Township Institute. °' Plasm:int to previous notice, and in accordance with an act of Legislature, an Institute has, been formed in Ulyssees. Ist session June 14, 1862, at the Olm sted School House. Meeting called to order by the District Seeretary,and Frank Leet called to - the chair. Miss Helen `Gridley was chosen Secretary for the session Present 4 Directors; 7 Teachers of the District, also Miss Burt, teacher at Lewisville, Miss Wildman, teacher in Allegany, and several citizens; also the County Superintendent; whose kind at tendance and assistance were duly appre ciated. At the call of the Presidect, L. Bird, Secretary of the Board of Directors, read the law creatig these Institutes,and the explanations of the State Superin— tendent—also staced - the object of the meeting.. It .wasl stated that the main -object is to afford i teachers opportunities -of mutual improvement and they sho9id de most of the work of the session. Pro ceeded to the discussion of questions • pertaining to teaching. Ist, • Resolved, That it is not advisable for the teacher to wholly prevent whispering during study hours. • 'After an animated discussion a vote was taken and the question was lost.— (Poor children, no, more whispering.) 2d, ,Resolved, That WO• desire the County Superintendent to hold an Institute for the County next fall=that it is the duty 4 1 of tea lers to attend—and of all citizens to ene rage ouch Institutes by all proper meth° 5. After some_reinarks,the question was carrie&in the affirmative. A committee which was previously appointed reported an order of business for the P. M. AFTERNOON SESSION lst;Discussion.—Best method of te2ch ing the Multiplication Table. It was generally tonceded +hat it• is better to teach it by easy ilhistrations; and by using be table than to require th'e scholar to learn it by absolute' emory. 2d. How to. explain SubtraCtion, by Miss Mary Burt. 3d. How long and at what hours should small scholars be confined to the school house ? Some amusing and "old Fogy" arguments idre used in favor of "close ennfinement"-but fortunately for tbe little urchins, Young America and Progress prevailed, and they can have plenty of exercise in the open air. 4th. How shall a scholar who will not study, be made to study ? Verdict— , stir up in him a will to study by placing pro Per motices before his mind, but not thrash sth.' Can the . teacher make a law; in I reference.to studies and behavior in school 1 and enforce it-? Mr. Lewis stated that the teacher can regulate the scholars' studies Within the boundaries recognised by the School Law, and can compel good behavior. Question left open fur discus sion. A committee of three appointed to I prepare a plan of organization,—to report'l at next meeting, consisting of L. Bird, Q. Grover, M. Neefe. ' On motion, the President appointed i Misses Wagner and Olmsted to read, eac'a a short essay, selected or original, Miss Wildnian to speak upon "Teaching the Alphabet," and Miss Gridly upon "What. is Required to Qualify the Teacher ?" all at the next meeting, On motion, an ex tract of these proceedings were ordered to be for Warded to the JOURNAL with a request for publication. . It is evident at' impression is'' formed that the Institute will be a good thing. Names of Teachers—Misses M. 'But. N.Wilciman, W. Wildman, A.E.Oluisted, C. Grover, M. Neefe, U. Wagner, H. Gridley and N. Burgess, (4/1 of_ which participated in the discussions. , • Adjourned two weeks. HELEN GRIDLEY, Se 'y. L.BIRD,See'y of Board of Direct's. It is reported that Gen. McClellan has been largely' reinforced General Mc- CO's division, made up mostly of the Pennsylvania Reserve, Corps, has gone . forward some 8,000 strohg. Ten re i meats which have during most of the year been at Newport. News, Old Point,. and other-places, havd also joined the grand army. It, is also, understood that a number of regiments are comingforward from the west. Everything now indicates that the battle of the war is to be fought at Richmond, and our Government is determined 'flirt there shall be men enough there to fight It successfully. ' There. are now at West Point 174 cadets 28 of whom comprise the first class, 26 the:second