosworfch, 14 7qq 17 C Stubbs, groc’y 14 700 V 0 Phelps, 14 ,7 00 Crandall &. Seeley, 14 7o> ECTLA.VD. 0 L Strait, O 7CO TIOGA 8080. S 0 Daggett, 13 10 00 >V T Urelf, groc’y, 11 7w U H Jofmauii. " 14 7ou S U Alford*,eating bou-.LQ & groc'y 14 T Off B\V Uiark, 13 lo ft> £ A Sinead, hard; warp, 34 700 T £ Baldwin, 11 1# 00 II £ Smith St Son, bout and shoe, 14 700 •Toalish, 14 7 ft) E C PUb, groc’y, 14 700 PS Tuttle, 13 10C0 Borden & Bennett, drugs, 34 700 lIR Fish A Co. gro, 14 7 00- UFAIAVeUs, 14 7 00’ TIOGA. Jas Kelly, grocery, 14 700 WESTFIELD, Im M Edgcomb, 14 700 Cbas Goodspeed, 14 700 Ambrose Close, 14 70d K Knwon &Co 14- 700 •I U& 3 O Mutdock,l4 7yo 9A & X Buck, gro, 14 700 WZLLSHuRO. Thomas Ilarden, 12 12 off Jl* Bowen. 32 12 .V/ Jrrome Smith, 12 12 So P H Williams; dr'gslA 7 00 C L Wilcox, 14 7 ft) Illugh Young, books and stationery, 14 7 ft) W T Mathers, gru, 14 7 ft) Q TV Sears, boot and shoe, 14 7 OO Wright 4 Bailey, pro vMon, 14 700 Bullard 4Co 12 12 50 I A Hoy. drugs, 14 700 Wesley Pitta, eating house k groc'y, 14 700 M M Converse, 13 10 ft) Wm Townsend. gr> eery & pru>iimn,U T Ob- G Hustings 4 Co, gro cery, 14 715{V mV Rimljup, groc’y.l4 7Off JI) Jones, groc'y, 14 7 Off Wm Roberts, bafd- ware, U ,7 OO Michael Schwnrtzcn- ! liacb, brewery, 10, h CiO * WART). Fall Crook Coal Co, 14 700 it an appeal will be held at the llsboro, (in the SOth day of :ir» of 10 J\. M-. and 4 P. M„ at ns aggrieved by the fore*joins id such abatement? made as iml all persons failing leap* II be barred from making any E. J. PURPLE, Mercantile Appraiser.