LATEST NEWS. ANOTHER BATTLE AT, PEA RIDGE. WASHINGTON, Saturday, Oct. 25'62. —The following was received at the head quarters of the army to-day : Our arms are entirely successful again in North-West Arkansas. • , Gen. Scofield, findine that the enerny had camped at Pea Ridge, sent Gen blunt with the Ist Division westward, and moved toward Huntsville with the rest of his forces. Gen. Blunt by making a bard night's „march, rcached and attached*he Rebel force nt Maysville, near the notth•west Omer ofAnysville, at 7 o'clock in the morning of the 22c1 inst. The enemy were estimated at from 5,- 000 to 7,000 strung. The engagement lasted an hour, and resulted in the total rout of the cnewy, with the loss .of_ all his artillery, a battery of 6-pounders, a large number of horses, and a pettier' of their transportation and garrison equipments. Our cavalry and light howitzers were still in pursuit of their scattered forces when the messenger left.. .oer loss Was small. • . Gen: Schofield pursued Gen. Hindman 'beyond. Huntsville, coming close upon hiui,laiten his forces precipitately fled be yond •the Boston Mountain. All the organized forces of the RAbels have thus.been driven back to.the Valley kit' the Arkansas River, and the Army of Ithe Frontier has gallantly and successfully -'.accomplished its mission. REMOVAL OF GEN BUELL Gen. Buell has been relial,;ed of the cututnand Which he bas abundantly proved himself' incapable of wielding, 'a fact iitich will rejoice the loyal North not on . ly - btoanse of its effect upon our military • - prospects -o in one DepartMent, but because he regarded as indicative of a pur pose" :on the part of the Administration to &justice beneeforward without fear or fiver in'respect of individual Ge"erals, sand to-conduct the war solely to the end of victorY,,tisine;_those means to that end *bich are indisfiensable to military suc cess, Wit!lout regard to the wishes of par tizans.— Perhaps Buell's reinstatetneet, after,the deserved order for his removal we,it forth a few weeks ago, Was neces sary in order to convince even Kentucky that the game which he played was nit the . gante of war. ..Now, as we aro as• urea . both by natives of the State hith erto tavotable to hint, who have just ar rived here, and by army correspondents fresh from Louisville, Kentucky, whose influence fora , moment overbore Ohio and Indiana; is converted from the maw of ter ways, and joins his soldier:4, on] he has led everywhere but to battle-. in bog ging that; Beal be superseded by some body who knows how to bring the enemy to i'light and to .beat hint. That Gen. IttiSenerans, who succeeds Oen Buell, is such a man no one need be told. His viictory at Corinth proved to the popular eppreben , ,ion what was known in the urtuy before, .that lie possessed those epalities which conduce to success in the field. -• . • T3uell l is deprived of his corn, tntindi The President did this once before but tile Kentucky fossils all pro tested that it would disorganize the Army in Kent :ay, and he gave way to them. The consequence was that Bragg, Kirby Smith, i i umphrey Marshall tz Co. devas tated the richeA part of :their ' State, pitched two of their divisilms upon one of 13ne l's, end fou , rht an undecisive bat, tie with it, then inoved off unharme'd from limier Buell's very. nose, escaping ion , Tennessee with a good share of thfir plunder. This was too much and the I'r sid3lit has now removed Buell and pUt the f4 , hting ltosENett,O's into his place. Ile could hardly have done better. Zie pitient a very little while, and all the att , e. - i that - won't bore" will be s=erved as Buell has been; There to nu goitiLr. into Winter quarters till 'the lia'cki Of the Bebellion shall . Lave been and'sluggards ;1114 traitors Must itaud from under. The Union must cud will be saved, not by surrendering to the traitor:, but by making them surrender to it • Wait a littlelonger.''