class, 32 the third class, and 88 the fourth class! , About 90 appoint ments have lately been made, but are not Included in the above figures. Gen. Butler is engaged in feeding the poor" ofNew Orleans. The Louisville Democrtit Rays they may object to, martial law, but they like its "provisions.", TELE JOURNAL. Coadeisport. Pa. Wednesda l y, June 25,1862 M. W. MeALARNEY, Roma. The People's State Convention The people of Pennsylvania, 'who desiie cor dially to unite in sustaining the National Ad ministration in its!palrioticofforts to suppress a sectional and unholy Rebellion against the unity of the Republic, and who desire to sup port, by every power, of the jGoveriareeat, ,ouc hundred thousand Iwic brethren in arnis, braving disease !and iKe .perils of the field to preserve the Union of Our Fathere,are request ed to select the number of Delegates eq - nal!to the Legislative Representation of the State, at such times and in such manner as will best respond to the. spirit of this call, to meet !in State Convention at Rerrishurg„ on Thursday the nth day ofJuly neit, at eleven o'cleck,to nominate candidates - for the offices of Aildit.or General and Surveyor General, and to take such measures as may be deemed necessary to strengthen - the, Government in this season of common peril to a common. country. A. K. AIcCLURE, • Chairman People's State Committee. Pro-SiaTery Shill: It is astonishing,says an exchange, hew many Northern newspapers, which,before the rebellion broke out, in virtue of their so-called . Democrady, were pro-Slavery, , are nro-Slavery still. The war, with its horrible developments,- has taught them nothing Slavery is still to them the "blessed institution:" They !see thousands of slaves set to work to build fortifications, Qtr which to mount cannon stolen from the Government, and ;front behind which cowardly. traitors • May ' destroy the liVes of brave men milting unshielded to the defense Of their country; and yet they are unwilling that we should free those slaves from the bondage that compels them to strengthen the hands ,of their cruel oppressors and our deadlyfoes. Again, 'they see the slaves througho l ot rebeldom employed to raise food for tiiej rebel armies, thus enabling all the able- ' bodied whites to engage in the war iftai'o.t their country; and they evince no desire to have such a state of things interrtipte!d. When- the rebel Generals need supplies. they.se;ze them, and those whose property has been seized must set their slaves to work to produce lustre, which may. again be siezed to feed armed rebels ; while our Government Cuu.st pay for the food and! clothing and all other supplies of its irriz I mense armies, thereby incurring, vast I debts, and thus furnishing nnpatriotic Northern pro-Slavery journals a text from, which to preach hypocritical sermons on , the extravagance of the' Government. It, our Government is rffraiintr, rapidly and enormously in debt, by whom was it com pelled to do so? • Was it not. by the! Slavelhld2rs, the authors of this most wicked rebellion ? And why should we,, whose pr'operty as well as the lives cf . , thousandS, they are . their rebellion robbing Us of, be so tender and solicitous for the preservation of their property ? There is no doubt that this rebellion could net poss Iv - live many months without! the aid ofSlavery ; there is as little doubt that Slavelry,instead of a source of strength 1 , (night be turned into a source of weakness to the re ellion, if our Government would. pursue t wards its enemies as severe a line °I p i licy as other Governments pur sue similar cases, and as the rules of war - would justify. We say. then jet the slaves of rebels be set free and the prop erty of rebels be confiscated to pay the expenses of this war; and let those who oppose these just and . proper metisures cease their howling about the vast expeuseslof the war and the consequent taxes to which • the loyal people of the North must be subjected. We hold that the wicktd authors of the war—the Slave holders 4 the' South—should be coin- r, e I d tolpav its expenses as far as possi bie ; and those editors and partisans,who,' while magnifying,the exptnses of tlie . war, and endeavoring to persuade the people that great i suff:ring is in store for them in conrequence; yet oppose every Move ment toveards confiscating the property of rebels and depriving them of the products of Slavollaber, May justly be looped up9n with sus r pieion as the actual and active, though .11:ael;,finwiedged, ;lilies of rebels and tmitors. Cottl!lni.