r 'IS! ,1 1 4 m i if! 3 t 3 it Kits rr i Ml .41 Ji4 i "I 17. 4 ..HT-, xi Raftsman's Journal ft S. J. EOT, DITOR AWD PROPRIETOR. CIjEARFIELD, PA., AUG. 7, 1867 TOR SUPREME JCDGE, Hon. Henry W. Williams, OF PITTSBCna. The County Convention. ' Last week we published thecall for a Re publican County Convention, to be held at Clearfield, ou Thursday, August 15th, 1S67, for the purpose of Dominating a county ticket. It will be recollected that every member of the party is entitled to a seat in said convention, and have a voice and a 'vote in its deliberations. And, as the election ot Judge Williams to the Supreme' Bench by an overwhelming majority will have a favorable influence upon the next Presiden tial election, it is incumbent upon the Re publican party of this county to nominate a full ticket, so as to secure a full vote for our candidate for Supreme Judge, on the Sec ond Tuesday of October next, and thus con tribute our mite to the grand triumph which awaits our party in 186S. Jn view of these facts we urge all to turn out to the Conven tion on the 15th, and nominate a ticket composed of men of unexceptional charac ter for honesty and business qualifications for whom it will be an honor and a pleasure to vote and who are fully qualified to dis charge the duties of the important positions for whi h they will be named, should they be elected. - - - S lack wate R Naviqation. The Penn sylvania Canal Company have recently made a survey of the canaWmd river from Harris burg to Huntingdon, with the view of adapt ing the Juniata to Slack water navigation. The Lewistown Gazette thinks there is nothing in the way to prevent this from be ing carried out. Such a change would soon create sterm navigation, at least for light draught boats. At a comparatively small expense, a channel from 50 to 100 feet wide and from two to three feet in depth, could be made by removing a few rocks and stones. It may yet be done. : i . Wealthy. The Clarion Banner says : "We are informed that not less than two ' millions and a half of Government Bonds are held by citizens of this county, demon strating the wealth of our iron region. What other county with the same population can boast of such large investments in these se curities?" And yet, we presume, Clarion county will give a large majority for Shars wood, the copperhead candidate for Supreme J udge, who decided that legal tender nates were unconstitutional, and would repudiate these bonds if the opportunity were afforded. It will be a good thing for the brokers and bankers if Sharswood gets to be Judge of the Supreme Court. The first thing he and his Copperhead colleagues will do will be to break down the National Banks, and put Government bonds and notes at a ruin ous discount. This will afford fine pickings for the brokers, and wild cat banks, on the old system, will start up in every city, town, and village. Bank note lists and counter feit detectives will be in greater demand than ever about those timed. Great excitement has been produced in Chili and Peru by the report that the Span ish squadron has again sailed for the South American waters, and that a renewal of hostilities may be expected. Peru is pre paring for a vigorous resistance, and desires to act on the aggressive, but the Chilian Government has officially declared that it means to carry on a defensive war only. Having succeeded by clamor in dctermin ing the President to remove Sheridan, the unreconstructed have undertaken to ha"e the same job done for General Pope. If the President shall continue to yield to the sug gestions of these people there will soon be no loyal Generals in command at the South. The Democrats are working hard to per petuate their rule in Connecticut A resolution- looking to the closing of the Normal School has just passed the lower House of the Legislature. The abrogation of the multiplication table, and the repeal of the ten commandments are next in order. Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, Thomas, and all the great heroes of the war, have en dorsed the reconstruction policy of the peo ple, as enacted by Congress. President Johnson is left alone with the men who de nounced the war as a "failure." The receipts of lumber, lath and shingles at Toledo, Ohio, since the opening of navi gation, is as follows : Lumber, 40,433,000 feet; Lath,10, 152.938; Shingles, 23,293,000. Those in favor of making Greenbacks and National Bank Notes as worthless as tbe Continental money of the olden times, hould rote for J udga Sharswood. Plotting for a Panic. The Copperhead organs of the 'country, says the Harrisburg Telegraph, have been plotting for the past four years to produce a financial panic from the effects of which they hoped to gain political power. George Sharswood gave judicial force to this grand scheme' of fraud, when he decided against the legality of a national currency, aud now we have the Copperhead organs seeking