— 'Tribune. Tables Tri 'A Kentucky- correspondent of the Gin tiinnati limes states that the "contented and happy servants" of Secession master s still flock into Callip. There is one—well educated, for be can read and write—who furwerly belonged 16 one Duncan, now in the regular arms j his name is Jim. Sotne eholders who had hist their slaves,put \Up ad certisentcnts,••Une Hundred Dollars . IteWard ! Ran away from," &c. Not to, be outdone, Jim wrote and put up auo• Oer notice, as follows : • 50 CENTS REWARD I away from dis chile, an' Jeff him all sitione to take care of hitnselt after I done worked twenty-six years faithfully for him, my massa, I>iti Duncan. Mass'l3ill is supposed to have done . gone off - wid de §"ecc . shers, for to iotntjbr hs rights, and Lspec - he dim got lost. Any person 'turn iu' him to me, so that he can take care of me—.a . s he alters said "Nig,ga" couldn't take care of hiinself—will be obliged to dis chile. 'N. B.—Persons buntin' for, him please look in all de "last ditches," ;as I often hferti Win talk about goia' into the &Vie' business. • - 'Spec:dully submitted, JIM. - This poster et:clued a great deal of mer riment in canip, while the Kentucky resi 4ents win") came tiero , ,s it LIIOUCht Jim a upgbfy 1ii:4411r." THE 3 OURNAL. Couglirspart. ea. Wednesda'y, Oct. 29, 1862. IicALARNEY, Enrroft. Than t. 6 lion. Edgar Cowan for a copy of the Congressional Globe, Ist Session, 3701'611a:1-os. • 1 Taal 'RESULT. Principles got4erning the actions of men in time of peace,baseil upon truth, justice. and equity, must prove themselves equal 'le the neeessitieS of war. --The circum- I stances incident to civil strife can not Make truilt, falsehood or justice, tyranny. IThei fact; the late election evidences, has I never properly iiupressed itself upon the minds orßepublicans. They have but lately ran off aftdr the shadow expediency, forsaking principles whieb gave character and dignity to their oreanization,and now behind this shadow they find an organi lzation .they souOt to embrace but in the effort crumbles to the earth, emitting the !foulest stench of locofoeu rottenness. if Republican Principles ate true and the iso-called Democleate principles are false, i why should we go half way or all the way for the purpose Id combining exponents of these two great opposites. If we are right, they can;conic over to us ; if we are wrong, we should go them. The at tempt to cohabit truth with falsehood. Republicanism with Dernocraey,will prove about as 'successful as the attempt to Mix oil with Water. No party has ever, here ! tofure, survived after partially amalgaina ting with its opPonent, and it remains to be seen whether ur not the Republieln !party will prove : an exception to tins rule laird recover front the late disorPlnizine 'defeat in, this State. A defeat evidently Produced by its own lack of foresight its !uniting. Witb a portion of the Democracy coiling itself Uhion. If there were two Democratic parles : the one holdmgalle giaireo to the Union being. too weak. to sustain au organization, why could they nut have ,one over to the party most firmly allied to the interests of that Uniuu and cut themselves louse forever from Frank' Hughes laLd his secession clique?' This would haVie strengthened Republi .eanistn—t he only true Union' arty the! country at the present time—and would ! have crushed out most effectually the nest of traitors that lies, by this milk-and-water- course, succeeded in Its efforts•and virtu-1 ally endorsed Jeff' Davis and his ,overn ment. StatH and Counties where a Republican organiZttion was