THE TELEGRAPH IS PUBLISHED EVERY DAY, By GEORGE, BERGNER. TERMS,-•BfriGLR Theaturnos The DAILY TILZOI42LI *Served to subscribers In the City at 6 cents per week. Yearly subscribers will be charged S 4 00 in advance. .. __.„ WEPILLY AND Shim WISELY TWI YORAM.. The. TELEGRAPH is also published , tularii, Week during the session of the Legislature, and weekly during the reminder Di the year, and furnished to subscribers at the fobowing cash rates, viz: Single ,ÜbSoribers per year Semi-Weeluy..6l 60 Ten ,i ~ tt II ..12 00 Twenty " It It tt ..22 00 Single subscribers, Weekly 1 00 2112 LAW OP PEWSZAPIERS. If subscribers order the discontinuance of their news papers, the publisher may continue to send them until arrearages are paid. If subscribers neglect or refuse to take their newspa pers from the once to which they are directei, the's , are responsible until they have settled the bills and ordered t nem discontinued. !listrtlaneotts NICHOLS & BOWMAN, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Ca-RCpC7ERi3, Corner Front and Market Streets, HARRISBURG, PENN'A. DESPFCTIVELY invite the attention jjk, of the public to their large sod Well selected goo- of GROCERIES, PROVISIONS, FOREIGN AND DO• MESTE FRUITS. We now offer for ealo' iltewarts, Loverings Golden Syrup, White and Brown . Sugars of all grades, Green and Black Teas, Coffee, Spices and Flavoring [Extracts. ALSO, FLOUR iIBH, SALT, LARD, RAMS, ',c., &0., &o, We invite an examination of our superior NON-EXPLOSIVE COAL OIL, 17qquktIled in every respect by any in the market, to. gather with ell kiodi of LAMPS, SHADES, BURNERS, We have the iargest f.ssortment of GLASSWARE & QUEENSWARE in the city; also, all kinds of CEDAR AND WILLOW WARE. Call and examine at our old stand, racnova & BOWMAN, Corer Froot and Market streets. septt2 EAGLE WORKS, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. MANUFAOTORNA OF BOOK-BINDERS' BULING-MAffINES AND PENS, STANDING PRESSES, SAWING MACHINES, PRESS BOARDS, AND MAO E 9 FOR GRINDING CUTTING-MACHINE KNIVES. Portable Cider Kills and Fodder Cutter', SCHOOL FURNITURE, Ueneral Machine Work and Iron and Brass CASTINGS, WOOD TURNING IN ALL ITS DRANOHNe, SCROLL SAWING, PLANING, EM, R7C., or Any Maclaine of Wood, Iron or Bram made to order. Gear and Screw Cutting, &c. lIICZOK'S PATENT WOODEN SCREW CUTTING TOOLS. Air • aji r aid for Old Copper, Brass, Spelter, &o. STEAM BOILERS, &C. PANNSILVANIA RAILROAD, ABOVE STATE STREET. CELLAR WINDOW GRATES, UI various patterns, both siationury and swinging. Sash Weights and various other building castings, for aide very cheat) at the [my24-Iy] Z WORKS. BOOKS FOR FARMERS, HE attention of agriculturists is directed j_ to the following works, which will enable them to increase the quantity and value of their crops by adding science and the experi ments of others to their experience: STEPHEN'S BOOK OF THE FARM, de tailing all the labors of husbandry and the best way to perform them. Price. ..3 60 COLEMAN'S AGRICULTURE and Real Economy 4 00 LANDSCAPE GARDENING, by A11en....1 00 THE FARMER'S COMPANION, by Buel.. 75 LECTURES ON PRACTICAL AGRICUL TUBE, by Johnston 50 THE AMERICAN FARMER'S new and uni versal handbook, with 400 engravings.. 2 60 AN EASY METHOD OF MANAGING BEES, by Weeks . 20 The Nature and Treatment of Diseases of Cattle, by Dadd 1 00 LEIBIG'S IGRICULTURAL CHEM/STRY 75 lowa COWS AND DAIRY FARMING, and the production of milk, butter, cheese, by Flint 1 60 GRASSES AND FORAGE PLANTS, by Lynch 60 SAXTON'S HAND-BOOK, containing the Hone, the cow, the pig, fowls, &c., &c.. 1 00 THE FARMER'S DICTIONARYand Prac tical Fanner, by Dr. Gardner ... 