to impress the people that the principle on which National Banks are organized and al lowed to do busiuess is one of fraud ; that the great majority of those banks are rotten concerns, and that it is unwise and reckless for the people to place deposits in, or rely on the circulation of such institutions. The object of all such stories is to create a finan cial panic. So far as the security for the circulation of National Banks is concerned, it is just to say that a circulating medium could not be based on a safer foundation than is that of these banks. The United States holds securities, dollar for dollar, for all the circulation of these banks, so that if any such institutions in the country were to fail and close their doors, and at the same time they had all their notes in circulation, not a single note-holder would or could lose a dollar. , The Government has the means deposited in its keeping by the directors of such banks to redeem . all their circulation. Hence the folly of talking about the rotten ness of these institutions. The object is merely to get up a financial panic, by which it is hoped speculators may be able to rob ignorant people. It is one of the meanest of the Copperhead tricks to defraud the la boring man and mechanic, and as such we denounce it. It may also be characterized as equal to Judge Sharswood's attempt to break down the currency of the country as legal tender. . Who are the Friends ofjie Constitution ? As an answer to the sickening prating of Democrats professing to sustain the Consti tution, the following lrom the Albany Jour nal is pertinent. It addroses those who have such a reverence for the letter of the Constitution that they are willing to see it perish because it contains no provision for its preservation, and fitly exposes the hy pocrisy of Copperhead regard for law : "The true friends of the Constitution are those who do not shrink from any responsi bility necessary to preserve and establish it. In doing '1 his it is conceded that the way it shall be met is not specifically defined in the body of the Constitution. Neither is it ne cessary that it should be. The argument, from a constitutional standpoint, rests with the Democracy. Let them designate the article which authorizes the rupture of the Union and provides for the downfall of the Constitution, while it prohibits any inter ference to prevent it- Let them point, out the section which declares the Government powerless iu States whose people and Gov ernments have repudiated their allegiance, to establish Governments which shall ac knowledge tl at allegiance. Let them cite the article under which they sustain the po sition they have always assumed, that the Government is everywhere powerless, and its enemies always potent because of the weakness imparted to the former, and the strength derived by the latter from the Con stitution. That instrument is no such 'rope of sand."' A Parly of renegade Republicans, headed by Joe Flanigan, of Philadelphia, and Nat Sawyer, of Pittsburg, called on the Presi dent before he started for Tennessee, to enlighten liim in reference to Pennsylvania politics. The main object of these adven turers was to impress the President with the fact that they were out in the cold, and unless he could manage to put them in warm places "the party" would go to pieces in Pennsylvania. Mr. Henry Cogshall, of Philadelphia, was of "the party" that call ed on the President. After hearing the complaints of these miserable renegades from a great organization, Mr. Johnson was evidently disgusred with the petitioner's as he plainly told them he had no bone in his kitchen to relieve their suffering. Repudi ated by the Copperheads, despised by the Republicans, and treated with contempt by the President, the leaders of the "National Union Conservatives" of Pennsylvania, Messrs. Flanigan, Sawyer and Cogshall, present a truely sorry plight for the con templation of their old friends. Telegraph. Mr. Henstes, the newly appointed war den of the Washington jail, states that when he was Consal in Canada, prior to the assa-ssination of Mr. Lincoln, he met John II. Surratt there so frequently as to become lamuiar wun nis person, tnougn not know ing him by the name of Surratt. Further, that on the 14th of April, 1865, he met Surratt on the stens of trip N'atmnul Ilntd in ashingtou, recognized him as his Can ada acquaintance, and shook hands with him ; that on seeine him in the court room he recognized John H. Surratt as the person he met at the National Hotel on the day of the assassination. As the testimony has been closed, Mr. Henstes cannot be placed on the stand. The President over-estimates the number and influence of his conservative adherents in Pennsylvrnia., He wants them not to run a third ticket through fear they might thereby secure the election of Mr. Williams to the Supreme Bench. What does he mean ? . He seems to think many Democrats