maintained! in its prity, ti l e. right Wen have fotind j their propel. places ;and the Tick - et has! beet] received with an unqualified en-1 dor.mneut. loWa stands forth nobly with her six out-andluut Republican Con,ress men, There is r no doubt expressed as tot how they will vote upon questions vital to the country's interest. Their is no ; fear that old pa!rty ties:will stultify their reason or clippie thifir action. Alt is safe there! .Not s 6 in Pennsylvania. here, we have elected men because - they prom-1 ised to do their duty. Bend. B. Wright proalised ,the 6ante l thing, and what be-; came of anut proiniSes when bro't to the test? Republicans of Luzeroe,l who voted for trim, Gan doubtless tell. At the present tiMe wt know not how the State has ! ronelas regard. 3 the Legislature; some put it 1: Ton, ;anti suint;'elaitn it for Prank Ilughesi Sletiker the Deomeratic candidate for ...nditor General has i 2,001 majority—repMied. Curtin had 3:".1(3-11 straight. Republ:can ! We. adrilit that four-Iftlis of thin volunteers ratio the State I arc of iMr partY, but this would not have been s i dfileientiti , defeat us, counting our; ereat gain it] Philadelphia. o.e.cpcdicney,l thou art a jetN4.l ! A fair defeat we cant receive stoically, but when those of our! own household take up the sword again , t us we Should be allowed to grumble a 1 little. —The recent election has cot been ut• I terlv devoid of Union results. Vallan dighans, who aid that - the Ohio soldiers would be conqiellcd to walk .ver his dead body in theinfanatical raid upon his bre ', thrtin of the .South, has been laid high land dry upon the ;top slick of defunct. Southern dirtjeateris, by the friends of the soldiers who have gone forth to battle fur the governmeut this perjurdd Represen• tat ive has endeavor'd to overthrow The traitor, Col. Biddle, and the drunken int , becile, Gen ,3leCall, have both been de• feared by constituents who wer:A foolish 'etionoh Co look for; something- else than ' more shoulder, straps. Old Thad. Ste vens,the man Jiditny Buchanan. hates more bitte;iy than he hates "old Nick": and to.defeat whom he expended 85,000 in '5B but without success, and 11 , ain =31,000 . this year, has been elected, 4,534 majority! Thad Stevens is the eye-sure of the Lancaster locotocos.• In the Dal phin district the Republicans cave the nomination to one of the most unpopular members of their party and a man against whom suspicions of corru)tion dertertnin ediy pnititcd , he Was opposed in the con vention by wonttr and conscientious Re publicans, and,as might have been expect ed, he is defeated, though by so small a majority that'almost any-popular member of that party could have been elected. We hope this defeat will teach some very small-touted politiCians that although a demag„ngue may be nominated by ti little wire-pulling his election is n-,t always certain. Galusha A. Grow, Speaker of the present Iluuse 'and ore of the ablet debaters in the Pennsylvania delegation, has been detente& in the tnzerne and Susquehanna District by Charles A.Den nison, a democrat that has promised ,to to Conservative I * Ileasetra . what 'cou sistencv DRAFTE List.of. names_ of pers.ns drafted at Coudereport,for the coun f ty of Potter to fill the quota : called for by the Governor. Those that are not star-ed, are those that reported themselves and arC now in Camp Curtin, Ilarrisbum. A piurtion of-those remaining reported thealselves, to. the Commissioner aud:were altowed to remain at home for a short time. This was to fill our.quota independent of those gone to New York. . Allegany--Franklin Rakers*, John 4. Ncliou*,Ephriain Manly, Rufus Rice, Ly man Stanly*. Claral—Ambrose C Burt Substitue for William Teuselien. Eulalia—Edward Glasby 