f tradtit Al,vpooiiorg. VEIjNESDNY, NOVEMBER 4,1863. 1111ONSIEVR THOMAS COME AGAIN. Borne tiollths ago the Pittsburg Gazette ooneluded •to defeat the re-nomination of • Gov. Curtin. .As he, had publicly and. in geed faith declined totbe a candidate again, and, at the time the, Gazette "moved upon his works," cherished no wish or purpose * VS have his name before the Pittsburg Con vention, the Gazette became dizzy with the prospect of defeatinga Jaen who was-not running. A lolemn council was held in at which a programme was d,.fi -mapped out, looking first to the de teat of Curtin in the Convention, and, fail ing in that,-to defeat him at the polls. A aeries of most vituperative and atrocious . personal attacks upon . Gov. Curtin was re solved upon, and, ill casting around for a competent scavenger, by common, consent Thomas Williams was selected. Approach . :itigfhira on his egotistic side he was readily flanked and bagged : and forthwith he hurled this thnnderbblts of ivar upon Gov. Curtin r .and his supposed inathediate eircle;of friends, and eulogised, [Thomas' Williams, day after - day in the editorial columns of the Gazette ,until the Co'fivention met. The editor of the REPOSFI'ORY, although a private citizen; . 'not a candidate for any position, and not at :the time Seeking even in the least degree to control or influence the action of the Convention, was made the object of repea ted assaults of the grossest character.— Knowing that the author and aim of the articles were too well understood to damage ° 'any one, we passed them by in silence; but, 'after the electipn, when Gov. Curtin had been . vindicated alike in Allegheny and in the State; by receiving the largest vote ever polled for any candidate, we ventured to put in a meek reminder to the palsied exe cutioner of - the Gazette and those who had used him, that it was sometimes possible it men to go wooling and come home sheared. The response to that modest in ,' timation we have in the Gazette ofthe 26th uk., and in another column of to day's pa per it will be found entire. . •As Mr. Williams' article embraces several distinct charges, which he has repeated un til he 'Probably believes them himself, we `will dispel the illusion by noticing them just -mice. Oar support of the bill for the com nintation'of the tonnage duties,, in common with two-thirds of the members 'of the • Houser—including nearly if not quite all Williams' colleagues—and a majority *of the Senate, is well known and needs neither explanation or vindication. With the composition of the Hopkins committee ,we had much less to do than himself. He begged to be on it ; but the Speaker very Properly refused to appoint him, giving .as - hia.veason that it was net a proper place for an insane man. Williams next appealed personally to the members of the House to • put him on by a direct vote, and had the Speaker notified that it would be done ; but upon a canvass it was found that fully two _ thirds of the members agreed with the Speaker; alike in his action and in his rea sons, and the enterprise was abandoned. • Considering that the House harmonized with Mr. Wilhelm and not with usion the ques tion of-tonnage duties, we submit that he should not fly into our face because his own friends thought him a fool. The adjourn inent of the Legislature and the discharge of the committee we had nothing to do with, while 4r.-Williams had everything. Scores of members voted for both solely to get rid of his incessant and incoherent ra ♦ings,on•a hobby that he used for no our *poOnt to hear himself talk, to see him self In print, and to proclaim his self-con gratulation that he was not as other men. The House would have consented to allow ", him ho/f its time for his self-glorification -and his shameless but impotent vitupera tion of all others ; but as he demanded pretty much all the time of the House, and besides insisted upon - declaiming on him 'self and the tonnage tax, to members be tween sessions; to strangers in the rotunda; to the sweeps and pages; to . lamp-poste ; to town-pumps, and,especially to bottles in black; the House wearied toward the close of the session ; and one morning while Mr. Williams was detained in a fruitless effort to get his swollen and befogged bead reduced jo the proper dimensions to accommodate his hat, the Boise disposed finally of him and his follies. The allegation that we favored the "dee tion of the district which secured a vote, siad gave a U. S. Senator to Copper heads," is simply an ignorant or malicious filsification of history. The -district allu ded to is that of Bedford , and Somerset, and Mr. Cessna's was the "vote" referred When we state the fact that Mr. Cessna had several hundred more majority in Bed ford than the Union majority in Somerset, and that he would have been elected had the counties been connected, the case is disposed of. The charge that ive'had torn -up half a dozen veto messages in the pies ence of the Executive himself ;." that we 'declared the war "but an idle expenditure of money and blood,'.' and that we hoped for foreign 'powers to interfere to stop it, are all wholly, stupidly false. -There is not the, shadow of truth pertaining to any of Ahem, nor have they the merit of even plau sibility. That they reached his brain in the %isa,garieeof some bewilderingidebauch, is the most, zliaiilable explanation, that can be= given, lina, we accept it. r-.-We &mad not have the public believe that Mr. :Williams is a common liar, &W -eyer clearly the apparently malicious atroc ities of his erratic . Pert would stam' p him. He is one of. those whom the world should judge kindly, and mingle. pity- freely with the scorn his wrongs upon truth and decency would seem to invite. Sadly as he wrongs others, he no less sadly wrongs himself; and his towering genius—once the pride of wes tern Pennsylvania. 7 -has 'Ain lingering re collections of, vanished honors and , past re spect, as it is crumpling in untimely ruin beneath the remorseless' assaults of life's saddest infirmities; and he— . "With his own tongue still edifies his ears, Ana always list'ning to-himself appears." That he is made the instrument of the cow ardly and ; tualignant ; thus becomes the ap parent author of the weakest andiwiekedest falsehoods, and clouds his once honored name.with'Worse than pot house scandal, is his misfortune--not his crime. As his better and brighter attributes have faded beneath that avenging h'aild that spares no human follies, .his weaker traits have been enthroned where once was intellectual might; and in pitiable conceit . he fitfully dreams butthe evening of a brilliant life. Forgiven and henceforth forgotten, him 'and his foi bles are dismissed =We have published the Gazette's rea sons for its frequent and shameless assaults upon the Editor of the REPOSITORY. Will it- have 'the manliness to copy our reply•? If o, it can have the field to itself hereafter. REBEL ZEAL'OF THE SPIRIT. The Spirit is the only journal that we know of now that endeavor,s to bolster up the fading hopes of the rebel cause. In that paper, of the 28th ult., we find the following : itosecrans has been beaten back into the fastnesses of Chattanooga; Meade beats an inglorious retreat from Lee and retires with in the fortijcatiOns of •Washington." Again it says :-- , , ;it is folly to believd, as we are continu ally' told, that the rebelliOn is almost crushed. It'is revelling in the pride of its strength to day, and pressing our armies •baelt from all `its borders !" The more conservative journalsin the in terest of the rebellion—we mean those printed in the South—take quite a different and a sadder view of the aspect of things. The Richmond 'Whig, speaking Of this dri ving of Roseerans " into the fastnesses of Chattanooga,". says : j , "If he (Rosecrans) le permitted to hold Chattanooga, then our victory will be without profit, and wehave only tb mourn that so many' brare men: have died in; slain! He holds a region pestilent with disaffection. and that needs only the presence of the Yankee army to ripen into full blown ;treason." The Richmond Enquirer says that " the enemy holds the gate of ,East Tennessee," and adds that " So far in all our operations, though We have won 'a !great victory, we have lost ground!" Equally conservative are the Richmond papers .as compared with . their Chambersburg ally, the Spirit,' in speaking of Meaee's "inglorious re treat from Lee," and 1 his retirement into " the fortifications at ! Washington."