extensive scale. The Confederates in TronWk ! it is not unusual to see the guilty crim inal, after having spent a life of wfclced cduecs a-ud crime, when he is at last caught by Uie strung lund of justice, become prayerful, if not religious. Such appears to be the present position of that grea' criminal—the confederacy, wliitb at last begins to see clearly, its approaching doom. In the Richmond Whig, of 22nd February, the following is fouud: _ "In view oftlre fact that our position as a people is critical, it is respectfully sug gested thjt all persons in the Confedera cy observe Friday, the lUth day of Mar., appointed a day of fasting and prayer, wi:li more earnestness an 1 solemnity than has yet been manifested, and to that end it is proposed 1. That all churches shall have at least throe public services. The first early in the morning; the second at eleven o'- clock. and the third iu tho afternoon, or at night. 2. That such churchesas can, will keep their doors open, and the services in ope ration without intermission during the whole day—the ministers relieving one another, and tho people going aud com ing as thay may need. 8. That country churches protract their services through four or live hours. 4. That the people re illy humble them selves, and as a means thereto, eat noniore food than may be necessary to keep up their strength. 5. That all light conversation and un becoming amusements be discarded, and the day be truly obsorvod as a day of hu miliation. If there be any virtue in a day of fast ing and prayer, it should be observed as the Bible directs. Heretofore many have kept it as a mere holiday. This cannot be expected to elicit (Jod's blessing. Our condition is now such that triflingis mad ness. If we give-all our time and hearts to it for that one day, wo may look for a great blessing." Wo don't believe that those who still profess to be eulbassaders of the Most High, who still prostitute their high and Holy profession to the cause of tin, eau have any more influence ovei the l>ivine will,-than had the Prophets of Baal, in the celebrated caso in scripture, whore they cried all day fur Uie demons tration of the power, of their god. We almost imagine we can hear the 'man of God" Elijah, mocking them as ho did those of old saying, ''Cry aloud; for he is a god," cither he is talking, or he is pursuing, or he is on a journey, or parudveuturc he sleepeth and must be awaked." llow strange the reflection that men prolbssing to be followers of the meek and lowly Jesus, can address a throne of grace in behalf of a cause, tho success of which would result in the destruction of the freest government in the world ! Would re-fasten the chains on 4,000,000 of human beings, and consign them to endless daiknessand dis; ui . u diicctvic lation of ail the teachings of true Chris tiauity. W Our attention has been called to an article in tho Armstrong Democrat, from the pen of Mr. Copely, which we give below, and recommend to the careful perusal of our readers. We have said less ourself, in favor of filling up this call by volunteers, not because we were not us so licitous a* ever, that it should be done; but because we knew there was a doubt ing among the people, as to whether they were able togo ou indefinitely, paying bouuty. llad' bounties remained a iittle lower, there would have been more yji couragenient for tho poorer districts, to have uiadcthe effort. As it is,were they sure that this would be the last draft, we believe there would bo a more general ef fort. Our opinion has often been asked or this subject, and we have invariably said that we h'-lieve it is. While we there fore decline to importune our citizens, we arc free to say that nothing eke could give us more satisfaction, than to know thatour ecunty had escaped the draft. "On all former calls for men to sus tain the Government against this gigan tic rebellion, Armstrong county has res ponded nobly. In 1801, when the Pres ident called, first fur 73.000 men, aud afterwards for 5u0,0u0, no county iu our State, of equal population, answered to the calls with more a'acrity. And (lu ring the past year, when lioav- calls were made, and the system of local bouuties adopted, Armstrong county nobly sustain ed its well e irncd reputation for generous liberality and patriotic devotion to the cause of the country. 1 his Board were required to make but light c< mpulsory drafts upon the people. Even Allegheny county, with all its wealth, was not able to show a better record. We are now engaged in filling what I fondly hope will be the last call. The work of filling sub-district quotas on the local bounty system is progressing brisk ly. Allegheny City is hard at work, and will be out iu a few days. All the bor oughs and townships, except two or three, are cither full or in a fair way of beiug so. Butler county is sendiug men in rapidly. A considerable number of its sub-districts have already filled their quo tas. lam ssrry to say that, so far, Arm strong county is behind. Kittanning borough, Kldcrton, Sugarcrcek, and Ma nor are full, or uearly so. Fiauklin tp., is vigorously at work, and in one or two other sub-districts there are indications of successful effort. But in a majority of the sub-districts we have no informa tion that any efforts are being made. Even on the score of pecuniary inter est this is the worst policy that any peo ple cau adopt. We have some towns»ftips in this district which were almost ruined in the drafts of 1864. They lost nearly all their young men, who finding their own people would do nothing, went off awleulisted tothe eredit of other dis tricts which did pay local bounties, (and who cottiJ blame tiiem?) or they •ske daddled." The consequence was that the draft fell tipon lueu whose domestic condition was such that they ought, not to go into ttifc service, and who were too poor to hire substitutes. No oiau can estimate the anguish and distress which resulted from this dragging of poor and worthy men from their helpless fiuailies. And who was to blame '( Not the Gov ernment certainly j for it needed men— aud must have them or perish. Not this Board; for never did men plead more ear nestly to be saved from the painful duty of teurihg husbands from wives aud fath ers from children. But those men are to blaiuo who refused to contribute of the wealth with which Providence has bless ed them to shield their poor neighbors from these calamities, prevent this dis grace to themselves aud their districts, aud this depopulation of their townships. Canuot such men see that, by (heir retu sal to Gil their quotas, they lose three or four times as many men as they would lose were they to pursue tffe wiser, nobler and more generous course of paying a lo cal bounty to each recruit who is credited to them? To force a man into the service by con scription without either local or govern ment bounty, leaving him nothing where with tosupport his family but the pom pittance ot 81(5 a month, is hard indeed, aud ought in no case to be allowed by the men he represents. It is this view, of the case which induces so many noble hejrted men in our district, who are not themselves subject to draft, to pay out large sums of moneys, and give their per ianal exertions, to fill their sub-district quotas volunteers. Just as I was writing this paragraph I stopped to talk with an old gentlnian of Butler county, who has been laboring for some two weeks, and contributed liberally to fill his own sub-district quota, and when that was filled, he turned to another and fille . tfiat. 'J his is the kind of men we like to see at this office. lie returned home happy in the consciousness of hav ing done his duty to his neighbors and his country, and dovoted his money to a no ble use. There is time enough yet for every sub dis'rict in tho three counties to fill their quotas, provided they keep us busy mus tering in volunteers. But so ROOU as wo cease to make good daily reports of out work, the draft will certainly be ordered and made. Perhaps it may be made in secret, and no man know, until summoned to appear, whether he is drafted or not. My old friends in Armstrong cou&ty will pardon the freedom of these remarks They are prompted by the sineerest friend ship, and by an intense desire to avert, as far as possible, a calamity which I see im pending over the heads of many of them, and also by the more selfish desire to save myself from a du'y from a discharge of which 1 shrink with a kind of horror. JO.SIAH COPEI.KT, Commissioner 23d Dist. S&~ We have on our table a new book, entitled Camp, March, and Battlefield,by Kev. A. M. Stewart, Chaplain of 102 d. llegt Pa. Vol. Wo find tho following notice of it in the A'it tonal Intelligencer, ol' Feb. I t. - # This is a handsomely printed duodeci mo volume, of four hundred and eight pages. From it we gather that tho au thor, aPresbytorian clergyman, in charge of a church at Pittsburgh, Pa., tendered his services to Gen. J. S. Ncgley, then organizing troops in that vicinity, and was appointed chaplain April 19, 1861, to the 125ih Pennsylvania volunteers, a three-months regiment, which, at the end of their first enlistment, volunteered for three years. The author of this book followed the fortunes of this regiment du ring all its eventful career, in the "cam pings, marchings, and battles of tne Ar my of the Potomac." The volume con sists of a scries of letters, addrcssc I to the public press, almost weekly, from tho army, during the period over which they extended. The work is characterized by great manliness and candor of views, cx h.biting a clear, observing tninil, and the style of composition i> all that the most severe and fas'idibiis literary culture could desire. The leading purposes of the writer are stated in the preface to have been"to exhibit what the religion of Christ may and ought to become in camp,"and to furnish "others some just conception of camp life, of a great army in motion, and of two mighty hosts in the shock of battle," both of which pur poses tho author has well accomplished. We have read the book with care from beginning to end, and have marked many passages which we would gladly transfer to our columns, if space permitted. The 13th legimeiit went into camp at York, Pennsylvania, in May, thence to Cliamberaburg. Berkley, Ya., Martins burg, Jfcc., and July 22d was mustered out of service at Pittsburgh—the li)2d P< nnsvlvania volunteers being immedi ately organized therefrom, and hurried to Washington, to meet the emergency re sulting from the first Hull Run disaster. In this vicinity, and mostly at Tenally town, they were encamped till March 20, 1802, when they joined the grand army under Geueral McClellan, for the Pcuin sula. Under date of Jn.ie 16, 1861, at Charles City Court House, the author thus writes: Two years ago, after a scries of bloody battles, the last of which at Malvern Hill—tie most decided victory to tho Uuion arms of the war—we were hud dled up a' Harrison's Landing like a fiock of sheep, in a rather smali pen, for forty seven mortal days, alter which we retreated us quietly and as fast as we could past this old Charles City C. 11., in order to try our chances against the rebels in other localities, and perchance better auspices. What an interval! Since last here we have met the rebels in deadly conflict at Manassas, at Hull Run, at Centreville.and Chantilly, at South Mountain, ami An tietaiu, twice at Fredericksburg, at Salem Heights, and Chancellorsville, at Gettys burg. at Rappahannock Station, and Kel ly's Ford, and lately fur two days in the Wilderness, for a week a death-Btruggle in the slaughter-pens of Spotsylvania, on tk« North Anna and Pumunkey; for a week in the region of Coal Harbor, and now wc are bore. A larg* circle com plete ; two years to make it; thirty miles yet from Richmond. It' only the veter ans who left Harrison's Lauding ou the 18th of August, ISG2, Constituted the army which has now returned, how in significant the uuuiber!—melted away in that score of dreadful conflicts. Urare heroes of the former Peninsular army, you have not fought aud died in vain. Under date of November 27. 1863. is an account of tho battle at ltappahan nock Station, from which we are tempted to copy the following, in regard to a regi ment which Mnj. Gen. llancock represen ted as one of the bravest and best that lie over saw move in battle: SCENES ON TIJE BATTLEFIELD. —Ear- Iy next morning (Sabbath) I passed en tirely over the scene of last evening's bloody struggle. All quiet now. The wounded have been sent away during the night, and the sixteen hundred prisoners conveyed fur to the rear. The dead were being collected into groups, in order to be covered up in trenches, then digging by their living comrades. All were buried just as they fell—nncoffined, and shroud ed in their bloody garments—perhaps the fittest burial for the brave soldier. Atone place within t lie enemy's works were collected and laid side by side for interment, thirty froai the 6th Maine regiment. All noble-looking young men; still, calm, bloody, dead. They came from that far off north east, to sleep their last n!cep on the quiet banks of this lonely river. Nearly every one of these had re ceived the death-wound in the face, the neck, or upper portion of the breast, as they marched directly up tu the muzzles of the rebel rides With one other extract, which we can not forbear to copy, we take leave of this interesting and instructive volume. Writing from near IlanoverCourt House, May 28, 1801, the author says: STARVING OUT THE HMIKLS.— This nonescuse we have occasionally endeavor ed to combat in letters for the past three years. " Starve 1 out." Yes, so we have been assured hundred times over by bo gus legislators, ignorant, conceited news paper reporters, and still more senseless editors. ' Rebellion is on its last legs, its supplies are nearly every cut off. In a very brief period it will thus be forced to submit." Dear reader, hereafter don't believe a word of such stuff The rebel lion is neither starved out nor likely to be. There is but one way of putting down the rebellion— -jijht-it tluwn. Mole corn has been planted the pres ent season, and will be raised in Virginia alone than will suffice not only lier own inhabitants, but the whole of the rebel army, for the next two years. Wherev er we have gone in this campaign, im mense fields of corn, well cultivated, greet the eye. It all looks well, tho young stalks in many fields being already knee high. In not a few places has the forest been cleared during the past winter and planted in corn. P«ev. Mr. Stewart, the author when the regimen was mustered out of service at the end of three"years, was assigned to duty as chaplain at Glesboro; and with only si much knowledge of hiui as is to be gleaned from his book, and without assenting to every sentiment in the vol ume, we are prepared to believe that the Government has a discreet, faithful, and and cultivated gentleman in charge of the grave duties to which lie has been as signed. We have examined the book nurself, and can say to our readers that it will richly repay a reading—a few copies am tote found vrilh W.J.Young, our clerk of court, an active aiccmt for its sale is al so wanted, my wishing to undertake the business can call on him for information. A Man Who Has not Slept for Over Fourteen Years. At present there is a soldier at the Chestnut Hill Military Hospital, Phila delphia, who has not slept for a single moment for over "fourteen years rnd six months. This may seem incredible, hut nevertheless it is true, and can be verifi ed by numbers of persons. The individ ual is an intelligent man, naturally, and has the benefit of a moderate education. His name is 0. D. Saunders, orderly ser geant of Co. U, 13th Virginia Volun teers. He entered the service of the United States on December 28, 1803. lie is in the forty-filth year of his a_-e. — 11 is health has been generally excellent during his life. In 18dU he was attack ed with cholera, and since that peri'd with lung fever on two occasions. In the summer of 18«)0 sleep i irsouk him, and since that time he has never felt the least drowsy. He has always led a temperance life. His wile and children reside in l'utnam county, West Virginia. Since ha entered the Union army be has been on seven raids, and in lour charges, dur ing which time he informs us that he never felt tired nor sleepy. He was in the four charges made beyond Harper's Perry, Va., on the 17th, 18th, 19th and 20th of last August, and yet he did not feel the least sleepy. Why is it that he eaunot or does uotsleep is as much a mys tery to him as it is to many scientific gen tlemen who, having had their attention Culled to hiui, have been astounded in their attempts to investigate the cause. Upon one occasion, at his request, a number of curiously inclined gentlemen watched him for forty-two days and nights consecutively, in order, if possible, to ar rive at the cause of the wonderful phe nomenon. These gentlemen took turns in the progress of watching, so that if he should chance to sleep it would be observ ed. Some of the watchers became drow sy, and it was as much as be could do to awaken them. This singular man was sent to Phila delphia by order of the"fieM surgeon.— H« was admitud into the hospital at Chestnut Hi 1 on the 17th of November I last, suffering from chronic diarrhflja and j rheumatism. He has nearly recovered | from his physical disability. His »p£c- | tite is good, but yet lie does not sleep.— , He retires to bed, the same as other aol dicrs, but be cannot sleep. He simply j receives physical rest. This brief narra- J tive of a most wonderful phenomenon, | may seem fabulous, but the reader is as- i surcd that it is the truth.— Philadelphia ! l'ress. SHERIDAN!; VICTORY IN TIIE YALEY Sheridan Defeats Earlv. THE REBEL ARMY ROUTED. OFFICIAL. WASHINGTON, March 5. To General Dix, Acw l'ork: The following dispatches in relation to the reported defeat and capture of Gen. Early by Sheridan, and the capture of Charlotteville, have been received at this Department: General Sheridan and his force com menced their movement last Monday, and were at Stauutou when last heard from. Major General Hancock was placed in charge of the middle military division, during the absence of Sheridan, with headquarters at Winchester. [Signed.] K. M. STANTON. CITY POINT, VA . March s-11 A M. lion. E. M. Stanton : Deserters in this morning, report that Sheridan bad routed Early and captured | Charlottesville, 'lliey report four regi ments having gone from here (Kichuiond) to reinforce Early. [Sigucd.] U. S. GRANT, Lieutenant General. CITY POI.NT, March 5. //ox. K. M. Stvn lon: —Deserters from every point of the enemy's lines confirm the capture of Charlottesville by Sneri dan. They say he capture! Gen. Early and nearly his entire force, consisting of 1.800 men. Four brigades were report ed as being sent to Lynchburg, to get there before Geu. Sherman if possible U. S. GRANT, Li utennnt General. CITY POINT, March 5, 4 A. M. — Hon. E. M. Stanton .■ Itefuuees confirm the statement of deserters as capture of Ea»ly, and nearly his entire force. They say it tcok place on I hurfiday last between Staunton and Charlottesville, and tliat the defeat was total (Signed) U. S. GRANT, Lt. Geu. NEW YORK, Narcho. Tho Times says a-letter from Winches ter states that on the 2."> th u 1 1., cavalry reinforcements and pontoon trains arriv ed there: and on the 27th Geu. Sheri dan started with about five thousand cav alry, it is said to operate in tho direction of Lynchburg. Some say Sheridan and Sherman will meet and act together in that direction. Gen. Hancock assumed command at Winchester on the departure of Sheri dan. FROM NIIEKJIAN. The Washington correspondent of the New York Times* ays: —The absence ot news from Geu. Sherman, aud the reti cence of the rebel press concerning the movements of their owu troops, will nat urally tend to breed apprehension in the minds of many in regard to the conceit (ration of force? which the enemy is ma k.ng in the hope ol checking Sliciman's lii.ucli. it is well, therefore, to consider what uuuiber ot troop -, aside from Lee's old army, can be brought to resist our ad vancing columns. 1 am iu po. s ssion of some inf.imitation concerning tins matter, which will throw some light ou the subject. In the first place, it must be recollect el that when Beauregard assumed Coln maud of the ltebel iorcus immediately in Iroiii ol Sherman, he simply superseded 11 rdee, who was ordered to < harle.tm; be iu turn superseded Gen. Satnucl Jones there. The force which I'eauregard took command of was simply that which escajied from Savannah with Hardee, !cs- I'our thousand Georgia tniii'ia, wh cli were disbanded on South Carolina soil and returned home. This force thus reduced did not positively exceed, even it it reach e i,B."U'J effective men. lleauregnd did in t himself bring a man to swell the lor cea c./iltostiug Sherman's march ; and it has i.een simply impossible for any of llooa'j old army to have reached him since, as Sherman has been directly be tween the two forces. Hardee had at Charleston anil vicinity only two brigade*, including everything, i.r what wast iju <1 to one division rir live thuu.-aud men. The.-e moved northward au i hive probably formed a junction with Beauregard. At Wilmington, Bragjr had not exceeded live thousand men. principally composed of Iluke's Hi vision. These have fallen back in the direction ot ti>Msboro. On the line between Wil mingtou and Weldon, was stationed one brigade under tien. Bi'Ler, of North Car olina, not over three th >usand strong, in cluding conscripts,.militia, and every thing that could be dragged into ihe service. At Salisbury there is also a small reb el force two regiments L am told which will be relieved from their duty of guard ing prisoners by the change m.w going on. The entire infantry force that Beau regard can therefore bring to resist Sher man, from any other poiut than Rich mond, does not exceed at the outside twenty-two thousand meu, if it equals that. In addition, he has ft Carps of cav alry, commanded by Lieutenant Gen. Wade Hampton, an 1 composed of two divisions ; one commanded by Gen. Wheeler—the same whi» "whipped Kilpatriek" arwl then "/ell back" so often to G#orgia—numbering 4,000 men, and Hampton's div'sion from old Virginia, najv commanded by Gen. Butler, of South Carolina, number ing ft,500 men, or S total in the C jfps of 7,500 men. Beauregard'a entire force, exclusive oT any aid from Lee's is therefore about 30,000 men of all descriptions, and no resources of militia, minute men, etc., for they don't raise them in North Carolina. If Sherman forms a junction with Seliofield, as he undoubtedly will, it is safe to say that the two armies combined will be far superior to Beauregard's concentrated strength, and all the aid lie is able to get from the army defending Richmond. These figures are much nearer cor rect than the enemy would like to admit, and are based upon such data as to entitle them to full credence. Vice President Stephens of the Rebel Confederacy, was at Charles ton, North Carolina, on the 14th in stant, on his way to Oeovgia, but tar red awhile to se° how he could 1 est dodge General Sherman, who was di rect'y i" his path. It is an important fact that the rail roads between Atigustx and Atlanta, and between Macon and Atlanta, are still unrepaired. The travel across tin ''Gaps' is by means "112 stag s, wagons, sc. The "Southern Express Company" carry all their goods that way.— JY. Y. times. SCWN Items, —lt is thought time the Kichmond WAc/s statement that the railroad from Augusta to Atlanta is not completed, is proof that l>icn 'l'uylor's forces were not able to reach Sherman's rear iu season to | interfere Willi his movements. The reb els have evidently had no railway coin in uiijjfTii.'hs west of Augusta since Shoi uian passed through. —The Richmond Examiner says: Cul. Hatch, Commissioner of Kxchauge, has arranged to deliver at Wilmington all the Yankee prisoners in North Carolina us fast as transportation can Iw furnished. —The Richmond Examiner mention-' the attempt to burn down the State to tinccn ware house in llichin MI I.and says: The tobacco was mostly owned on private account, and was fully insure!, and the indications are that the owners attempted to burn the building and thus secure the insurance. —The Rebel Senator Robert Toombs in a speech at Augusta, Georgia, on the j 16th nit.. says: Bad regulations and had 1 management were the cause of the dan | gers that beset the South. He declares I that they must begin at the root of the evil and apply the true remedy and de mand the removal of the administration. —Advices from Mexi«oSi#te that the war in the Lhiited States I* Attracting the special attention of the Imperial Govern ment. The police are directed to arrest all who express their sympathy with the Federal Cause, and one man, named Val dez, has been sentenced to a years impris onment lor speaking favorably about the j United States, and predicting the speedy end of the rebellion. The Imperial Treasury is constantly getting lower. The hostility id'the Church party to the Km peror Waxamilliaii is on the increase. —Should the panic now r ging in Rich.noiid arid the rebel army not ne soon squelched, and Sherman contin ue his unopposed inarch north towards Richmond, as it is evident he will from the news received from Gilmore that Hood was nearly a week behind Sherman, while Beauregard and liar dee were away to bis right, it is tho't bv high officials that Lee will be uri aiile to make a-other serious battle. —A dispatch from Oswego, Y. Y. of the 4th says, that Mayor Grant , e "'iveoji di.-pitch from Gov. E nlo , stating that the War Department i.t Washington had received iufortfiatiori from Halifax that the rebels in Prov inces are contemplating a raid on Os wego and Rochester. A public meet ing was to be held in that city on Sat urday evening, to take such action on the matter as might be necessary. —Brigadier General Joseph Hays.cap tured last. September in the movement which resulted in our permanent occupa tion of the Wtldoo Railroad, has return on parole from Richmond, ami will goon j! e exchanged. Several weeks prior to i his release, Grneral Hays wis paroled in ' Richmond for the purpose of attending to i the distribution of supplies forwarded to j our prisoners. During th it lime, be dis tributed six thousand blankets, 2.500 suits of clothing, and twelve hundred boxes of ! supplies, principally among the prisoners |nt Richmond, Danville and Salisbury, j which did much toward alleviating their condition. —The Japanese who visited this I country three years agogave thirteen i thousand dollars to Anguste Belmont for the benefit of the New York po lice, as a reward for their attention Jto visitors. The money has never been distributed, and now a man who | was'a member of the police at the time comes before the courts with a ; claim for his s'lare of the money.— The terms of the gift were such as to complicate the case, and the lawyors | are likely to get a good share of it. —ln the a'ley in the rear of the ■ old Broadway Hotel, in Nashville, on Friday, the remains of a dead negro were found. The hard rains of last week has washed the dirt away, and one of his arms was left sticking out. ; Upon disinterring the body, it was found that the negro has been literal ly cut to pieces before burial, the arms and legs being separate from the body. The condition of the body shows that he had been buried for some time. —The Richmond Examiner says: On Saturday last, tweuty-one taansports, con taining»ix thousand troops, left Alexan drij for Fortress Monroe. Their destina tion is supposed to b® Gram'* hoes. tint of CiraiMl Jaront! DRAWN FOR MARCH TERM, 1865. Thos. Stevenson, Ksq., Slippcryrock; Daniel Meals, Sr., Washington; lirowa J. Dodds, Penn ; James Say, I'arkerj A. B. Tinker, Uutler tp. ; Thomas Brandon, Fratiklili ; Anthony Hoon. Oakland; I). S. hkas, Buffalo ; Jos. M'Gowcu, Mud dycreek ; JOSEPH Murrin' of Jos., Venan go ; James G. Wilson, Jackson; Micha el Kmrick, Summit , Jno. Ilarhison, Mid dlesex ; E. L. Varnum, Centre; Samuel Colwell, Jefferson ; Jag. S. Shields, Mer cer 1 ; Wm. Pouthett, Forward ; Jas. Ste venson, Connoi|uenessing; A. B. Story, Fairvicw; Sam'L Cornelius, Worth; Thos. Ekus, Clinton; Robert Carnahan, bor. Hutler; Jiuies ALLE'J, Clay ; Juo. Parks, Adams. TRAVERSE JURORS —FIRST WEEW. George. W. Milford, Allegheny; Rob ert Pinkerton, Adams; Silas Covert, Bra dy ; Matthew Greer, Buffalo; Jacob Wal ter, Butler ; James Wilson, Centre ; Levi Stewart, Cherry; Ephraim Allen, Clay; lliiirh M'Crea, Clearfield ; Edward Fink, Clinton ; John Starr, Sr., Concord ; Jas. W. Garvin, Cranberry; JIIS. Welsh, Jr., Connoquenessing ; John Wolford, Done gal ; Chambers Scott, Fairview ; Jno. Al bert, Franklin ; Benj. Douthett. Forward; Jacob F. Wise, Jackson ; Matthew Cun ningham, Jefferson ; Ilenry WT-steifield, Lancaster; Robert M'Dowell, Marion; Wash. Buchanan. Mercer; Thos. Logan, Middlesex; Dunwiddy 'Collough, Mud dycreck; Matthev Harbison, Oakland; Eli Hartkell, Penn; Robert Storey. Par ker; DUV. Armstrong, Slippcryrock ; Ja*. Kearns, Summit; Robert Martin. Sr., Veuango; Samuel M. Moore, Washing ton; John Young, Winfield; John Ren net, Worth; M. W. Spear, boi-O Butler; Josiah M'Michacl, Millerstown ; Absalotn Slianor, Prospect; Jonathan MA;, berry ; Centreville; tieo. Beam, Harmony. SECOND WEEK. ifohn B. Adiington, Portersville ; John Wober, Saxonbnrgj Eckart Bcntel, ZE licnoplc ; Solomon Snyder, Harrisvillc ; John N. Pollock, Allegheny ; Jerry W. ' Starr, Concord ; John English, Cranber ry ; Thomas Watson, Winfield; Jona than Clutton, Brady ; Armstrong Reni- I son, Adams; Samuel 11. Flemming, Buf . falo; William Bartley, Butler; Ilenry T Whituiire, Centre ; James Smith Cher ry; James Stoughton, Clay; Wm. Har vey, Esq., Clinton ; Samuel Wilson, Con noquenessing; John S. Shakley, Done . ! gal; W. G. Stoughton, Fairview; Peter Albert, Franklin ; John Cowan Forward ; Jacob 11. Ziegler, Jackson: Philip Burt ' ner, Jefferson ; William Wilson, Lancas ter; Joseph Marshal, Marion; William P. Brabant, Mercer; A. T. Harbison, > Middlesex ; John M' lymonds, Esq., Muddyereck ; Jacob Larimore, Oakland; ' j Andrew Kmrick , Penn; Z. B. Shepherd, ' Parker; Jumes Adams. Jr., Slippery rock; John Forcth, Summit; Thomas I Kay, Venango; David Pi cr. V> a~h;ng- I j ton ; Thomas Clark Worth; William . j Truxall, boro. Butler; William S. Boyd, . I BU'ler. j si'iiuAi, xoTicia. , A nil"Utiocmcnt, , BVTI.KU March 7, I ! MR. EMTOIC—P!ea*e annuities the iMinoof (; B AN- I ItK SON. or llutl-r l> T V »< a |ioi. ri eferyway qnall - : r.-.l Ift di*chai'Ke the 'liltie* of I' .-t M l-Wr, 41)1 who Will > ; bo i.upp>r>oJ »u tli* ISth oi March, by hie M*SR PRICES. - I M* *r»r!- >n:— Plea*e announce the name of ORIKOE | W M' 1.1 Kit, "112 Butler, l:V" Manyfiienda. M . . _ RO\-.OQI:K.NKSSIMI LOnOE, t *"*' ' " " 112 " K ' h ""' "* M. >nday evening. eommencibjr at *ix nVIo, L. Brethren from "inter l..wipee »r» rerpocl ri'l -1 j y invited to attend. By or Jar of the N. 0. JSOITOH or ClTute* : I'/'IK Sill:—With yo.ir pormit . el--ii IMI- ll to t'ty to Hi,* render* 'if your llt.i I i will #eud, by ieuun mfti'. t - all who wieli it ;f.e-.Rlte - I eipe. w ill f'itt di: ciione fe* ni'ikimf nnl n-in.; ;i ei .iple V . I.ln l alio tlu.i will efl. . :mlly ■ .-in ve. MI ten <1 iyt, Pimple., 111-tehee lan. Pre-kle.. awl DKESS GOODS, PRINTS, > GINGHAMS, Balmoral &. Hoop-Skirts, : GLOVES AM) HOSERY, . C.OA«IN of all Dov ' cription, : MILLINERY GOODS, j New Style Cloaks, Snqucs anil Ches terfields, always on hand and j. made to Order. , Cloaking Cloth of all Kinds CALL AND EXAMIN 0 CR STOCK Aiarch 8,1665.