'Substitute for Jehtal Engtish. rwenesee—Lorency Peck*, S. S. Mar lon*, . Mathew Moret*,' Allen Shepard, Seyuton Norton, Thomas Hurd*, Graham Hurd*, William Gannon*, Henry Rey nolds*. Sylvauus Rubins. Dennis Clan. ey*; William Hurd*, Henry Hurd*, Thomas - Gannon*, Bryen ,Moren*, Geo. Ansel Hiekeoe, James Me. Ginnis*, Jeseoli Wilster. • Ilarrison-- , -.11. A. Fisher Substitute for Olaio Hawks, J. P. Lute, Sylvester Clark, John Olney*, AnsOn Rubiuson*, OlaYo Dennis*, Thomas J. Kibbee,,Joko N. Gill, Franklin Steadman, WilliaM Statham, Peter Simmons ; Substitute fir 41. N. Stone, M. Couriwright, I. M. Baxter, Leonard Sitntoon. Hebron—Leotard , DaVis, Wallace W. Dwight.. ileetor—Erastus Onetiney. Pike--Wnt. Burrows. • Pleasant Vall , !y—Lewis 'Lyman Roulette—William Sherwood Stewardson—*Geo 'text'Ord . :Jain6s W White sub for John S E JI Car- pewter sob. for ileo W Shitrow Summit—Tim!: Fi,lier Sweden—Aug Seifeit sub. for Andrea :Snyder, *Wm Dodd, Edw'd Fronk, Hub. bard ['sines Sylvar.itt—Wm Seifeit sub. for J Reese, West ly Reese. Lytuan Clinton sub. for Chester Burleson ; James Logue, 8.0. Austin', *James Reese. M B Carson and Benj Booth vuluute red Whirton--*1 Y Coleman 'Humer—Ed Howard subt for D Hall Ulysses—F.Selioanower sub. fur Origin Clull]. Hiram Parker sub. for II Ilourd, Geo. Kappo sub. for IV. 0 Smith, Benj. Close. Coudersport—Ferd'd Propping, volt'd. Abbott-Johu Roselle!), volunteered. Osm;yo—B F Lyman' audWilcox volunteered 'Anneals against 11"senasylvania. )n, the day of the battle of Antietam, thei Richmond Dispatch, in espectation ofl.he invasion of Pennsylvania, spoke tins: '9'.et not a blade of grass, or .a stalk of corn, or a barrel of flour, or a bushel of meal, a sack of salt, or a horse, or a cow, yr a hod, or a sheep, be left wherever they move along. Let vengeancebe taken for all that has been done, until retribution itself ,sball stand aghast." 'The editor complains that 'Virginia has "lost thirty tbousand.neg,roes, -the most.valuabletipro s, .perty , a Virginian can own." He adds : "A Dutelt s tarmer has no pe . csoes ; but he haS horses that can be seized, grain that can be confiscated, c..ttle that can be kill: etl) and houses that can be burned." - 'After this, we may' well ask, Can the recent proclamation of the Pret.ident add . anj [ 'thing to such ferocity ? • '.The proela. says the Providence Journal, "can no more make them more furious or unscrupulous. than it will make_ the gat ors of Florida more ferocious, or the buzzards of Carolina more, avenous." .Tlll3 ADMINISTEATION NOT A FAIL OE —The 2 , :0w . York /just reviews the events and achievements fur the year; and clOses as fullovs : "The Administration" has not "been a failure." It has been a grand and brilliant success. Il istory will account-so.i t it. We challenge the annals of he past to furnish an example of equal achievements in the same tithe and under suhh stupendous difficulties. The Amer idn people : arc proving that they so re gaill it by the generous and enthusiastic lo4ahy with which they are putting their trdas,ure and blood at its disuo;ial. And it ;remains only fur the. President to push fo ward our armies at once upon the rob elzt; 'to continue "to move upon the en. entv's works ;" to give rein to the enter prise, the skill, the daring, and the patri. otic.determination which have been de %loped and trained during the past year of war, to speedily make an end of the gigantic inivity, and the name of Abra- • lii6n Lincolii\wid stand on tile future an in Is of his country illustrated by a te to wn as pure and undying as that of G urge Washington. , , Cot. McCtua•e. Col. A. tif..i‘le.Clure,of Chambersbu4, P ~ who was charged by his fellow:chi ' wens With the duty of making terms will l b i k e