1 50 ALLEN'S DOMESTIC AN1MAL5.....76 THE FIELD BOOK OF MANUIr.:I, or American Muck Book 1 25 THE HORSE AND HIS I.4IEireASES, by Jennings 1 00 YOUATT ON THE HORSE 1 25 aulD'S FARRIERY and STUD 800K....1 00 HORSEMANSHIP and the Breaking and Training of Horses 76 Standard Books, School Books, and every thing in the stationery line, at lowest prices, at BERGNER'S CHEAP BOOK STORE: LIFE INSURANCE. The Girard Lite Insurance, Annuity and Trust Comuany of Philadelphia. ORtice. NO. 408 CRESTNV7 STREET. (CHARTER PERPETUAL.) CAPITAL AND ASSETS E 1,548,888 THOMAS RIDOWAY, President. JOHN F. JAMES, Actuary, cONTINUE to make INSURANCE ON LIVES on the most resann able terms. lisff ad as Executors, Trustees and Guardians Wider last Wills. and aa Receivers sad Assignees. The capital being paid UP and invested, together wi a large and constantly increaling reserved. (raid, Were perfect aeon. ty to din insured. -4 The premiums may be paid yearly,halt yearly or cant , The company add a BONUS periodically to Mel ranee. for If.. The FIRST BONUS appropriated In Ti c . comber, 1844" the SECOND B lu December, 184 's the THInD SINUS le December, 1864, and the FOUIt.TA BONUS in 1859. These additions are made Without, re . Wrung any increase, it the premiums to be pa id to the uomliallY• The following are a few examplor , from the itegister Oualand Sum I Bonus or I bonne ',Lobe increased Polley. Insured addvion by ili j rare additions. _._...._.,... NO. 99 $2600 $ 887 60 di 182 8000 1,050 (0 ~ 199 1000 400 00 it 888 . 6000 1,875 03 A gen t at burg and 11c,,ti elGolly .jI ruisjjth FRIENDS. OF THE SOLDIZR, READ! FATHERS, YOU THAT HAVE SONS IN THE ARMY, READ! READ I BROTHERS, YOU THAT HAVE BROTHERS FIGHTING FOR YOUR COUNTRY, READ I READ I READ I At a period when the hot shot and bombs were falling thick and fast around the gallant band who were defending their country's honor in Fort Sumter, Gov. Curtin had sent into the Legislature of the State, then in session, a message suggesting the better or ganization of the militia, and asking for an appropriation of five hundred thousand dollars to place the state on a war footing. When the bill proposing to make this appropriation came before the Legislature, Dr. Heck voted against it, and thus praetically de= Glared his disregard of all that aimed at the defence of our homes and the preservation of our liberties. CEIELNINUS, &c., &s., &c The bill as it passed, can be found in the last year's volume of the laws of the state, page 229 , and the proceedings attending itS passage in the House, in the Journal of 1861, page 957. We ex , tract the yeas and nays as they appear substantially on the Journal' of the House : Yams—Messrs. Abbott, Acker, Alexander, Anderson, Armstrong, Ashoom, Austin, Ball, Barnsley, Bartholomew, nisei, Bixler, Blair, Blanchard, Bliss, Boyer, Bressler, Brewster, Burns, Butler, (Crawford,)Byrne, Clark, Cowan, Craig, Douglass, Duncan, Eilenberger, Elliott, Frazier, Gibboney, Goehring, Gordon, Graham, Rapper, Harvey, Hayes, Hillman, Hood, Hanes 'Huhn; Irvin, Koch, Lawrence, Leisenring, Lowther, M'Ckmigal, Marshall, Moore, Mullin; Ober, * Osterhont, Patterson, Pierce, Preston, Pugh°, Rally, Ridgway, Robinson; Roller, Seltzer, Shafer, Sheppard, Smith, (Berke,) Smith, (Philadelphia) Stehman, Strang, Tailor, Teller, Thomas; 11 1 Tracy, Walker, White, WiMop, Williams, W n and Davis, Speaker-76. , Nevs—Messrs. Brodhead, Butler, (Carbon, dwell, Cove, Dbinant, Divine, Donley, Dnf-' field, Dunlap, Gaskill, ' , 3133 R.. LiM 9 I7V - I.SI 3EXMCIE.,, Hill, Kline, Lichteftwallner, M'Donough, Manifold, Morrison, Myers, Randall, Reiff and Rhoads-21 Freemen of Dauphin county 1 Soldiers! who marched at the first call of danger to the defence of the capital of your count r y, and' who still rest upon your arms night and day around the limits' of that capital, are you ready to vote for a man who so lightly es.: timated the honor of your country and the lives of its defenders? Dr. Heck is one of the old Breckenridge Democrats who sympathized' and still sympathize with and confide in the course of the traitor Breckenridge, and showed his attachment for those who are at the head of this rebellion by refnsing to make an appropriatidn to arm the great state of Pennsylvania to aid their overthrow and its suppression.. This man is again before you, and again solicits yourvote that he may again disgrace the halls of legislation with his presence and his conduct. He desires to be returned that he may aid in embarrassing the future efforts of our noble old com monwealth in assisting to redeem the land from rebellion by enforc ing the laws and vindicating the federal authority. No patriot, no brave, loyal lover of his country can vote for Dr. Heck. Freemen, remember that this is the reoord of Dr. Heck whilst he was In the Le gislature. Let us now examine his action at a later period. On the 7th day of August, 1862, the Democratic County Convention met at the Court House, in this city, for the purpose of nominating a ticket. Dr. LEWIS HECK was a delegate to that Convention, and assisted in nominating himself as'a candidate for the Legislature. We copy the following from the Pattht and Union of August 8, 1862, viz : " Dr. HECK moved that the resolutions passed by the Democratic State Conven tion on the 4th of July be adopted by this Convention. cg The reading of the resolutions was called for, and after reading of which they were adopted amid applause." The resolutions and nominations of that Convention have thus been fairly and openly approved by Dr. HECK, and we give him all due credit for his action in having them adopted. He stands therefore squarely up to the platform which the friends of the traitor John C. Breckenridge advocated in this State. The candidates nominated by that convention are also the avowed enemies of the country. Isaac. Slenker and James P. Barr, for Auditor and Surveyor General, are both on the record as the abettors of rebellion. Slenker seconded the efforts of Buo l aanan to steal or purchase Cuba—and he was also in favor and would now es tablish, if he had the power, the slave trade in every port of the Union. Barr is l'xnown to have so far defended treason as to have incurred the wrath and run the den- ger of a halter at Pittsburg. Such is the record and such the company in which we find Dr. Heck Second, We diselover him in a Convention called to endorse the proceedings o those who openly oppose the Ilational Government. *VAT 60 4,060 00 1,400 00 ( 6,876 00 ity • Third, He refused to vote money to pay those who were willing to defend the honor and glory of the Commouvre:igUL is mica Marl fit to oocup3r a seat iia the LegidatUre BIYERIABB. "INDEPENVES:T - :l,s — !it•Ll'''T TEI vi..4'!l N',:!41,:,;1,1%,43,[....c_1.N.N.-,O,N:E, VOL XV.IIII First, We find him voting against arming the State 1) • HARRISBURG, PA . THURSDAY -AFTERNOONi OCTOBER 9, 1862 ':.p.t: .. .' .7'.:44.'a.pk. FRANK HUGHES' TREASON UNVEILED I , 4:tv: 4 4:vooN`TV:lcNv:Voi , J7.E.jrnie , rwcva*l On Tuesday afternoon we printed, from the .llfmer' s Journal, of the 27th ult., a startling re cord. It was clearly shown in that record, over the signature of one of the ablest members of the bar in Schuylkill county, that Frank Hughes, chairman of the Breckenridge State Central Committee, was tainted with a seces sion feeling and professed a 'traitor sympathy, at Once insulting to loyal men' and dangerous to loyal communities. This exposure was sus tained by the testimony of two of the most re 'spectable and loyal men in that region, David Lomison, whose reputation for veracity andin tegrity no one will challenge, and Jerome K. Boyer, a Douglas Democrat, now a candidate for the Legislature on the Union ticket in Schuylkill county. Nevertheless, the revela tions were so shocking to the loyal heart of our noble State, that many people were loth to be lieve it. The first of the charges were that Hughes was heard to say : "lam a delegate to the Democratic State Convention at Harris burg, and I am going over to attend the Con vention, and when there, I intend offering a resolution before that Convention, that Penn sylvinia seeede from the Union, and join herself with the south; and leave Rhode Island, and' Cennecticut, and Massachusetts, and them d—d little petty states, to subsist on their codfish and Plymouth rock." And that he did offer such a resolution in committee, General James, of Warren, a member of the committee, supporting the allegation, declaring that " Mr:Hughes came to me in the committee room and asked me to support his d--d treasonable resolution( After I had read it I got so d—d mad that