-1 end Sherman, in hls effi chi] report of the ocupation of Corinth, remarkslwitli surpri'se upon the weitkuess of the clierny,s : works there. Alihough so long n "possession and with such an abundance of 'laboring force, their en trenchmnts were less extensive than sev eral lines of temporary works thrown up by cur army on its', advance from Pitts burg Landing. This does not agree With General Illalleek's telegrams announcing the 'evacuation of Corinth, and in !which he said the enemy's works were very strong. 1 1 • • NASIIVILLE June 'l.2. = A dispatch from Gen. Negle y to G)vernor Johnson anpoundes the . success of his expedition to Ea4l. Tennessee. He took • eighty nrisonerS, inclUdiM , a number of promi nent cizens. 1 Thu rebel 'batteries at Chattanooga were 'silenced on the TO) after a heavy cannonading of three holt . Our forces opened fire nest day and c 1- tinned it for six hours on the town, driv ing the 4newy 6ut of his works and forcing him to levacuate the city. The: rebels: burned the railroad bridges to preventi pursuit.' Thi: East Tennessee people came out in crowds along the route of the march and cheered our troops enthusi astically! ' ; 1 - - . An Arkansas regiment is being raised for the iJuion army ' trnieh is to ba com• manded by Col. La Rue Harrison. National Debt— Rebel sympathizers, iu Congress; and ont of it are endeavoring to alartir the honest people by grossly exaggerated ac counts of the , costs of suppressing the iWar begun by the Rebels. They say, "the Debt is now Ten or Twelve Hundred Millions of Dollars, and growing at the rate of Two 'Or Three Millions a day—we had better compromise, and give the South its rights—Slavery won't hurt us any." Some true frieliads of the Union hove thoughtlessly acdepted these state ments as facts. But Mr. Dawes', the watchful; Congressman from Massachu setts, has presented, from Official data, the following ;exhibit : In time of Peace. Mr.: Bub banan left the Nation in debt We have appropriated for War purposes Up to 2?d May, 1862 Total National Debt $511,000,000 (Less, some millions paid, but balanced by floating debt and elnims, probably . — 77 [, Our Military and not average One. 600,000 men are on t The ordinary expel] are on a scale Eight t, per year than they %Ter . In proportion to 9 ,wealth, our Debt is mu , at the end of the War u Debt does not much of England's debt. WY-Better yet—und ;Cobb, it VVRS hardly po: ey for the Union Gov: cent discount. Under Lincoln an easily raised 'on U. S. I I a premiuM. SW - We see. it state , cratic war upon a few cost the Union $1.00,0 to Africanize Taus— the Nation in all fro, Hundred 'Milhous I . Restore the Pro-Sia, its former power, dye and yield to its new credit and wealth will ,increase and Liberty b , be warned by the Chronicle. Thurlow Weed, in a Europe, says that the volunteers iu facing ba ing redoubts, under • commendation of veter in Europe, who look in raw volunteers. Not one•fourth of th ) sum appropriated by the District of Coln) 11)41 Emancipation 1 1 3 bill. for the compensati )n of slave owners, will be required, so n any of the slaves having been run off • their masters in anticipation of the pas age of this act . . . Opathleyobolo, one f the loyal Indian chiefs driven from Ar ausas and the In :dian Territory by the rebels, told Capt. Coffin of the Federal a my who was about to start for Fort L avenworth, '•You bring us down some w sous that shoot !" The bereavements as the single city of N 'corned—bate a dread .in the appalling fact Delta, that there are to J;fur hundred orphc; asylutrismf that city There are seventeen engaged at the Washi repairing vessel:: and id dc.eription of ordnane. Three hundred wo at Washington in the tridges, of which two are manufactured per The Breckinridge reviving the cry that Connecticut the latest volunteers are deniocr same thing in thes St• was held. - It is said that not 1 slaves of Delaware ha orie•knows whither, broke out. ,Thero are at riret..e t, eight full regi meats of Batt tentle.eeatis in the U. S. ,service, and about 5, 100 fugitives from that-Siate, on account of their. loyalty. The Nashville Union thus speaks of the Vallandigham Democratic Address 'The:Union men of the South regard it. as the production of a pack of traitors. They detest both the Address and its author. 