rebel cavalay un the occasion of their re'Jent raid to that place, had a good many 1 oethem to coffee in his house—coffee be : 1 ing a rarity to them. CAM eClure writes Ito a Philddelphia friend a kindly acconat id their vi and and of Ina free conversa 7 ! tiOns with them. Ife says : 1 , •IV hen told that T was a decided Re , publican, they thanked me for being can did ;' but when,iu reply to their inquiries; I told them that I cordially sustained the President's Emancipation Proclamation. (;hey betrayed a little: nervousness,bardid not for ' ; a moment forget their propriety. !They admitted it to be- the most -serious 1 danger that has yet threatened themanit they were all hopeful that it would not tbe sustained in the 'North with sufficient , . unanimity to enforce it..'' ' A SZY*Glettiii W.: Scofiehl, out-aod-o.'t 1-600 000 .1114LE1 or ;FEMALE A :.:1.,,§. TO SELL_ ..1. tepublican, of the ilrie Distrioo.4 pleote , , , ! • _.... . by 942 maj. over Courtright, Whig-I4- -; LLOYD'S new ate 1 plate 4ounticolord" publicin-LoepfoemUnion. This is d great: - • I •- k i di 11 ' Brhnswick. Vine of the United Stites, Canadas, and .liOn suceesS, and tests tt, a certatntyt .; 1:1 4- ' eoce - of JiTdge Seo&eld,io tape. Northwest- li F tiz ro ; m c g t oe s n 2 t o, s o u o r o ye . y,s to ' , ens completed avo it .1 A ai n . d g. 0 / i l, - ern District.,. : We,are:.as pliased io.llor year's time. ~ _•s 1 1 •,,,i; , . of it as the yiere!sorry-that some I.3,!eph"bli, District -Superior to any i s2Rmap . nvermatinhy COI c selvesan ;,f sh el a e l eliti le4‘‘9. intothtaht -.Amt. tor - or Mitchell, and , selljs at the , low pricejof fifsty cents ; 370,000 naives are engraved pn • g• a ;worse this-map. demagogue that !'straight-Oat Dernecialt' ' .•: ; ' • I If is not only a County,' 'May; but it is also . a could have been.. Three times throe for County and Railroad map of the Milted Stater the consistent Republicans of thS .1"..lort41: and Canadas combinedlin one, giving every west. . ; 1 i • ' ' -j; ' 1 Railroad Station add itiiStances between. 1 Guarantee any woman or man $3 to $5 per', day, and - w!lt take baeltbillj maps that cannot: be sold and refund the ruoney. • j Send ',for 131, worth' th try.. ., , , Printed instructions Ihow to canvass well, •furnishSd all ouragents. l , ' 1 Wahted—Wholesalil:Agents:lac our Maps I in every State. California, :Canada, England, France and Cuba, 'A I fortune may be made ; with a few hundredaidilars,eapital. No Coin-- petitiOn. 1 J. T. LLOYD;, No IG4 Broadway.N.tl7. 1 . The War.Departruerit nses .our Map of Vir ginia, 3faryland,and.POnirsylvan - a, cost $lOO,- I 000, on which is mark' d Antietam Creek, I .Sharpsburg, Maryland Eights, Williamsport' Ferry; Ithrorersville,Noland's Ford, and all others-on the Potomaq, and every other:place in Maryland, Virginia', and Pennsylvania,:or nioney refunded. , 1 ' Lloyd's Topogyanh :cal Map Of Kentucky, Ohio, Didiana, and Illinois. is the only au- I thority ',for Gen, Blit4 and the War Depatt-' nieut. Money refunddll'io any one finding lin error in it. Price 50 dears, - Promlthe Tribune, .kii,9.st, 3.—" Lloyd's Map of Virginia, Maryland itad Pennsylvania. This Map is very large ; itil l edSt is but 25 cents, and it is the best which con,beintrchased." Lloyd'S. Great Map jht the Mississippi Rit'er —Front] Actual Sarre:Vs Iby Cams. Burt and Wm. Bhwen, Mississippi River Pilots of St. 1 Louis, Mo., shows everyonan's plantation and-1, owner'slname from . .§l.. ',Louis! to. tile Gulf of I Mexico+-1.350 milesHeyery sand-bar, island, town, landing., and a ll !places 20 miles back from tile river—colored in counties and Statqs. Price, ;;TI in sheets. : Co._, pocket furin, and $2, 50 on linen, with rellers. Ready Sept 2,0.1 ! I NAVI7 DEPAirt*EFT, WASIIINGTON, I 1 'I ' • ' I.! Sept. IT, 1800. 