— They probably doubt, the, truth of the aSpirit sexclusive in forni a 4on about Meade's "inglorious" tumbling into the Wash ington fortifications, inasmuch as they declare that he "managed his retreat most orderly and that he'savedhis stores and lost but few men and they also declare that in the only battle fought during the march, they "were generally worsted." lnstead' of boasting of Meade seeking safety in " the fortifications of Washington," they imagine him to be closely on Lee'.s heels about the- Rappahannock ! Strange delusion I The South&n rebel journals-are eniinent ly more' conservative than the Spirit also as to the rebellion " retelling in the pride of its strength to-day; and pressing dor armies back from all its border's!" They have some how or other Conceived the notion they have not driven our armies hack any. where, and that " the pride of their strength" was somewhat shattered by the surrender of the Mississippi and the division of th 73 territo ry of treason ; by the defeat of Stone River and the subsequent liberation of East Ten nessee ; by Lee's discomfiture at.Gettysbuti and his manifest purPose to winter south of the Rappahannock. Probably they are . not as astute—certainly not as sanguine as the Spirit as to the triumphs of their cause, for the Knoxville RegistiT deelares that the "very existence of the Confederate States depends on the re-occupation of'Tennessee by Bragg;" and as Bragg has not yet, re occupied Tennessee and - is. not likely tollo so 'during the present war, they are glow to • appreciate the nervous interest the Spirit takes in their cause when it insists that they are not only invincible and triumphant, but actually revelling in the pride of its (the rebellion's) strength to-day, and pressing our armies back from all its borders!" - Although not a profound admirer of Nor than conservatism as taught by' Copper heads, we submit that the Spirit is rushing into fearful radicalism in its rebel proclivi ties. Why can't it be a respectable, digni fied rebel- journal, and-keep within range of its southern coadjutors? Why insist that everything is going to smash in the North and that our armies are practicing "inglorious" retreats and flying from the' rebel "borders," when its cotemporariesa the south are mourning over just such . a state of affairs on their side? The Spirit or the Southern rebel 'papers must be in error, and unless our Generals are .wofully deceived as to what they are doing, them selves, the Spirit - is ontrebeling rebeldom itself in falsifying the North and the cause of the Nation. tiff frank!ittlittOtOorv,l-414,atithttsburg, THE CALL F0R.TR04440. We give in another column of to-day's paper the proclamation of,G-ov. Cqtin call ing for volunteers in accordance' with the late proclamation of the President for 300,- 000 additional troois. It will be seen that the quota of this tate under the late call is 38,268; but the administration Wisely calls for all deficencies under former requisitions, and thus increases the demand now made upon our State to over 91,000.. The num ber of men due from Pennsylvania on the' 17th of October last, when the requisition was officially issued, was as follows Deficit prim to draft of 1863 Deficit on present draft... Quota under the new call Total... The item of 16,071 is made up-of men drafted in 1862 and never reported for du ty. The draft at that time Was made for 'the entire number of men then due under all requisitions to that date ; but many de serted or never, reported, and now 'they will be liable to be drafted foi three years in stead of nine months. The draft 4 1862 was necessarily made under the State laws, and they had been franied in time of peace and without any anticipation of-awar demanding hundreds of thousands of men., They, were therefore fearfully defective, and under their loose provisions it was almost impossible to enforce them effectually. The government abandoned all effort to compel attendance of those who- did not report; doubtless' for the reason that it did not justify a system 'of police to, arrest men for nine months' service. The item of 36,754 is the deficiency on the draft now in progress, and that will be materially reduced by the time - the draft is completed. Franklin will probably furnish 500 by men reporting or paying commuta tion. When_the quota of men due on the current draft was fixed on the 17th of Oc:; tober, but few counties lad driated men in service; and in ,a large number of counties the draft -had not been made at all. NQ part of this district could have been re ported at Washington: at the time the cal culation was made, so that all the men put in by the draft or who pay $3OO will be a credit to the respective.districts. Another material credit may be had by the re-enlistment of veteran troops now in • in the service. Every possible inducement will be offered by the government to have the old and experienced troops re enlist for another threeyears, unless soonerdischarged by the termination of the war; and a large majority of them will do so, They are of fered furloughs for some thirty days to see their friends, and a very large bounty ; and now that they are certain to be well sup: ported by the' prompt .addition to their ranks of enough ,to make them invincible at every point, andbesides have the unmis takeable evidence of the earnest ,support of the people at home as indicated - in the late' elections, they will not turn their ,backs upon the Old Flag until they see it trium phant wherever there is a foe of the Repub lissonfronting its We rejoice -at the decisive steps taken by the government in calling for all defi ciencies from the Statesl It is equal and exact justice to all, and insures an - army of not less than 600,000 men by spring to meet the despairing hosts of crime. This is= the surest road to Peace I How beautifully sorrow and sunshine are blendain human life—how divinely grief is tenipered with hope. The' Spirit thus touchingly, illustrates this truth. On the 21st it thus lamented : "We had fondlyhoped for the election of Jadge Woodward. We considered his election of vital and momentous importance; and htb .defeat throws a cloud over the future,'which we would fain hrve dispelled." . _ • ' Again it tnourneth thus—. "This, triumph - of Abolition shakes our last hope for the- Union !.* * *• May. the great God of Nations avert the calamity! We believe it is coining rapidly_ and inevi tably.„ Although the " last hope" is gone,_ and it seems to - have but little faith in its own prayers, it resolves in its midnight of des pair, to die at the helm. It thus heroically rushes into the hopeless breach : 'Yet we will not desert the old ship. We Will always as heretofore continue to send up our 'warning voice to tho man at the wheel. And if the worst must come, we will still con tinue ,to re-echo the immortal sentiment of America's greatest statesman and beseech all to 'cling to the Constitution as- the mariner clings to the last plank, when night and the tempest close around him !' - The scene changes. A week has passed . into history. - Morning and-evening time have .come and gone as usual, and " the man at -the wheel" seems to have , heard the" re-echo" of the Spine. The "last hope" has returned, and ip that paper - of the 28th it is jubilant and sunshine dances in every line of its editorials. , In one arti cle it announces, at a sad cost of truth, that "Rosecrans has been beaten ba l nk into the fastnesses of Chattanooga; .Meade beats an inglorious retreat from. Lee, and retires within - the fortifications of Washington;" and in another article, with renewed _hope and manly pride it announces that the re bellion "is revelling in the pride of its strength today, and presing our armies back from all its borders I" We do not wonder, that with so much to give it comfort, it recovers from its despondency about the defeat of Woodward, and thus emits the sunshine of satisfactiou - : . - "The more we reflect tipon the result'ofthe recent election the better we are, in some re spects, satisfied with it. It may in - the end prove for the beat that Judge Woodward was not elected. Had he been chosen to the Ex ecutive chair of the State, the people would most , 4ely have- expected more of him than he would have been able to give them." In the end the Spirit is " satisied,"--so is the RIIPOSITORY I Thus misery and mercy, 'sadness and sunshine have, been blended in the Spirit's path; but .when it can announce universal disaster to the Union armies, it emerges into the fulness of Pride ; ',and .ioy, and even buries - Wood ward with a smile.. Sich is life TEtt Spirit, in an appeal for Union men. to volunteer, says that "Rosecrans has been beaten back into the fastnesses of Chatta nooga;' Meade beats an inglorious retreat from Lee, and