7 . Yet t'here are locofocos th. the North., stoutly professing to he Union men, who endorse that Address] • Prenticesays Lot's wife would.be'wortit seventy-five cents u pound in the South ern Coufedetacy. Gc'eral Floyd says that the federal arms do not "go off" so quickly a., they did whcu he was Secretary of War. There are thirty of the blood relations of the late .Gen. L on, now liglitinf.; for the cause for which lie lost hiA life. An Irish school master in Ireland ad vertises to keep Sunday School twice a Week—Tuesday and Saturday. Bully for him ! - Kossilth has latey lost his second daughter; aged eighteen. , Jeff. Davis has is9ned an address to the rebel army, claiming a victory at the battle of Fair Oaks 11 John Bull .would call this a Fair floamto l i _ . 1 Au Arms penioc:Tykit. ..t 1 Henry TA, Cake, gol..dotrim clitir th vi i s Ninety-Siitii Regiment,'. of EN t n4lyatiiii. Volunteers-4hd was private ' C4tai9 McDonald's company, Odell ; anon; the ftrat' to retich.the Capital oft 9 o er:tlo fall of Sr:niter,' when alliwas :gloo. and iles T pendency,: and who . 1 1ins;iiince , e'er( pro; !noted to the high Position he: oac?pies is well:known in this State .as rta i rdent Democrat: ' : Ile co r operated it .the straight Douglas Democracy, in I.§6P,and was one Of the : men who too, 'gtounril against the criminal ,Lecomptod poißcy of jarneslß . uchanan. ' Ile'end hi regt . taelt are now in•ihe advanceltinder ~Gen:i.M - Clellan, and we are net surpris4d t 9, he9r a that he 'has proved to be. niosi effibie t Co,energetic,.and popular coniudnder. , uo . Cake, in a letter to J. II:: Pulegten,imir?.- tary agent .of Pennsylvania, lexptesses 1 some opinions which Will be t reack with; interest, 'written, as. they: are, lfroli the batte l field, and being the Jentiiiients of a ;conscientious, Detnocr4 ' ; After speaking. of big pro-Douglas pi,ioelitles,' he.:says : : , s "That the' war will be prose nted to; a .successful issue for ;the Union . .s; 14,yoticl a peradventure. I did' not vo e' fot Mt. Lincoln, but ,I belieie that God ;ltnlglity had a hand in his election. Hel has three . good years to conquer a ppac4 but the present Congress ha 4 only one. 1 It Would seem impossible that this violent. and. vita -1 dictive contest can draalong frat Other 1 'twelve month,' but it may. II: 'Thre, old. stagers of the Democratic pa are )yitig lin wait, and by a judicious lilindlin‘z t‘f the, 'war debt,' the taxes,'' the -black .11.:- I publican Abolition' .seilie-crow,l 4.1t4t an nually emancipates a flood of bloa labor, and sets it North to the .untloiilg of: free ' labor at home,' it .ii just positle tilaft7a large majority of such Politiciais asOitl die and 'Ancona will takethe placeflit' the present more conservative tuaArit)l arid then where' are we ? I. ' 1 It .„ "As sure as it happens, I billiev tl:e great traitor Breckinridge and his part y, or all that are left of them, will e invited. back, and the war will have acc(iMplislied nothing. ' Thus itinay;overtakd us. , in your time and mine: The 11anta I the South Will be wore: exaet,ta, I ever, and while they again coMe il North to insult us with iiiimthitY.l -prohibit our 1-peaking above qiiist Dixie. _ he Figures:: $70,0D0,000 441,000,000 aval expenses do In a day, although le rolls of service. ses of Government Ten Millions less . • under Buchanan. lir numbers and h less than it was f '76. Our whole teed the interest Per Buchanan and ible to raisd [nip ! irninent at 12 per Chase, money . is ends which bear 1 that the Deino i ndians in Florida 0,000. Our War Mow seceded !-*cost ! Two to Three cry Demc.erncy to the Free States ; remands, and Our nue, and our Debt e crushed. Let us bast I.—Lewisburg "We can never be at peace South until an inflexible poli,iy n 1( to Slavery has been estabitAiedi fore, meet que:•tion now. Le recent letter froul: ersistance of our teries, and s.torin• re, has won the n military officers "ir no such results abolition be, s.o gradual that iE almost imperceptible. done, who doubts that every the South, the cotton,tice, sugar! ! , tub, hemp, and turpentine region- 7 -wlll ;tb modate itself to the I)6T : order ;t hi' It requirea no Daniet itO sugg.d,si, ;lint a Eveat. -party only can carry out the tint ails of the turt;de.', . • 1;' "Let all who are skives rem; in plan tjs until they die; but aftkir the tirsy of Ja4 uary; the. 4th of Jialy, lkS4 human being be born into 'slav4Y - in the ,United States of Anterica. ThiS, has nothing to do with the:divositiOn confiscated property of, rebelsaM't.l if Govcintnent wants to ; furtiler;Llet. price he paid for the slaves of Supm.Stat . ls voluntarily asking the precipirtloil f emancipation. the wslr—o far w Orleans is m il exemplilicatinn admitted by the . fewer than (wenty chMten in the "This war should bea- solve frbit. But that fruit be a - hundred .cents ofi4ieii.."l 1 . I - Wetimii (IF .7 , 1 ENTI9N.—A .etcrlll . .. - dent of the Phihotelnbia Ewpi rei• says that while Banks was re:reatinti!CdOngh Winchester, and niurtierous voflity:i were beim: poured into hi i ! ranks tow: tii,c windows and houseteps, a rebel mi l s observed :taking :dill at the Generbl.4 tyltep a private, of the 46th Betinsylvalialletti• merit, flatbed John Clark,' instiu4l3i 4,reW a h e w) e t i the fellow and sent Iti:11 11 hi l s• last account, !bus probartly savini t t ttit: i Ilf!e ,if his coniiiiande tt i. Tire :i leer4ptaeldl for the ,act,. disniountedf from hys Ilitrse, inquired bis name. and i thankedi liirp 4 The JOhn Clark inentiOtied here Ito6-ferlir resided in ticranton',i and was eui)isite:tl h . ! Captain Fitzgerall's e4iiiipany eiol:ii tilt: place.—Sarantem .11,110,Iirgut. i r hundred worlonen loon Navy yard in nnufaet uring every len are employed preparation of car hundred thousand papers are again Ion) sonic places— ! two titirds of the its. They (lathe te until au election 'ms one•tenth of the •c disappeared,'no ince the rebellion . - The - Atlanta .Cottleiliiracy ca ov ; .. 'w. Gilmore SillilliSi the neyelist,.od i e bq thj most unfortunate men of. the 4yl II d. lost all his property, and sources oitrnici r by the disruption of• the cou f iri,l,.tlie publishers and holders of his eopYi.tg l 4 residing in the North., Fle.had llobteed children.; Lately lie buried nine t;illt.4ent i and a few days, ago. his. !muse and !ill Ii effects were- consumed, by fi re. Ni)t)tin9 w;.s saved from the general ruin but his ~;, library. • ‘ 1 •• • • 1 i,t • • • • • = Mr. Russell, since his. retutlo for i • land, not hesitate to as'on 11)4 entire "sympathies are; and alwasT ihave been, with the North, and frao;l:yieon fesses. that, in Lis, late correstiontlencF with the'London Times, he has it:Etter under.dietatibri, and not as his.owni con victiuns would have led 'him to doi, 3 A few days: before 'the Unicin .! , forces t oo k 'r,o,essiou of Norfolk, •ttutie) was itiven of the :,ale, Nay 12, of tUrealhun• dyed and sixteen . e . olered men anilirionen who had failed to 'pay their eit t yl(axefr. before May 12, the. city .was is 1 v iiiiin hands; and those imprisoned ,!lleti ' and Niemen, who were to be suld,werer.e4ased [! i Six: 'ladies" of Newbern, N. 01, wbo have to thank the United States 'lraqis for their-'daily bread, recently ehati'ced o meet, when one of them invciotari y v 1 exclaitned, , “What shOuld we lhat done if these "cussed" Yankees hadre 4mo l!". It i 4 s extra that'. : the Mlhave destroyed $70,000,000 Worth of 4pe4 since 'lle. war began. 1 : 1 11 1 JUNE 15.... ~ ...:,1 ..„ 9 •. •_ ~,, II L. 4 I ' NEW AT , • - Ag.‘i elowithe prices here given. - if TAKE pleasn e in informing my friends A and costomgr i , that I ann.. just receiving a!lfine, fresh'assoqment: . of Goods and that all those. who are in ..want of nny had betteriivi Me an early call. .. ; i. • : ! : keep pal" GOODS .. , . t ROdERIES„ • . .: •;. PROVISIONS; 1400 TS and SEIOES,, 1 (iapc,KERY. i . - • ,1 ii ''' . ! And everything usu Ily Lirdin a ColintiN Sture 4I; have justi c retOw' rned froth - Ne York with one of. the best and 1.. • 1 ' il r °. e: . ! ` 1 '' l,, . • • , i e'wer.brou ntlinto! this _connty..l t propose l ' . 1 . tp, e; these GOODS FIFTY per 1 . ct lover than can be bought in this vicinity, Wells- iiiille or Olean notexeepted. , My Goods .have i i been bought;fort CtA'S I-1 froth ;a large nuthberlofl houses tliat-tiad failed in the city, at froth s'o tor. l :slets. on the dbllar 4,f the origlflail tost therefore I al - ireo -. .-ed to.:give all great bar ianis that ohOo: - .1e to give me a c'all! ,tgaln yi )f tin u ) ti L ' 4 ,4 r In t LOOK Ail . So-qE OF THE PRICES 'vtely nice Meetin gs front Bto , 1.11 ets , soal ay most merchants at the ?re eat time for 1:1 to IS. GOod cOtton:. batS for S cis roll Good Prints °for 6 to 11, worth to 14. : One Delaines frorn,ll to 20 cis.; ward) 15 to 25 . and '3O: Good T*eds from 25 to S 8 cts.; Worth 41, and. 63:_ Good' Black ziilk front 50tcts. to $l.OO, worth .cts of 41:1?::: ClOthc2s : Coat, ;Boot!i. I;r:lvat. ike4 for I t. worth $lB. Groceries,lhaVe a good sweet pleasant for 50 cts per lb:, qnd, upwards.- . GOod`..itigar for 8 cts., white cchree_ . suoi• 11. -Sal eHratus fo 6 ets..COdee IS. 801) - 8 cts. bar NfolaSses for 45 cts. D l ei , gal. .136 A. kerosene 0i1,::44 cts, gallon Floorat "Wellsville priees " lu thi:.• lire of .Boots and Shires we baVe a Ladies Enamel e'd Morocco Boof'for 50 cts sold by must dealers for SI to 51..25, Heavy. Kip Lia - dies. Walking BoOt cts Fine Congress Gaiters and other's . from 50.cts. to SI 00, ti~orth6 to l 2 shillings. Fine Calf Boots for '2 50; Fine Stogey boots for Fineßroche Shawls flar shillingS anti up- Wards. • liLadies , Stella Shawli3 froin S 0 221 shillings.. Woolen . for 121, shilling and tipward.. Flininell froth 2 shillings 'per yad. Gingliams for ten cents Cambrics for 9 CAB. Heavy Working Ribbed it,ket Coats for 8 shillings. !. 1 . And 'row. I intena to keep my stock frill bO supply those who may hOose to;buy.at • f • I _ WHOLESALE .or RETAIL, And all Families of Volunteers 'ill receive 1 Goods at the first dpk in New York, regardless of transportatiOn, and I still hold tiy offer - 00 to pay any one that lls upon rne. dnd ',not finding nods at the prices given to pay t4ein for their time and expenSes •, in coming. . L. U. SIMMONS,' §wAyo REGULATOR Jtvte 25, 11115. 1 4 El RTEI 014 GOOD, El JONES'COLUM NSW GOODS AND SOMETHING ELSE NEW ! ! T HE sub;cribers,at their t OLD STAND ON MAIN STREETI COUDERSPORT, Offer. to their old customers and the pulls generally for Cash, United States •Treasnrq Notes (which by the way are taken at Par,) Wheat, Corn, Oats, Buckwheat, Butter,Cheess, Hides, Pelts, Deer Skins, and all other kinds of Skins, such as Calf Skins, &c., also, Beans, Beas, Venison, and some other things that can't be thought A .'LARGE AND WELL-SELECTED ASSORTMENT OF DRY GODDS, BOOTS & SHOES, DEADYMADE CLOTHING GROCERIES, Hats & Caps, Hardware, DRUGS & MEDICINES, Polnts, Oils, and Dye SluID, Together with some of the best KEROSENE OILL Far superior to the Oil Creek or Tidioute Oil • LAMP &LAMP FIXINGS, POCKET CUTLER!, ,Also a few more of thoze Superior CANDOR PLOWS, SLEIGH SHOES, GLASS, SASH, PUTTY; INK, 'PAPER, ENVELOPES, And other kinds of ,STATIONtARY WALL PAPER, ' WINDOW CURTAINS And other articles which time alone for bids us to mention, all of which will be sold as low as the WAR PRICES. will allow—for strictly itEADY-PAY I! And for those articles we take, the high• est market price will be paid. - We' are also General Agents-for DR. D. JAYNE'S Family Medicines, DR, AYER'S Medicinei, BRANDIIETR'S KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, And all the standard Medicines of the day CALL kND SEE! C. S. & E. A. JONES. • , . N. B.• The pay for the Goods must be on hand when the Goods are delivered, as wear° determined,to live to the motto of ggiq 18 Ton Go." Just one thing more. The Judgments,uPteg and book accounts which we have oil hand must be settled and closed up immediately or we fear they will be increased faster than tits anal :tile of intent... _Poll • PROVISIONs, Iron l - Nails,