1 1 J. T. j LLOYD--Sir :)Senci me your Map ;al the MisSissippi River,! ! nith price per hundreds copies. I Rear-Admiral Oharlei . IL Davis,coin- 1 mantling the Mississippi, ;squadron, is nuttier ized to jparchase.as-Mauy :5s are required tor use of that squadron. j 1 I . 1 1 GIDEON WELLESecretary of Navy.! i ---- ---- - ---j H -- - .4 -- 1 ' ' ; The Continehi Monthly. al I i , • , P4itadOphia •Election. The election in Philadelphia,. :for t3i - Officers, resulted favorably tothe men. The vein f'or Mayer is giv, as . follpws 1 MAYOII.--Flenr.Unionj) 3t.;299 r Fox ••(liemocrat,) 32,,184: . • i i . , • : . Majority'fOr llently, 5,115! For City Solicitor, Brewster, Union, was elected over Oirst, betnocrat,, by !a wajority of 4,630.! , • , The Union Ictindidatei for , District Attorney, Receiver of , Taxes, Citry COn troller. and City Conitnissio ,, er,'were also elected by tnaj , 4rtties ranging over 3,000 each. .•, • 'i • . The Union Men also elected a iajort• ty of the itlemb:ers of both branclies: . of tho. City Councils,; which give the.;Union men the control of all the City officers for the ensuing yeqr. Referring to the glorious .vic!ory of the friends of the Administration in 'Phila• delphia at the election on Ti.te s lday the 14th inst., the SOrtit 'Anteriedn-l'aptly says : I 1 .• "The gorgonlof "abolition " been shrewdly used to affright the 'tititid and conservative, and all the chattgesl were rung upon thatwell known the Me. The anGient prejudice' against . the CegrO rage was unscrupoluttAy taken advantage Of, in the !ip,. of thereby conjuring up unc l e more 1 h inighti pro-slavery party to be used in favor cf the southaud against the government. R utt the event showedthat Lhis device is now effete, curl Might. as well be c,%refullY laid away ‘vith things orthe dead past. No votes Were to be obtained by crying out "abolition." The crusade was a total failure in l'hiladtd phia; just where it was supposed iWould have been most successful." I INCEEASE OF THE Attm . Y.7-- Onr army, duri2;; the last two or three mouths, las grottil enormously in oath , hers. Probably more than three-fourths of the troops ordered under the last t%v(li calls of the Pre!r•ident are now .ready fur the. field. Theke is nearly a quarter of; a million of Union soldiers 'on tliu •?obtoac. Gen McClellan! has attested that ilie new: troops fight like Veterans. The;' are fUll of enthusiasM, health and pluck. We are now in a far stronger condition for attack than we ever have been before. We are stronger than we Will be : the en suing Spring, even if the conscription:is cnforced=shoulti our army Winter in inactivity; for the wastage titan tilactive , Winter is.ppalling. • , - Go Curtiai's Proc2aviration. PENYSYLNIA, SS s La the name' and by the azdhod' of the cumnunitcecdth uj Penlt.Tlcanio, AN DREW G. eURTLN, Gorr:cr.:or 4y`'. the. Lou On ony: eci tit. A PROCLAMATION. Winn EAS, It is a good thitig . to Tender thanks unto Cod, for all , His werey and loving kindness; therefore, a; • I. Andrew Cr. Curtin, C','-uvernor, of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania; do re commend that THURSDAY; the 27th day of Novembto- next, be set apart by the people of this CotnWonwealth as a day. of solemn! Prayer and ThankSgiving to the Altui ,, hty—giving Him bumble thanks that Llejhas been graciOuslypleaed to protect our :free institutions and Guy eminent, and to keep us from sickness and pestilence-Hand to cause the tiart4 to cause the eartlan bring forth her increase; so that our garners arc choked with the harvest--and leek etr favorably on the Luis of His 'children, that industry has thriven among us and labor ha S its ire ward ; and alert that he has:deliVered;Us• from