I shook my fist and swore that if he attempted to offer that resolution, either in committee or Convention, that I would pitch him and his resolution headforemost out of the window." We now ask attention to the resolution since openly avowed by French' W. Hughes himself, under his own name, as having been prepared by him to be , offered at the Democratic State Convention referred to. It will be perceived that it argues in favor of the secession of Penn sylvania from the Union, and her addition to thetiominion•of Rebeldom under the auspices Jaitallserle. • Yet this fa the anther of the, ad - diessOrifiiiirliamboratie 'Mae 00iiithlit4 3 which we have been asked to believe loyal and patriotic. It is published in an extra from the office of the Democratic Standard, at Pottsville, on Monday morning, September 29th, 1862 : "Resolved, That Pennsylvania owes her growth in population, and the increase of capi tal and wealth of her citizens, chiefly to the advantages which the American Union had af forded for the development of her natural re souices ; and that her glory and paramount in terests are identified with the continuance of that Union. "Should, however, causes hitherto resisted by the Democracy of-the country rend Rosen der the bonds that bind together these StAtes, and should the fifteen slaveholding States, claiming to be driven by the necessity of mu tual protection against' the effect of such causes, successfully establish another confederacy, then Pennsylvania must regard her relation to the facts which circumstances beyond our control have produced. lEEE "She cannot then refuse to perceive that she must either take her place fn some northern fragment of a once glorious Union, and rest content b . , be shorn of the greater part of her manufacturing industry, and of her export and import trade—to hold a secondary and help less relation to the northeastarn States, with no outlet or approach from the ocean for her great eastern or her great western metropolis, except through the waters and before the forts and guns of a foreign nation, and thus practically (for the want of ability to protect) be made to yield up all reliable direct foreign trade. "Or she may, it a member of the new con federacy, become the great manufacturing workshop for a people now consuming annual ly $800,000,000 worth of products and mann- Manua from and imported through the north ern States ; her cities become the great com mercial depots and distributing points , for this confederacy, and her wealth, population, and glory be promoted in a degree unparalleled in the history and prosperity of any people I - "That it will be the right and duty of her .citizens to consult their own best interests in a position so momentous, and decide between the lawful alternatives. And that in stating the truths here announced, we have no desire to conceal that our object is to present to the people of other States the position they may severally occupy if the coercion disanionists in their midst succeed in defeating an equitable compromise of existing difficulties! " (Signed) FRANCIS W. HUGHES. This man Hughes is at the head of the fat ton in this State . .who are seeking to bind hon est DeMocrits hand and foot, and hand them over to the worshippers of the Ebony Idol, who began this war against the Union, and of whom I Henry Clay, in a letter written July 1, 1844, said, "from developments sow (then) BEM lUDS in South Carolina, it is perfectly manifest that a party exists in that State seeking a dismiss• lion of= the Union." Is it not plain that the trai tor Hughes still loves that party and his native State, where it was first organized, before and above either the Union or the principles of Democracy as taught by Jefferson and practi sed by Jackson? And yet, neither he nor his organ in this city hew a word to say in condem nation of that party, the real authors of the war, whose existence and aims were seen and prophetically stated by the patriotic Clay twen ty years ago. Will the honest Democrats of Lancaster county allow themselves to be dis ginned forever by following the lead of such aontemptible - traitors as'MIA% and his so /biters f If a0,.00r faith in the plitial lulu . of man has boo koet hordes* tuft:diked. EEL Iriteto. Respect to our Russian 'Minister. A letter from St. Petersburg, dated Septem ber Bth, • gives an interesting account of the marked attention bestowed upon Gen. Came ron, our Minister to Russia, from which we ex tract what follows : The American who comes to Europe, strikes the bitter brittend of hostility.ortreaching En gland, in France he ends, at best, a courteous indifference; in Germany a mild, phlegmatic sympathy ; but here, a genial warmth of feel ing, such as one nation rarely exhibits towards another. Russia, by the manifestation of this feeling, has already done us good service, and we should not forget it when our days of trial are over. Gen. Cameron, lam glad to learn, both knows how to value and to reciprocate this service, in every way consistent with his position. He has been treated with marked attention, both here and at the imperial pala ces of Trairsko-Selo and Peterhoff. At the lat ter place, the immense systems of fountains and artificial cataracts, which are only set in motion by the command of lie Emperor, were specially made to perform on the occasion of his visit. His family were conveyed through the parks and gardens in court equippages, and afterwards sumptuously entertained at the pi lace. These unusual courtesies, exhibited ate a time when the press of England was howling for intervention, and that of France, more cau tiously, following in the same track, have—as they were meant to have—a welcome signifi cance. The Court has been absent from St. Peteis burg the greater part of the summer. The Emperor has just returned from a week's visit to Moscow, which is still more truly the Rus sian capital than this city. Gen. Cameron left and returned on the same day as his Majesty, profiting by the occasion to make acquaintance with that portion of the empire: In addition to his family, Bayard Taylor, Secretary of Lega tion, and Mr. Josiah Pierce, Jr., formerly Se cretary, accompanied him. In Moscow, the superb palace on the Kremlin, the imperial treasury, and every other place of interest, were at once thrown open to the General and party. I understand that two or three prominent Russian noblemen, having anticipated his visit at an earlier period, bad made arrangements to charter a steamer and take him to visit their estates on the Volga. It is to be regretted that he was not able to be absent from his post for the time which such a jt urney would require. At the Foundling Hospital the party was re ceived by the governor and directors in person, and conducted through the vast building in which Russia annually receives and cares for fifteen thousand of her neglected children.— This institution is probably the grandest char ity in the world. Twelve hundred nurses are constantly employed, and whole villages are supported by the fees paid to foster parents. BY TEMPI. from our Morning LARGE FIRE AT GOLDSBORO'. Animation of a Saw Ell and Dwellings. ISpecial Dispatch to the TELEGRAPH.] GoLDSBOBV p YORK COUNTY Oct. 8, I 91. o'clock, M. A fire broke out in the saw mill, located in this borough, at six o'clock this evening, and has entirely consumed the building, spreading to the Hotel and several buildings c.n the oppo• site side of the railroad. The accommodation train of the Northern Central railroad is now lying below the city, being unable to get by the fire. From Washington. WASHINGTON, Oct. 8, 12 x. No war news of any consequence has been made public up to the present time. Tne following appointments are announced : Brig. Gen. J. D. Cox, 11. S. Volunteers, to be Major General of Volunteers, U. S. A. Major Gustavus M. Bascom, to be Assistant Adjutant General of Volunteers. Capt. William C. Church, to be Commissary of Subsistence of Volunteers. Mr. Blondeel, the Belgian Minister, is going home for a short time. Mr. Berghmanus, the Secretary of Legation, will perform his duties in his absence. The Rebel Army in Virginia. FAERVAE COURT House, Oct. 7 A deserter from the rebel army, brought in last evening, makes some highly interesting statements, which are important if true. He belonged to the Second Virginia cavalry, of Gen. Mumford's brigade and General Stuart's division. The following are his statements : Mumford's brigade, of from nine hundred to ten hundred cavalry, is between Warrenton and the Springs. The force at Culpepper Court House, now commanded by General Jo. John ston, consists of three divisions, one of them commanded by, General Gustavus W. Smith, another by Gen. Horton ; the name of the other division commander he did not know. He heard General Mumford say that Johnston had been ordered to take command of the Depart ment of the West ; Gen. Bragg having been re lieved. There was much complaint against Gen. Bragg. He saw a young man from Bich aloud, who told him that the rebels had aline force at Gordonsville. He was with the rebels in Maryland, and heard officers say that their loss at the battle of Antietam was sixteen thousand killed and wounded and four thousand prisoners. The rebels say they obtained eight hundred cavalry and two thoneand infantry recruits in Mary land, about six hundred of whom were from Pennsylvania. The force tinder Lee at Winchester, he says, numbers one hundred and eighty thousand men, and is being reinforced. This is consid ered here a large over estimate. The old regi ments are being filled up with conscripts. He was in the battles at Bull Bun, and says that the rebels universally admit that they ware whipped on Friday by General Sigel. A prisoner from the Forty-ninth Virginia, commanded by Colonel (formerly Hon.) Wm. Smith, was brought in yesterday. He was home on sick leave when taken, and gives no information. 41MIM LEL Advices received 'by relatives of dim Lee Pam Uttinting gars. Having procured Steam Power Preame, we areprepar ed to execute JOB and BOOK PRINTING of every description, Gleam than It can be done, at, ant otber establishment -ta the country. It ATM OF ADVERTISING. • air Four lines or less constitute ents.half square. Eight lines or more than four constitute a square. Hail square, one day $0 25 one week.... 1 25 I" one mouth '2 60 " three months 400 4t BiX months a 00 on one 3", Br ....10 00 onesquare, one say p4l one week 2 00 i. one month ,.. 6 00 le three months 10 00 " six month.‘ 15 00 o one year. 20 00 gr Business notices Inserted in the Local Munn or before Marriages and Deaths, EIGHT CENTS is LIN* for each insertion. NO 36. Marriages and Deaths to be charged as regula r IldvestitielsientS. show that he was lojured in both hands at the battle of Antietam. A. toll passed through the palm of his right hand, and soon after, his horse becoming unmanageable, he was thrown head foremost, breaking one of the bones in the back of the left hand. One of his relatives, who saw him two days ago, describes him as perfectly helpless. FROM ARKANSAS. Intelliienoe from the Rebel Foram Their Location and Nanalbers. Correspondence of the Missouri Republican. We have late and very reliable iatelligenoe from the rebel forces in this State, which are regarded by military men here as worthy of confidence. It is as late as the 18th and 22d ult., and se riously modifies many reports we have heard, some of which have reached the country. According to this information, the rebel forces in Arkansas number and are encamped as follows : Gen. Hindman ' at Austin, 25 miles north of Little Rock, with five thousand men and one battery. General Roan at White Sulphur Springs, near Pine Skiff, on - the Arkeinsas river, fifty 'piles south-east of Little Rock, with five thousand men, two regiments of whom are conscripts, one unarmed; also a Texan regiment and one battery consisting of three six , pounders iron, and one two pounder brass and one siege plea; mounted. General Mcßea, on the Arkansasiiiver, thirty mile; north west of Napoleon. General Baios,at Grose Hollow, with a repor ted force of from four to five thousand, mostly conscripts. Gen. Holmes is commander-in-chief of all the forces at Little Bock, with about two thousand men and ten batteries, one of ten and three B.ponnders ,and the other of two rifled 13.pound els, and two pound howitzers. Gen. M'Bride at Batesville, with about two thousand men. Only one hundred and fifty of them are effective. Most of their cavalry force have been dismounted. At present it is not believed they have more than two thousand cavalry in the State. At Arkadelphia, eighty or one hundred miles south west of Little Rock, they manufacture munitions of war, and have removed there all the State records and papers. Though the rebel Generale boast of their in tention to invade Missouri, it Is not believed by intelligent men in their camps that they intend to do so. If they save the Capitol of their State, it is all they desire at present, and perhaps more than they expect. FROM SAN FRANCISCO. Arrest of Sympathisers with the Rehab. SAN FRANCIIOO, Oct. 7. Sailed, ship Star of the Union, for Callao. Charles Doan, ex-sheriff of San Francisco, died suddenly to-day of apoplexy. Col. E. 3. C. Kewen, member- elect to the Legislature from Los Angelos county, was ar rested by an order from Gen. Wright on the charge of treason. Secession sympathisers are numerous in some of the southern counties of California, having succeeded in controlling the local elections. Kewen has been something.ot a ring -leader among them. He will probably take the:oath, and - endeavor to get his seat in the Legislature. THE NEW EDITION or PURDO N'S DIGEST HAS JUST BEEN PUBLISHED, AN ENTIRE new edition of this well known Law Book has just been issued. It is now distinguished by the following superadded features : The laws contained in the various annual Digests published since the date of the eighth edition (1858) have been incorporated in the body of the work. Many thousand new authorities have been cited ; the report of the revisors of the Penal Code has been embodied in the notes to the various sections of it, and the appendix contains for the first time, the Acts of Congress for the Authentication of Records, and the Statute of Fraudulent Con veyances, with full and elaborate notes of the decisions explanatory of them. The work has been prepared by the learned editor, Mr. BBIGEITLY, and its freshness and permanent value will be preserved by the continuation of the annual Digests, which have given so much satisfaction. For sale at je2B BERGNER'S /300KSTORE. 11111 E subscriber offers at private mile his FARM, situated on toe public road leading from Harrisburg to Ltoglestown, about one mile from the latter place. The Improvements ere a large TWO BTOBY WEATREB BOARDED HOUSE, Large BANK BARN, with all active try oat.buildings, a Good Young Orcbard, with first rate riming water near the bandit:4s. The land Is well fenced and in a high state of cultivation. Terms reasonable. OiIitISTIAN LENTZ. Persons wanting Information, can cal on David Mumma, Jr., harrisburg ett7n.3tdaw AUDITOR'S NOTICE. PRE Orphans' Court of Dauphin oowi bas appointed the subs rlber audit'r to diattiboto the baltnte in the hands of toe administrator of dos *state of George Kissinger, late of I iambi wnship, In Said county, deed, ou 1314 'ftel settlement o to f Bald mud* among the belie at law, 0 sa cl Deceased; and she toad tor has appointed Wedneeday, fi rst day of QL.tobor nest, at hls office In Harrison% at bin o'olooll In the forenoon ct midday, Bre tha purpose of mails told distribution, Whoa and where all persona are requested to attend. septa-dawnao JOHN ROBERT. Auditor. POCKET BIBLES. AFULL assortment of Pocket Bibles and Testaments for the soldiers just rs oeived at BERGNER'S BOOElyroft .. _. GLASS Jars for putting up frult,. tha celebrated Wynn patent, cbeap, 'Ample and of warranted to give satutfactionjust received and for wile by NICHOLS & BuWltas, Jae Corner front and Market street. SPIOES of all kinds, whole and ground, warra""i fresh and pare. fo r lo w by -- Corner Prone and Market street®. =LI CIDER Vinegar warranted pure for 408 low, by tNRSOLEI & WOlVi 4 19 e P t l2 Coma Rout and BUMS Woes. } l / 7 43NA, Asa. Oct. 4 PRICE $5 00 PRIVATE SALE