would follow the Conservative banner, and therein he is hugely mistaken. It is of no earthly consequence what the Conservatives do Or refrain from AnXner WKIAaro. marl they take there will not be enough of them Z "mV By RoinS witn the Democrats they will hide their weakness, and that is what they will doubtless do. The New York Tribune has an article on tenement houses, showing that 15.000 per sons live under around that in mv a tl occur every year from preventable diseases. The monev order svstpm nnt nnln ... xn.Ajr pajrg t n pxnpnuft attpndini-it Knf flnrJm 1 1 r o " - i uauu some revenue to the department. The ex tension or faculties is contemplated. The Tennessee Election.. - The election in Tennessee, on August 1st, passed off without any unusual disturbance, and resulted in a Republican triumph. The Republicans elected their whole delegation to Congress, aud made a clean sweep of both branches of the State Legislature. Gov. Brownlow has been re-elected by a majority of about 30,000; The Pittsburg Commer cial in referring to the result in Tennessee, says : "The succcess of the Republican party in Tennessee -possesses far siuore importance than usually attaches to; a Stateelection.' The most interesting fact connected with this election is that it was the ' first held where the negroes participated equally with tbe whites. A change so great, and in a State with so many turbulent elements as Tennessee, would necessarily be attended by excitement and some violence. But there has been less of this than was predict ed less by far than the opponerts of free suffrage and supporters of the old slave sys tem intended there should be; It is even stated that, in spite of the bloody prognos tications, the election was one of the quiet est ever witnessed in the State. A crisis has thus been passed, in view of which good men everywhere felt no little uneasiness. Had riot and bloodshed been the order of the day in Tennessee had the opposition succeeded in producing anarchy there, the influence would have extended te every other Southern State, and the future wou'd have had another cloud raised before it. Not only for t he order-loving qualities of the col ored population have we many reasons to be thankful, but their devotion to the princi ples of the Republican party, which never wavered. It is true, and we are .lad it is true, as a race they went not all that way ; some supported the Democratic candidates, jast as some of them had been on the side of the rebellion. A. .reat majority of the colored men of Tennessee adhered firmly to the cause that gave them freedom and suf frage ; and, as a consequence, on the very first trial of negro suffrage1 in the South, we have one of the largest and most influential Southern States rolling up a strong and re liable Republican majority. The influence on the South of such a result will be imme diate and positive. It virtually defines what will be the result in most, if not all. the other Southern States, and permanently foreshadows the politics of the country for years to come. From this prospect Demo crats are emitted to draw what consolation they can. They have driven the negro into the Republican ranks, and the penalty of the treatment they gave him they may as well make up their minds to bear for an in definite period." Grant Gossip. The following is by the correspondent of the Boston Journal: "lie has kept verj quiet since he has been in New York. He dislikes parade and attention. He says he never gets into a carria?e on great occasions, when crowds surrouml him and shout his name, but what, mingling with the pageant are the groans of the wounded, the sick boys in the hospital, and the dead and the dying on the battle-field. He has two or three cozy nooks in New York, into which he retires with a few friends to enjy a crn fideritial chat. lie is very peculiar in his habits. It is said he has not drank a glass of spirits since he was appointed Lieutenant General. He is breaking himself of his in ordinate use of cigars, sensible that in the inaction of peace the custom hurts hi health. Nobody can get anything out of him by asking questions. He seldom an swers any that are put to him, but if left to himself he will talk freely, clearly and fully on public matters. Since he has been in New York on this visit he has spent hours in friendly conversation. To all matters tcuching the Presidency he makes but one reply. He hoi es he never shall leave the afmy. That when his active service is over he shall still be connected with the corps he loves so well. He is not without his solici tude in regard to public events. He-considers matters more critical than before the surrender of Lee. Some one said to him, 'General Grant, we do not know what is before us, but as long as you are at the head of the army the country feels safe, far it has undiminished confidence in you. Your death or removal from the army would not only be a national calamity, but would so shake the national confidence as to well nigh produce a revolution.' General Grant said nothing, but his eyes moistened with tears a degree of emotion ha seldom ex hibits." . Ruin of Jamaica. The condition of Ja maica is the theme of a private letter prin ted in the Pull Mall Gazette, which gives a sad picture of the continuous decline of that once flourishing and wealthy Island. The writer, who is an old resident", says he "never knew Jamaica in such a state of despondency. None of the better classes no educated person would remain if they could manage to get away. The country is deeply in debt ; no effort isniade to develop her resources,and taxation is largely increas ed." Regret is expressed that the colonists no longer possess "anything like self-government." One of the parishes, that of St. Ann's which in 1840 contained thirty sugar estates, now has thirteen, and of these several are on the point of abandonment. Of fifty-three coffee estates, there are nnW four remaining. There is no market for horses, mules and cattle. The principal crop, pimento, promUes to perish ungath ered. ' The removal of Sheridan having been determined on by the President, it was but natural that he should be asked to nm T , ....... - ...... V. i ope, and indeed all the district "fi inuccu ail me uimiici comman- I ars. A single concession leads to a multi j plicity of demands, as experience has shown, j If the President were to consult his own i peace he would not interfere for a moment I By this time, he should have learned, that , the rebellious element in the South instead , of being grateful when concession is made to it become arrogant and domineering. Any body but Mr. Johnson would by this time have learned this. It has heretofore been stated that the Military Commission that tried the assassi nation conspirators recommended that Mrs. Surratt should not be hung, but imprisoned for life. The paner. as originally drawn and signed, has at last been brought to light. Ellsworth, Kansas, is nearly depopulated in consequence of cholera. There were from three to ten deaths daily for fifteen days. - .Washington City Gossip. , The Star of August 1st says "It seems generally, understood here that Gn. Grant not only ;declines (jn become a party to the proposed removal o Sheridan,but will sure ly see that his policy is 'tarried out to the letter by whoever the'Fresident may send there in his stead, the law as modified at the last session of Congress making it his duty, not the' President's to supervise and direct the policy of the commanders of the several military districts." One thousand 'private! claims lave been filed before the Claims Commission of the War Department, to the present date, aris ing out of the war. They present every conceivable kiud of claim, under the head of property destroyed or service rendered. The Chronicle of August 3d states" what is believed to be true, when it says that tbe friends of the administration are -offering wagers very freely that Secretary Stanton will be forced to resign before the first of September.as they claim that the differences ot opiniou between him and th President will soon result in an open rupture, preeipi tated by the lattcr's policy regarding the Southern 'military commanders. , . Returns from the .. registration in Louisi ana have been received at Grant's Head quartersand show that the 'colored voters have about thirty-eight thousand majority. Reports from the Headquarters of the Fifth Military District state that Gen. Sher idan has ordered that one-half of the Com missioners of elections in Louisiana shall be colored men. Gen. .Sheridan has directed that a 3Iilitary Commission convene at Brownsville', Texas, on the 5th of August or as soon thereafter as practicable, for the trial of such persons as may be properly brought before it. - 4 - ' ' ' The Secretary of the ' Treasury has deci ded that the payment of the compound in terest notes, with interest thereon, will be made only at maturity at the U. S. Treasury and at the offices of the Assistant Treasur ers at Boston, New-York, and Philadelphia. Admiral Tegethoff and depntatiou sent from Austria to procure the remains of Max imilian, arrived at Washington on the 3d! to learn if any official intelligence had been received by this Government, the Austrian or Mexican legations, indicating the course of the Liberal authorities in reply to the re quest made some time since for the Empe ror's body. It is learned that there Li no positive intelligence that the request will be complied with, but there is eveiy reason to believe that it will not be denied. The Mex ican legation is represented as favoring com pliance with the request. Widows,who have been getting a pension of half the monthly pay of their husbands, uader the Jaws passed prior to the act of July 25th, 1865, are not entitled to an in crease to eight dollare per mouth under that act. ' .. Senor Romero, the Mexican Minister, is about to leave for Mexico, not to return un der the present administration there, unless President Juarez should be re-elected, and desire his re-appointmeut. It U stated the contemplated removal of Sheridan has met with opposition from an unexpected source. Ex-Gov.' Parsons, of Alabama, is here, advising the President against the displacement of either Sheridan or Pope. He thinks that it will do no good now, for he looks upon the time as passed when Sheridan's removal would have been of any advantage to the administration. A Tocchino Incident. The following! toucmng meiuent is related m connection with the recent sad disaster at Mount Desert: On the morning of the day when Mr. and Mrs. Clark left their home, in Farmingham, Mass., on their ill-fated journey to Mount Desert, Mrs. C. was engaged in packing her trunks when a disabled soldier, with books to sell, called at the door. She said to a friend, "Though I am very busy it would be selfish in me not to help the poor soldier a little." She bought of him a child's story book-, entitled jjost on the seashore, and laid it upon the parlor table as a gift for her little child when they should meet aaam. When the child returned home last Friday trom her visit to a neighboring town, there was no mother there, but this little book was handed to her as the last gift of that mother. Bursting into tears she said, in her simplicity, "Mamma knew it, mamma knew it. Alonzo Tibbets was arrested some months aero on the charge of having murdered Thomas Page, in Morris, Illinois. He was acquitted his brother, who was believed to be cognizant of the same, refusing to testi fy. On Friday, a meeting of the prominent citizens was held, at which it was resolved to hang Alonzo. The Sheriff committed him to jail for safety. On Saturday, the crowd broke open the jail in the absense of the Sheriff, took Tibbets in a wagon across the river and hung him to a tree, against the protestations of the Mayor and others. He asserted his innocence to the last. An order is expected from Mr. Johnson mustering out of service all volunteer offi cers on duty in the South. This it is found, will displace about two hundred officers en gaged in making the registry, and the de sign of the order is said to be to interfere, indirectly, with the registration. The dis trict Commanders are, however, fully aware of the character of the expected order, and it has already been determined to re-employ all whose services are needed in the regis tration under the authority oonfered by the late Military bill, and thi Frecdmen's Bu reau aCt. . , : ' A woman was chopped in two by her hus band, in Buffalo, a few days ago. Two cor oners arrived simultaneously and being una ble to agree upon the right of possession, concluded to divide the subject, each taking one-half and holding separate inquests. . Ottawa ' RIVEK.--.A dispatch in th Montreal Gazette furnishes the following additional facts concerning the fruits of the expedition for finding the headwaters of the Ottawa river f-,? ' i- ; S "This party reports the length of the river to be about: one thousand. miles, in stead of a few hundred, as; has been supposed.- .They found, in the course of the' river, Gros Lake, said to be four hundred miles in circumference, but there is certainly some mistake in this calculation. On their wav they were met by a tribe of Indians, who refused to allow them to proceed. Fortu nately one of the party, who had been in the en: ploy of the Hudson Bay Company could talk the Indian dialect. After an ex planation a council of war was held, and they were allowed to pursue their journey. Navigation from Lake Temiscaming to Gros Lake is impeded by numerous rapids. Beyond Gros Lake, -to near the source of the Ottawa, a distance of two hundred miles, there was no obstructions. The source of the Ottawa is said to be within fifty miles of the head waters of tbe . Saguenay. The land along the upper region of the Ottawa is of good quality. The climate is much colder than here. The explorers had to pnshice out of tha way of their canoes, on Gros or Victoria Lake, on the 24th of May. The natives are pagans; the males wear neither hats nor unmentionables, their only garment being a loose coat. They have a plurality of wives." - . i. Some curious experiments have been made in London before the Koyal institu tion, by Professor TyudaH, showing the in fluence of vibrations of sound upon light, water md suw ke. A long gas flame, just on the point ot becoming sonorous or roar ing, was put in agitation by sounds resem bling the dumping of birds j and Professor Tyndall having called on his audience to take part in the experiment, " they com menced imitating the sound, and the gen eral chiruping was accompanied by violent movements of the flames. : A jet of smoke was influenced by sonorous vibrations iu a similar manner, a continuous