the handl:3l6f our enemies, and, blind our officers - and menin the itield;witlt . ' a loyal and intreptd spirit, andigiveit tliem victory—and that He has . pMired out ufi• on us (albeit unworthy)• other great and manifold blessings. • j • Beseeching lim to help and gCoernus in His steadfast fear and love, and to flit into our mindSlgood desires,; l so, that by His continual: help we inav have;agright judgment ah . thingS ; and especially praying Him ti r give to Christian chureites ,race to bate .the thing which is e, il,and to utter the teachings of truth and•rOtt eousness,. deelaring openly; 'the'; Wholo counsel of ; and most !bearltly treating IliW, to bestow uPon:outreivil rulers wisdoni and earnestness in and upon our military leaders zeal and 'vigor in action, that the fires 'of rebellion way be quenclied-H.that we , helot arMed with His deflince, May be preservedfrow all perils, and that hereafter ours people. living in ,peaee and quietnesS, may., front generation to!glneration, reap the abund ant fruits of His mercy, and i'with joy and thankfulness praise and: rnagnifj• His holy name. • Given unfir me ha nd and the gent 'seal of the State, at Hairisburg. this twentieth . day. of October, in the year of our Lord one thou sand eight iiiindredrind sixty-two,. and of the Coluitionwealth the , eighty-seventh: ANDREW' G. CL'ILTIT. BY TUC GO'IEaNOR, . . ELI SLIFEB., , • .. Secretary of the Ciutuoitiseilth. • . ~ . Editors : , • • lion. ROBERT T. WALKER, . . • Dun. FRED. P;-STANTON, . CLIARCE:iI G. LEL.ANPI ' " I . - ' E.I.MUND .lilli : KE The readers of the Ctiritiaentat arc aware of the important posiiion iL has assumed; of the inthienee which it exe ' rt's; and Of the brilliant array of political add [literarY talent Of 'the' highest order which supports it. No pub'i(iii lion of!the kind has, lin,l this country, so she- . cessfull : v combined theetiergyland freedom of the daily newspaper' iyith the higher literiiry tone of the first- elassjnionthly :and it is very . certain that no nia,.,a4ine has given wider range tio its eontribuiors, or preserved itch so completely from the narrow intitieneesl of party or of faetioM *jn times like the present. such afjournalis,ft potter to the ]arid 9r it istiothin , . i'hat the C:totiticttitti is not the latter is abundanOevidenced 11/ tchai it has done-by the 'retleetion of its councils in many iMportant public events,And in the cinir - acter and power of those who are its stauntil est supporters By the accession Of Hon. Thibert J. Walker and Hint. F. P..StantOtt ,to itscditorial corps, the COW/natal acq*eis a strength and , .8 polities significance; which, to those Ito are aware ,br the abilityr,!anld experience of these gentlemen, must elelhitb it tO a position far; above tny'prev,iotislVlticupied by any pahli cation [ht . the-kind in', ikmerica: Preserving ltll "the boldness, and! nbility" which a thoO , and juurmils4e attributed to it, it ill at Once greatly enlarge itslcircle of actiOn, and discuss, fearlessly Mid frakly, every prin ciple involved in the gfrent questions of the day, The tirst minds of the country, embrac ing- men most familiqr wiith its diplomacy and most distinguished ,tlit - -.;:tbility;'are to, becdme its contributors ; gtifdlit lis,no Mere, "flattering promise of a prospectr" td say, that this -untgaizine for the time " wilhemploy the first intellect in Aincric:( 7 under lauspices which no publication ever, eljoyedl before in this. country. : uti GODFREY Ti..F.TeAND,OC accomplished schobir and author, #,I1:0 11:15 till now been the sole Editor of the ,N,lagiazine, will, besideilth editorial labors, cantinae his brilliant contri butions to its pages f J kald Edmund Kirke, au thor of "Arnong the Pinles,!' Will contribute to each issue, baring already begun a work on Southern Life :trill 'Sudety, which will j be found fur more widely idescriptive, and in, all resp,cts, superior : to'4he first. While the Contine44 will 'express decided opinions on the great flbcstions of the it not be a Mere tbliticnl joiunnl : much the larger. Portion oil its colnrous, will be ert- . . livened, as herettifole,' by ta.les, poetry, and huntor. a ?,v0r4 . 