retires within the fortifications at Washington—and all for want of men." Three days before, the,abcrve was printed in the Spirit, Meade was pursuing Lee on the Rappahannock, and if Meade has lately been "within the fortifications at Washington," we F are quite sure that no one but the writer for the Spirit had the news., We do not expect the ..'pirztto represent the - glooir of relieldom truthfully, but we submit that it should not thus defWme the gallant Army of the Potomac for the purpose of throwing themloud of despair over loyal hearts. In 'another article of the same paper it says that the rebellion "is revelling in the pride of F its strength, and pressing our armies bar* from all its borders !" What a capital or gab for Jeff.Tavis the Spirit would make. While the :whole press of rebel r dom mourning the disasters to their legions criine at every pint, and deplo6ng the waning strength of Treason,- the Spirit re minds - them that they are " revelling in the pride of its (the rebellion's) strength, and pressing our armies back from all its 43or ders I" Could the Spirit be forced into some benighted corner of rebeldom, where they don't get the news, what hopes it,would inspire in its country's foes by the 'grateful intelligence that the Old Flag is-receding from all its borders ;" but in the regions of intelligence and light it would only wring 'bonternpr 'from despairing traitors' for its awkward falsehoods so clumsily disguised with blatant professions of loyalty. . 16,071 36,754 . 38;268 91,093 D. S. E. Dtrintr,n, of Fulton; will, .we learn, be strongly pressed by the Pennsyl vania' delegetion for one of the elective offi ces of the nExt House of Representatives at Washington. No man in the State could be more competent, to fill such a position, and certainly none could ;bemore deserving. He has struggled for many years in a hope-, less county, but never faltered in his deio tion to the cause ; always giving it his best energies in sunshine and in storm. He was, the Union candidate for Senator in this dis trict last fall, bat was. overborne by the re bel raid. He was subsequently appointed to a subordinate position in the House at Washington'. and has made himself known as a most useful, efficient and obliging offi cer. He is now, and has- frequently been, the member of the State Uotrunittee for his district, and as such has ever faithfully fulfilled its exacting demands: Indeed . in all respects there is eminent fitness and pro priety in the Pennsylvania delegation press ing him for one of the elective offices of the House, and we hope to record his FRY, the Provost'Marshal Veneral has written a letter to Col. Nugent, of NeW York, in which he settles the ,question to the effect of paying the $3OO commuta tion money. He now decides that thepay mcnt of $3OO has the same effect in regu lating the credits in the respective districts and in the State as if the conscr'pt had tually gone into service, Thus Frank Pn county will be credited on her quota for all yam have gone into service in person or by substitute, and also for all who have paid commutation money—in all probably five or 'six hundred. Col. Fry in his letter says : "The State receives the same credit for a man who has paid -comnlntation, as if the 'drafted citizen had gone .in person or fur nished'a substitute. and in like manner towns which have raised the money to' pay their quotas receive the same credit as if actual substitutes had been furnished ; and the Pre sident has ordered that every citizen who has paid the three hundred dollars commu tation shall receive the same credit therefor as if he had furnished a substitute and .was exonerated from the military service for the time for which he was drafted; to wit : for three years." TOE Richmond Extintinei, before the electien in Pennsylvania and Ohio, said it would hail the suc'•ess of - the Democracy " as the birth, of a peace; party ‘;" that it would " be a delicate infant and will require careful nursig," and adds Lee and Bragg will be' able to do more to hasten its growth than Wood or VPlandighatn. Let our Armies be victoriouN and it may be en • doomed -with the strengthi of an infant Her cules to strangle the serpent brood. Let retreats be the order of the day, and it will never pass the crisis of teething." After the electioni, when. Lee and Bragg, and Vallandigham, Woodward ,and Wood all had - Proved most "delicate infants," and sadly in need of " careful nursing," the same paper consoles itself with the conclu sion that th Northern' elections have lost their significance !" Wonder if they ever read of sour grapes down i itordom ? NEW YORK held her general election yes terday, and . Maryland votes to-day. We 'live no returns from the Empire State, but . since the overwhelming 'overthrow of Seymour's "friends'.' in Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and lowa, there has not been the ghost of a chance for disloyalty in. New York. 'Maryland will choose an Uncondi tional Union. delegation to Congress and a legislature of like stripe. THE Westmoreland Republican announ ces in an elaborate editorial " that Goy. Curtin is elected by a majority of some thousands, " and addS that it is " both stir ? 'prised and sorry. ," _ iter giving vent to a column or so of grief, t startles itself with the announcement " hat Curtin, notwith standing his enormous fraudulent vote, was beaten t ' and that his friends " then caused numerous false returns to be manufactured, in counties which they, controlled; so as, by a new fraud, to relieve them from the de felit'which the people decreed ! " Will the general be kinstenough to inform the-pub lie where all this happened? Considering that Curtin's- reported majorities in nearly` all the counties were reduced by the'official vote, we submit that the Republican must have been, "seeing double " at some stage of the figure-work. - . Tip: Carlisle Volunteer' is jubilant because the counties of Pennsylvania invade` the rebels gave a Democratic gain of 1,884 Woodword over Foster's vote-of 1860. It might have turned a little farther south, where the rebel army is on band all the time, and found still more deisive Demo. critic triumph's to console it for :its in Pennsylvania. The same -paper; speaking of the call for 300,000 additional troops, thus crawls and writhes in its slimy, cowardly treachery : 44 If we must enlarge the body-guard of _.John Brown's. soul as it goes • marching on,' if we must have more enslaved white men in order 'to fr e e the 'eternal nigger,' let the Conscription atleast fall- upon all classes alike."' Tan subscriptions to.the five twenty loan reached the enormous sum of eixteen and a half millions on Saturday last, and_the sub scriptions for the week reached over $36,- 000,000. Less than $150,000,000 of these bonds remain to be sold, and foreign com petition is now very great. Under the ad mirable management of Jay Cooke, the government has realized more than enough out of its securities to meet the expenses of the war, and they will soon command a clever" Premium . . We believe that they can still be had of G-eo. R. Messersmith, Esq.. at par._ THE War Department has at length made a sensible modification_ of the President's Proclamation suspending the habeas copus act, and hereafter the civil courts will be allowed to take cognizance as' heretofore of all cases for the discharge of minors.im7 properly enlisted, and illegally detained by the military authorities. A plot has been discovered in Ohio to liberate the rebel prisoners at Camp. Chase, seize the State arsenal, and commence a regular campaign. Several arrests of prom inent individuals have . beep' made. The plot appears to have been .revealed to the U. S. detectives, who disguised themselves as copperheads, and thus worked the mine. WHEN the Rebel Gen. Early was in York, Pa., he issued an address appealing to the people of that county to rise up and "throw Off the tyranny - under which you areall Suf fering !" York obeyed to the tune of - over 2.600 majority, but - they still didn't win. Early inust try again ! Gov. Curium has been speaking in_behalf of the Union ticket in New York for - several days. Qn Thursday last he spoke at Ott _ wego, yn Friday -at Horse Heads and on Saturday at Buffalo. Hon. Jaines H. Campbell and C01..R. Biddle Roberts. ae-, comphnidd him.. ("HARI:Es BROWN, whois the Copperhead candidate for Congress from; Delaware, in his speech accepting the nomination-, says : "I am no War Democrat. r have noth ing to do with New York or Pennsylvania platforms. My platform is the- Rlatforin of the Democracy of Delaware—the platform of peace." IN another columnof to-day's• paper we give __Gov. Curtin's proclamation recotn mending the sacred observance of Thnrs- A:l*c the 26th inst., as a day of Thanksgiv ing and Prayer, in accordance' with -the proclamation of the President. Tine public debt on the Ist of September, 1863, was one thousand two hundred and twenty-eight millions, eight hundred and thirty•two thousand and seven hundred and seventy-one dollars. Gov. MORTON has" issued an d eloquent appbal to the people of Indiana to provide for the wants of soldiers' families during the coming winter. HON. 3. N lirtuNGE,R, of Lebanon, has been appointed Assessor. of the -tenth District. An eicellent appointment. Ix Is stated that the re k, at Richmond have robbed our prisoneA of nimards of $60,000. 'WE are indebted to Hon. Edward Mo Pherson for valuable public documentis. SIIICIDE.—We are extremely sorry to state that Mrs. Nancy, wife of Robt. Kelly, Esq., of Bloomfield, committed suicide by hanging herself by the neck with a cord on the garret of her house, on Tuesday forenoon. She had we understand, been quite melancholydr de • ranged for several months. The , ,ftet ,was certainly committed 'whilst laboring under an abberration of her reasoning/faculties.— She wasperturps about 68 years of e, and leaves a son, daughter and husband to la ment the loss they have sustained by this afflictive dispensation.—Ferry Freeman, Oc.. sober 29fh. of T a 7 ch z Ei.e ne e r n s g fr c o h m ar t a h et e er arm . Gen. Franklin entere,l Opelousas on the 214. The enemy made a Stand. about. 'five miles from the town, hut_werelquielly diaper*. The same tiling happened at Vermillionita— yoni where Dana compelled the rebel mender to divide his troops, and so weaken.: ed his forces on the Bayou that it. was quickly turned by our cavalry. Another expedition is fitting out, .and is said to be' clestineiVfor some point on the Texas coast. A'partof the, Corps D'Afrique gees with this exPe6. - lion. On the 23d ult., the Thirteeittkporpi, under Gen. Washlitra, held Yermillionvalt. The enemy ate saieto retreating to _Alex andria. , - • A large pert' of the wealthy poOuldrion of Nashville were under lirepkinridge,idEragg'a arrny, at Chickamauga, and ouf of sixtetn hundred under that general thirteerflitm dred were killed. Three-fourths ,ot tha l- dips of the Episcopal Church are is mourn' -Miss KATE CHASE, daughter of the V, S. Seeretiry of the Treasury, will . be maeried to lion.:Wm. Sprague, Rhode ,Island jr. Senator, on the 12th of November.. • DIED. On the 22d nit., at the ioildenci Of his brother, 144/thi borough, of dise•ese contracted at Canig,Curtin, Wittisst ftgOIKAICES, aged 18 yvirs,74noutits and 9 dallat. On the Yid nit , Mr. CHRISTIAN tiOTTLIEB Slum, aged 81 year; and 5 maths. , On the' 4flodt.,Memaeurrita Bart urea , toltatiiraort. daughter of - Geo. and Elizabetha Riinabergeri . aged year, 8 months and 2 days - - • On the gd ult.. WallAm - ..lintitt, aged 3 _yenta 046- moe.. and on the Bth JACOB , :DICIrt. aged 8 years,. mouths and 14 days.children o , Washington auttStawa Shover of iFitshirvrton townnhip. this (2, unty. On the 19th ult., at Marsh Run. of Dipthertn, R ly _ CATHARINE, only daughter of Jacob and Matta ReWIII4t, aged 2 pairs; 11 months and ID days. ' • • On the 18th ult., near Waynesboro: Junta SZAIRUCIi, 111011 of Israel and Naryilaer, aged 5 yiars, 5 Monthii and 84ays. On the 30th tilt_ in Hamilton township, Rmcut Rillent.. • Reg., aged SI yearii, 2 months and 14 days. • ~ On the 19th tilt.. in this Owe. Wituat tOisspa. son of James end Rebecca R. Ring, aged 1 year, 4,taat. - and 4 days, Pulmonary Cbpsurraption a Clirablc,Piseaso. Cam—TO CoNSIIMPTIVES.—The undersign*, having been restored to health In stew weeks: iy nut" simpleremody, after having suffered .several years with a severe lung affection. and that dread distase r Coro snm piton—is anxious known to tile fellow-snf terers. the meansidbure. To sill who desire it, he will send a copy of the pees crlptirm used (freeof charge), with the directions for preparing and using the same, which they will flret - ss sure cure for,Coniumption, Asthma, BronchlticCoughs Colds, &c. The only object of the advertiser in sending thoPrescriptlho Is to benefit theafflicted, arid spread in formation which he conceives to be invaluable; and Iva hopes every sufferer will try'his remedy, as it will COlll them nothing, and may proves blessing. Parties wishing the prescription will please address Key. ElliTiftD A. -WILSON, Sept 30-3 m Williamsburg, Kings Co., New York. Prevention of IncrusiatiOn' Stecein em—WINANIVANTI-INCRUSTATION POWDER RE MOVES AND PREVENTS TILE DEPOSIT OFISCALE, AND WITUOUT INJUR YTO 'I'REIRON. Szvaff Ptak s tx Der. Reference's In all parte .of the country, vilitAlhiny Qas Co.; Eaton, Gilbert & Co., and others, Troy . ; Syra cuse, Rochester, Auburn, &c., &c.; John Galion & Phelps, Charles EuSign, iohn R. Evans & Co.,Jewet t Root, and others, Buffalo: Cleveland, Columbus, _,ltisnes e, &c., &a.; Geo. Shield:3Elles greenwood:Mitchel/ A Rtuumelsburg,ind 40 others in Cincinnati; anil thrceugh out the Weirt Dayton, Terre don'ts; ~o= gansport , Chicago. Springfield, St. Louis, Et. Paul, kr.. &c., &c. Coat about 40 to 60cents per 'reek. For eke' In?, alklyess Ii .14. WINANS, 11 WALUST,NEW [juiy22,43414m. P.O. Box No.B • Editor of Repository—Dear Sir: With_ our permission I wisb to gni to the readers of your paper that I will send bY return mail to all who_ wteb it, (free) a Itecipei with full directions for making and using a simple Vegetable Win; that will effectually re move, In 10 minutes, Pimples, Blotches, Tan, Freckles. and all Impurities of the Skin, leaving the dame_ soft akar, smooth and beautiful • .1.• will also mail free to those harinzMald Heads or Bare Paces, simple directions and. itt (ormation that's/rill enable them to start a full growth of Luxuriant Hair. Whiskers, or a Moustache, in less than 30 days. ap plicationSanswered by return mail without charge. Respectfully yours, , _TEIOB.If. Chemist; ' jply22'63-3ta. No. 831 Brorolway,New Rork „ George Ste - ok t Co's , Pianos.—Camsrp, Seams, Aug. 1861-31 r 4. E. GOULD, Seventh and Chestnut streets, Philselelphia.—Dxsa Sm.—Miring had frequent opportunities of examining the Pianoe made hy Jaesers. George Steck A Co., Now York, tinting. the past few years, in the practice of toy profession as Tuttiq. I pronounce them the moat perfect instruments I-tar e ever Peen. In point of,toliteh, equality, and singing tone o:eyeing., dely comparison with any and all other makes, while ib the upper two octave (treble notes) they are ineoutpuirt . My the-finest I have any knowledge of., , O. E. SARGENT, Tuner of Pianos, 907 Oho-dun; St., Philsda. rapt 23.3 m The amfessions and Experience of an- lw ea/ht.—Published for the benefit, and as a warning sad A CAUTION TO YuUNG MEN • who suffer from Nervous Debility, Promftture Decayed Manhood. etc., supplying at the sumo time TIIM MEANS OF SELF CURB, : By one a•ho has curod himself after being put to; great expense and injury through medical humbug and ottackery. ;By enclosing a post paid addressed envelope, ping,* copies may be had of the author.- - NATUANIEIeMAYFAIIt, Esq., Bedford, Sings county,l 4 i. T. may '2O, CS 1),. Orrtamcnia Iron Works.—WooD & PEROT, 1136 Rid,ge` Aeolus, :Ph tiadelphio, offer - for sate upon the most favorable Terms, NEW and BEAVTIFIII. DESIGNS in great variety if IRON RAILING for CEMETERIES, RESIDENCES,&d of Wrought and cut Iron, and GALVANIZED IRON and BRASS TIM ING ; 7 111.0N VENANDAGS, BALCONIES, STAIRS, COUNTERS FOUNTAINS, GATES, COLUMNS, ING POSTS, LAMP STANDS. VASES, TABLES, FLOW ER STANDS, SOFAS, CHAIRS, STATUARY'', ANTMALiA and all other Iron Works of a Decorative character Designs forwarded for selection. Miens applying for same, sit I Setae state the bind of Work- needed. Sept 9,'633m • ' Madame Porter's Ouratizze Balsam has tong ~ tested the truth th are Brat Principles In Med nine as there is in , ..tene, , Zlind this m e di c i ne i i , c o,.- 41( pounded on princ I hri k al . to the manifold nature or Mani The cure o rKlia in - keeping open the.pores, and creating a gentle ern I warmth, and this is caus ed by the use of this edlein4l Its remedial qualities are based on Its powe to asst the healthy and WSW. ens circulation of blood through 'the bur, it enlivens the muscles and assists the skin to perform its duties 4 regulating the heat of the system, and In gently throw ing off the waste substance from the surface of the body It is nut a _violent remedy, but emollient, warming searcVng and effective. Sold .by all druggist, at 73. and 25 centsper bottle. ' . , U 74 A' • . Li