jet of smoke about two feet high, being broken down and divided into two jets by the sound of an organ pipe. A str jam of water was sim ilarly affetcted, a continuous stream having been broken into drops by the sound of a tuning fork. Several other experiments were exhibited showing the effect ot sono tous vibrations. , ; A few nights ago Tommy Johnson, son of William Johnson, the barber, in Ken drickstown, Ind., woke up and cried out there was a snake in the bed. If is mother, supposing he had been dreamiug, endeavor ed to quite him. and succeeded. On the next night Tom iny awoke with, -the tane cry, and for tw or three other evnings; at length his mother, making a n,ore careful search than she had done before, . found a good sized snake in Tommy's bed, which es caped through a crevice in the wall. He usually awoke Tommy by "crawling around his arm and over his body. Important reforms in the practice of med icine are about being introduced in Canadj. It is proposed that in future all medical de grees or diplomas of universities, colleges or schools of medicine shall have merely an honorary value ; and licenses to practice medicine, surgery, or midwifery in the Do minion of Canada, shall be granted by a central board of exanfination in each prov ince, before whom all holders of degrees ot medicine, or diplomas in surgery ah 1 mid wifery shall appear for examination. A similar reform would be productive of good everywhere. Paper Money in Texas. T xas, du ring and since the war, has enjoyed a hap py immunity from confederate and Federal paper money, and rejoiced in a coin curren cy. But it appears that this cot dition is not likely to last ninch longer. The Hous ton Telegraph announces that the Texas Central Railroad has co nmenced to receive paper money for passage and freight. This action will probably lead to the introduction of greenbacks and postal currency in the State, and drive gold and silver into the hands of the exchange dealers, and to Can ada. ' . Kossuth's election to the Hungarian Diet is causing alarm among the members of the Conservative party in Hungary, who are fearful that the influence and abilities of this renowned Radical niiirht be employ ed in disturbing the work of conciliation just completed between Francis Joseph and his Hungarian subjects. Kossuth, it is evi dent, i- yet "a power,'.' and in view of his patriotic record, his conduct in the new ca reer upon which he has entered will be watched with deep interest. The At'STiUAN.s continue to threaten dire revenge tor the death of Maximilian, but may not the execution of the Archduke remind the Emperor of Austria of the cold blooded manner in which" R-ibert Blum, the martyr patriot was captured, tried, convicted and shot at Vienna, in the autumn of 1848; and the equal cruelty w'th , which Count Lojo Bathyani was slaughtered, in Hun gary, a year later, by order of that vile hangman, Marshal Haynau? The investigation of the Alms-house at Patterson, New Jersey, has shown that a system of slow murder was established by its SuperintsnJent. The cruelties inflicted upon the women and children, the sick and crippled, and insane, would not be credited upon rumor, but are too clearly proven. Yet these atrocities were practiced for months without the knowledge of the pub lic, and - ppears to have been revealed by accident. The figures are improving in Tennessee. It seems as if the majority of the Republi can party will ' exceed 30,000. Let our friends in the South learn this lesson : Wc can have every State in the South if our friends are wise, and show to the people that Republicanism means peace, economy, good government, general prosperity. : In M ississippi the unreconstructed de nounce Republican speeches as incendiary documents. In their dictionary.invocations to destroy the Union are sublime patriotism and incendiarism consists only in efforts to destroy the monstrous rile of fraud. wrone. and cruelty which constituted the old pro slavery temple. , . Chicaeo is certainlv in a bad way. The Republican of that citv savs : "Things seem to be rapidly approaching a condition when no man in Chicago will kuow whether he is married or not. . American bunting, better than tlie l- hsh, is oemg made at Lowell. Whit' ,S use of sending to England for miteriaVfe make flags, when wc have proven our abili 2Jw IMrtrtiSfments."""' tVl,will be chared doubt, prirt for tparolrl BEST GROUND ALI M SALT for S3 "5 August 7, 187. r , H. W.SMhihi FIRST quality of Mackerel. $r o SHINGLES, for S5 00 per tbouMod t Agust II. W SMITH'S BEST quality, ot Print, ler ISe p " August 7' H vji!fni J al G Wf'1US French Clf nwt, , f(lf. " SMITH'S MEN'S Heavy Boots, for S3 00. at August 7. : w- SMITU S. GOODS selling at lesa than present city micm August 7 H- W.jjftjn? CJTRAYOX. Came to the premises ol the subscriber, in Girard towih'm cn or about tbe 1st of July last, a red and whit work-ox supposed to be 10 years old. The owntr is requested to come forward, prove property pa, charges and take him away, or he will be oM u tbe law directs. August 7, 1S67. GEORGE B. SMITH "UEATMARKE T.-The underfed would take this method of informing the citizens of Clearfield and the surrounding vicinity, that they have opened up a MEAT MARKET, in tbe basement of tbe Clearfield Hoo, where they wilf be found with a supply tttrt TUESDAY. THURSDAY. ASD SATURDAY. Farmers and jobbers in the surrounding win try will be supplied with Meats to ordr. A lib eral share of public patronage solicited. S. R. FULLERT0X, AugnstT. '67, M. G. BROVVX. E W A lt RANG E M E X T. ROTE & SH A W, -DRUGGISTS, (Second street, opposite the Court House.) ": Clearfield, Pa. Tbe subscribers having entered ' into pvrtner ship In tbe Dm? business, and purchase I the en tire iuterestof Mr. C. D. Watson would r-'ect-fullv inform the citizens of Clearfield etucij, that they are now prepared to furnish DRUGS, PATENT MFDICINES. Dye Stuff, Tebacco. Cigars . Confectioneries Stationery. Ac. ' PlIYSIClAXS Will find our stock of Drag full and oouiji'ot and at a very slight advance on Eastern price. . . SCHOOL BOOKS. Tencbers and others will hi furnished with class ical and miscellaneous books by expreas, at abort notice. STATIONERY. Consisting of Cap, Flat Cap. Foolscap, Letter toil Perfumed Note Paper, also, a very neatstoe ot Mourning Note Paper and Envelopes on bJ Pens, Pencils, Ink, Ac . .. HOUSEKEEPERS Will find a full stock of Pure Spices. Soda. 3ai Ash, Concentrated Lye. Soap, Ac. L.ADISS AND GEXTLEMEX Are requested to examine our stock of Perfumery, Hair Oils, Fine Teilet Soaps. Brushes, Coub, Toilet Setts. Ac. SMOKERS AND CHEWEKS Will find a full supply, of prime Chewing snt Smoking Tobacco, Imported and Domestic Cign', Snuff, Fine-cut, Ac. CARBON OIL, Of the best brand, always on banl. . LIQUORS. The best quality of Liquors always on linn J. for mfdical purposes. Physicians prescriptions promptly and careful! compounded. - August 7. Iv7. JOHN F ROTE - - - - - - - . 4.1 SSW COLDIEIl'S BOUNTI ES. The new bill equalizingbounties has passed both Hoo ses, was approved by the President, and i ljw law. A three years' soldier gets $1 00 and too years' soldier S.iO Bounties and Penfions re collected by me for those entitled to them. Brisg forward your applications. J.U. McENALLY, Att y. at Law. August I. ISfifi Clcar6eld. !' fVRI'lIAN'S COURT SALE.-Hy virtue of an order of the Orphans' Court of Clearaeld county, the undersigned ndmiuistis'ur will offer at public sale, on Saturdav, Au;ut 2Ub. 1807. upon tbe premises, the following Renl EstaH of Jamei Gill, dee'd, vis : A certain inesssuge or tract of land, situate in Beccaria tw'p, Clearfield county, being the homestead property upon which be lived at the time of his death . and containing about 37 acr s, more or less; about 35 acres clear ed, having a good soil, in a good state of cultiva tion, and hiving thereon erected a small ltR house and barn; also a bearing orchard ou the premises, and a never failing spring of water at the door. Sale to commence at 2 o'clock, P. 31. when conditions will be made known by J. M. SMITH, July 27, 1867. Administrator. -REYOND THE MISSISSIPPI' JJ Complete History of the New bta A tates and territories, from the Ureal uiveno iuc'"- . - r .- Ji .... -l - f Ocan. By Albert D Richardson. Over -' ' copies sold in one month. Life and adren'ure on Praries. Mountains and the Pacifiecoast ; witfi over 2110 Deiwrtnti va anil Photnyranbic iewi 01 the Scenery. Cities Lands. Mines. People and ca riosities of tbe New S ates and Territories. To prospective emigrants and sett ers in tos "Far West." this History of that vast and fertile region will prove an invaluable assi.-taDce. sup plying as it does a want long felt of a full. n" tbentio and reliable guide toclimate.soil.prodBf' means of travel, etc.. etc. Agents Wasted. Send for circulars and se our terms, and a full description of the otlt Address NATION A L PUBLISHING C0- July 31. 4t. 507 Minor St , Philadelphia ; rjlWO FARMS FOR SALE.-The-t.der-- signed offers for sale two farms, describ ed as follows : . . . No. 1 is situate in Boggs townshie. cl"fie, county, aHout 2 o' a mile from the Railroad. be1.1 known as the I indsay Stone Farm, and cou'mk ab ut one hundred acres about 55 acres clear, aO ot which is in grass, and under good lences w ith log bouse and good log barn, and a young orchard of choice fruit trees iherron . No. 2 is situate in Bradford township- near tfl Railroad at Woodland, and contains one bci area acres 50 acres clear, of whic 40 is in gra-. j1 under rniui fnfa In hnnu and frafnaStabie, v-:-- . r. . .1 TLa ab"VS farms wi'l be sold on reasonable terms, or re,eo if desirable. Annlv to. or addiess the nnJef ai?ned. at Wood. and. Clearfield countv. Pa ity. Pa- o BUTLER- July 31, I867-3m. JJK. T 1HREE NEW BUGGIES for sale aheap. ' Corner Store, Cmrweoevllle, Pa. I1-