1, 1 1 the CoOinenta4 will; be found, under its nekvistaff of Editors, occupy ing :41 , , position and presenting attractions neverbefore fonntl i a maga l zine, TEInIST,O CLUBS Two copies for one year, Threei copies for one year, Six copies for, onc y oar, e Eleven dopies for on I ,year, Twenty copies for on . l ryeqr, rmo 1.1. :OvaNCE. Postage, Thirt-slic,;cents a year : to be paid by -iliolStiliseribe.r. Three, dollars a ye: r AovAscr.—Postage paid by he Publisher. JOHN F. TROW; • .6 Greene St., N.Y. Feb Liher fur the Proprietors. Mace tient to new subscribers, the Publislier.oE:ars the following very liberal premiums; person remitting $3, iwadvance, will receive the Mug:lilac from July, 15611, to January, 1864, thus ;securing the whole olJlr. K67E61711'8 and Jfi. Eirke's new serials, which ,are alone worth the inlet!: of subscription.'; Or, -if preferred, a bubs.ctiber can take.the Maga zine for . 18G3 and a t i opy 0f , ..4m0ng the Pines," or of!" Undereurretitelj of Wall St.,"• by 11. B: Iiim6011; bound in"cloth (the book to be 'sent' postage paid). person rentitting $4 50, Willi re ceive the 'Magazine 'front its commencement; January, 1804, thus securing Aft. Kin&oll's ira.4 Be Sacceslfall" 4nd Mr. Kirlt.',e "Among Pines" and "Ifetunt's ktory," and nearly 3.006, octavo pages of the best literature in the World. Premiu subscribers to pay - their own postage. • , • 710 HE BEST OFF OUR kept constantly on naafi at We, ; Post Utike .1 , ONE S' COLUMN NEW ODDS SOMETHING ELSE NEW ! ! r rIE subscribers at their OLD STAND ON MAIN STREET; COUDERSPORT, Offer lo tbeir customers end the public; generally for Cash ; United States Treasury Notes (which by the way are taten at Par,) t Wheat:Corn, Oacs, Buckwheat, Butter,Cheele, }fides, Pelts, Deer Skins, and all other kind! of Skins, such as Calf Skills, &c:, also, Beans, Lens, Venison, andl,some other things. that can't be thought of, •1 LARGE AND WELLSELECTED 'ASSORTMENT UV I • D.Y. Goops, BOOTS Sz , SHOES, , • ; DEADYMADE CLOTHING GROCERIES, Hats & Caps, Hardware, DRUG lIIEDICINES, Paints; Oils, mad Dye Stuffs, TOgether - with some of the best KEROSENE 011„ Far superior•to the Oil Creek or Tidiouto Oil LAMP & LAMp FIXINGS, r f i. . POCKET CUTLERY, Also a few more of those Superior CANDOR PLO'D'S, SLElGusno*s, GLASS, SASH, PUTTY, INK, PAPER, - ENVELOPES, And other kinds of WALL PAPER, WINDOW CURTAINS And other articles which time alone for bids us tv thebiloo, all'of which will be Sold as IoW as the WAR. PRICES will allow—fur strictly $5 00 6 00 11 00 20 . 00 36 00 READY-PAY!! And for those articles we take, the high est nrarket price wilt be paid. \., We are alto Genera Agents for • DR. D. JAYNE'S 'Family Medicines, . - DA. AYhlt'S 'Medicines, I.IIANDRETH'S rills,. KENNEDY'S 31edical Discovery, - And all the standard Medicines 31the day CALL AND 'ISEFAI. C. S. & E. A. JONES. N. B. The Tiny for the Goods mnst be en hand WllOll the Goods. ' ure delivered, as we are deterinined to live to the motto of ?'Pay ae You Go." Just one thing more. The Judgments,notos and hook accounts which we hare on bend must he Fettled nit , l closed op immediately or we fear they will be increased faster than th 4 usual rate of interest. Dec 11 • ~~ i AND IN PROVISIONS, Iron s Nails; STATIV4TARY
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers