NEWS ITEMS. Substitates are offered in Cincinnati - as low as twelve dollars. About again—Winter. We may ezz, pect soon to bee his "fleecy loektr",, Quite jubilant—the sympathizersi over the result of the Into election. Ditto- 7 Jeff Davis, Breekinridge, and 111 their "dear Southera brothers. Got into a scrape—many of the hest ladies of the land, since lint is in great demand. . _ It'iiitateil th at . iit'lrtelcsbritt flour sells at $52 ; ppr and shoes at 632 apair. " - A _inammoth ox, .tebieh• efande , " seven' feat high, io on exhihition at theagrieul; turd. fair at Hirtfoid, 'Conn. Great, quantities of ..cotton. continuo to arrive in Memphis, and the price's inthe . Western markets are ,f4lli,ug.. ~ ; Still iu use•=-mall- quiet alonobeTtito mac?' Weuldait , v igorous forward Lebiement7 be more appropriate? •' St^.al chickens - the guer ' illas', woerev= cau. ;'Prenticeopcscid y as luil:tif.t,how will get t e chiicken pcnr.2' Removed—Gen. :Buell, from' the con wind-of.. the Kentucky army.• ; That's right, diweard all'laug,ura that mat bure.7 G4en: Jefferson C: Div, is, who shot, er,,eu.', fuili days ago, basteeo . 'ieleaSeq fr . qui.arrobi by order of tho'War`Vepart suit& • • Strategic—porn:kitting three thousand or the eoemy'e•cttvuiry to eiroutorolyean arroftif one hundred and twenty thousand urco. - •"" , Wfls field -:•-•a rgo Union meeting at I,e'sinfert, N. U. The President ' s pruela tnation'lwas endorsed in' the resoluttous adopted:, BuCkioghatn, of Conneetieut, - haa ordered a..draft for eight hundred wor e MOP to fiih. up the regimentk now. organ.. isedin3he: State. atezin'ishii) Afabama is criiis: .miles of Sandy Hook; burning every ,Aniirican vessel she can -•." • •.- i,,Thelloston Common Council hive vd:kbouuty, of $2OO for recruits. It: is thought thit under this stimulus ~ the draft may be stopped,- - • k'infin named Brani;', in one of the townships of Dauphin countit,• had seven' iota s , all of whom were drafted. In au.' whet.; five'brotheri were also dratted. • -Enrolled- 7 -o , - manlivion• t' i n.. Summit. toguship, Erie county,. in three districts; 304 on. the day of the draft he.wa9 drawn; itt All of thew. Is that chap three soldiers 220.1 Y . `:;•Bretittisties lately . gathered, it is .n 3; 'pertained that the wheat Crop of Indiana fiitthe" veer about.2o,ooo, 000'buShel6 being L 750,000 'more than the, crop of 1861: .The.diflerenee':between war and•peace tipe.been:well defined by, one of the. an time of peace,, 0e sons bury their fathers ; in time of war the fathers bury their sons,' Lytieliburg :Republican says that 'is going up in that ivarket, a ifilatlq Prime article' commanding from 82 .- 60 to PG 25 per bushel: Family flour ielreld'ai $l9 50; extra $lB 50, super rite 17 .50. ..Senatur Hunter, of Virginia,, made quite a blunder, and electrified the rebel Senate, some time ago, by inadvertently swearing:lone of,the clerks to suppart the Constitution of the United States. The scarcity of change is felt by the Confederates, as well as by ourselves.— Thdy, instead of using postage stamps, have passed a - bill authorizint , r . the coinage of copper, to the amount of five million dollars, in five, ten; and twenty five cent pieces. Va,ese twenty.five cent pieces, if ttiihed 'of a size proportionate to the value Of the metal, would be attour_as big as a piii•cake. .Nice pocket-pieces. ' ~11The.Westein army is gradually forcing . the rebels to retire from the ground they rare allowedto occupy through the tree run of Gen. 13uell. . Fighting Gen. Ro sepprans has been put in .his • place and will in .a very short,time begin the ; work sn.nearly completed last, summer. l'Otrlp. 7 —The vote of =thisState i5 . 78,- 0001ese tbanat the •Presidental.gleetien: the're ern. that number of soldiers absent. The votes at hoine gave 8.74.0 - maj. -for the Datnocratte Judge of Supreme Court. "That's what's the matter," undoubt= edit'. .. r , Columbia county, has. paid forty•thod. dollars for bubstitutes to, the draft, Han. J. W. Mayilard, of Williarnspert, was unanimously elecied,PresidentJutige iti'the district composed of the,' counties pf goithamptou and' Lehigh; Galveston, the most important city and sea-port•of Texas, , bas been taken by a armY, , the enemy retiring to avoid !-,--An officer just from Vicksburg says that every, man under ,thirty five has bCen. impressed,into the Rebet artny--se terrible und,strong is the military despot- ism that scourges them. r.cThe people - not fur froth .Memphis are Suffering for the necessaries of life. The 'Cotton,' which was their Main resaarcefor stipples, .has been burned aptly the Rebel 'guerillas, who make the - coitimon 4idopie at tho , South f‘needlessly.Anffer thus,...as they would like to make the .North. THE JOURNAL. ti Coudersport, Pa. WOdikesilay, Nor. 5,18644 E617,01i. , • TUE ELECTION. ' Hutikeristn is jubilant over the- late election in this State, Ohio, and Indiana, but not as - much so over little lowa. This lluuker party is as mean as the word sig niftes--Humko, a mean, sordid, niggardly fellow, a miser who' holds on to what he gets for selfish gratifiCation and liaseness. lAnd in this instanceit cannot but prove true to its signification. Already is it l'venting its Spleen in threats as to what it will do when thOLegislature meets. Cary -1 ing for itself a success by disfranchising the MOO who are shedding their , blood for the life - of the Nation, it now threatens a counter-revoltitioif ,in the North if the "abolitionists" dais to contend for this inalienable right of free Americans Hase in all its aspirations, with its sole aim and hope stayed on treason and plucder it would 'sacrifice the country for a parti• zan success,. Hut, yet it mistakes tte in• fluence greatly when thinking that 'the soldiers have no power because of the de cision of the Supreme Court. According to a stafement in the Har risburg Telcyraph the next Legislature Will stand as follows : Senate, •IJn. Rep. 20 House, Uu. Rep. 46 On joint ballot • 66. . 67 This gii.ca the Democrats a majority of 1 It counts upon this one majority being able to accomplish wonders-!—declare void the loans made by the different coun ties and dictate to the Governor a policy contrary to the one he has thus fur patri otically pursued.. Adiniting its vileness to be as foul as it:desires us•to holievewe yet know that there must .be. among this majority- some true, honest men who will ffl bae the designs of.these northern dough. face traitors and not suffer their iniqui tous ptirOdses to prevail. To say that the masses of -Pennsylvania endorse the sen. tiMents of their leaders. was.to Most un righteously judge them. They have.been influenced into voting for these "things" by- representations that in ease they irere elected and•thelTnion-Republicau ticket defeated there would be do draft, no mote filiation, no bloodshed. - ..How avoid the draft 1 : By refuSing to reinforce the sight arm of the Nation I No patriot would listen to such a suggestion. How avoid taxation.? . By-repudiation I No bonen man would hear of it. And how. avoid Woodshed : By withdrawing our at ray and saying to- the" South, as Jelin Van.l Buren• says in New York, `.wayward tett - go in: peacel"- None but traitors,' would dare'Suggest . such u course. No i After all their rejoicing over a supposed endorsement by the people they will find their rower, tele but a myth,- a bubble orilles that: must - aeon burst. The war will be prosecuted: to a successful issue. The falsehoods that may carry an election I cannot change the determination of a pen. ple.- They • prefer organized war to foul I nodilood-red anarchy. There must -be a choice of one of these The Gov. eminent . must be sustained, .or a Mexican tomb-stone will teach onr children its fate. - Chick ahominy Swamp and the I braves who fell at Pea Ridge have written upon the wall our: glory or our shame.. They commenced the work which lutist be completed. We mast:yet prove that 'They net-cr. - fail who die In a great cause." 0, aye tribes of bastard freemen, he. ware . that -you TOusa out- a spirit: that will send you headlong-into ignotniny'sgrave. , So long •as thj•soldiers voted - Demo cratio,Lit was constitutionni—abut when they begin to vote against that party, the Democratic Supreme Court - decides the law to be unconstitutional 1 A law made by-Deniocrats, taken advantage of by the Detnocratio party during Slavery's War against Mexico, and exercised- under a Democratic &Trento Court; is knot.a little 'queer that they should just now discover it to bo unconstitutional ! The Motive for this course•speaks kindly from tlie.fdllowing'figures: 'flow Dm TEE SOLDTETtS VOTE? . aa--1861 , illi.noo-1.862 Rep. Uuivu , 11,3: 1 :Rep Unlort 10,198 Dew. - 317.3 Dew: • 1,687 Rep:Umniaj. 8,178 . Rep . l.Tn.maj. 8,511 Rep.:Uti. vote in bOth Sfates_ 21,549 Democratic -. 'do 4,860• Rep. t.Tnltozik maj. 16;639 Last - Fall, the; soldiers in' the - arMY•riid vote . : and,.out of 241 votes cast by our heroes in the field m this county, only seventeen were cast for the Detnocratie can cilda tC. ---'.ilfcruch, 'Chu irk - Gazette. loiva, voltirite'ers have _a right •to vote and we have 'seen a, return. from 34 regiments and parts'of'regituents; which shows the followirig result Republican..l,lnion • . nreeliitirldge.DeniL -Reliublican 'Union majority' • • . &sides, the' above we find the following result:of elections held, by Pennsylvania volunteers : . , Rep - . Union. Democrat. ,; Allegany Co. 521 " - 'I:1 Perry H 116 • . 20 Ditiphin ' -151 • • 72 " , . 167 maj, , " 143 znaj,, :82 • 23 ganitogrlon .'B4 " - '202 - ' ' 4 Mark it, ye Hunker-Demagogues ! a Iday of reanning:ivill . come. .All these voter* via:tint:lie killed, as you confident ly hoie,ulitit - -the ,clay will come when- a voice from :the batilc•fields will sound the tocsin of,war at: the ballot-boxes.. - i What will then . -beiottio Of 'your midnight plot. -tingdOsiseee-isfoii -- - heresies it is an. 'may thing to:prophesy.; .The Republican Vote from Ciirtin'sliiii-falleu off 50,090—have gone to the war or tailed to vote. The Democratic vote from Foster's has fallen .uff 14..Q0 Add these figures to.'their appropriate Poinintis; and what have you to become, jubilant over. 7.--.. We don't need yopr ong-win e ta ions o teach' us the - meaning of - figures Snell They are_ plain 'and bright and the lesson they teach , ' will;be written .ju : lettere of light :when :the - Hunker .protest . taken, I from; the (fee c zercise of suffrage, as soon it must.. • _ - • FROM MA RUILSIM/RG. As Lagreed with you; I, lOW proceed to post up to this 'date' to . regard . to our whereabbutS and condition . After ii.very tedious ride to Wells Ville we were puti into a dirty, hog:pert . of a eir,. compound ed of the itch' and ritual) poi; which, for tunately for us' breke dew . n a few miles; When wii• were transferred" - to a deCent carriage,and, 'with the usual vexations of a night ride arrived at - Harrisburg on Tuesday ' - ibout . two o'clock. and marched to Cain p itithinOns i Murediately. There i was but little of the:enthusiusni manifest -I ed that was shovin towards the volunteers a - year. ago, OecaSiolially, at towns where the drafted men were, ready to tranS 7 portation . ivith us to'this platy we were received with cheers and parted with by the Waving of huts, hands arid 'handker chiefs, but geterally a settled. gloom ap• geared on the faces.of spectators; proba, bly they Were thinking of the time when their turn Would come. • We. O'er& OM first draft in Camp; the record of our requisitions leading the rer , - - tater. The vPhipteers in camp showed a decided disPositied to ridicule the drafted men by cheers and shouts of derision. There were many exceptions, libivever, and gentlemen among - them hastened' to our quarterato . apologize for the rudeness of their men and thank us for the timely laid we were likely to afford them. • But this soon wore pg, and to day there is prObably runny drafts in camp as volunteers: And. the cry is, "still they come." The roads are 'everywhere full of thorn from' morning until night,and we have Ceased trilook at theist or their quar ters. As if , by'magic, a city of tents has grown .up around us and we bud ourselves iu-the ruiddre'of acres andacres of canvas. 'There is 'a great contrast in the appear :ince of the . volunteers and draft. The former are many of them mere boys—one large company of cavalry being composed almost exclusively of them—while the latter are generally men of mature' age; and leek - and speak retermined. OCT. 25.—Since writing the above wo have been joined,. by twenty men from -McKean county, under the command ot 1 2d Lieut. Mapes. To-day, the Tidga Lima I eame in. • We are expecting a few of them to join us and 'fill up our company. I must copferi 1 had no idea of the Magnitude - of our ;army arrangements. Such' vast quantities of stores and provi• skins cannot be adequately deserlbed by figurabut must . be seen to be appreciated. And this for, only a small fraction of the army. To say so' Many pounds of bacon or bread;.so many thousand tents or tens of timusands blankets conveys but a mea gre idea Orthem • but to bee box after bin, barrel 'after ' barrel,. cask after cask Ppened,,abd its contents 'distributed as fast as thousands of men can carry them off, all day long, RIO get an, idea of what it takes to keep an army,: The men are generally well and feet in Ilia bast of . . sp Yesterday.was election day with us. After the .MeNean ioen s came in a l vote was taken for offie4i's,whicli resulted' as follows : ' • Captciftt.- . -Rufus Bice, Potter.' Ist Licut.—E. o,' AuStin, "- ;1, Dem. 13 Dem. 54 2d Lieut.—Thowas Mapes, McKean. The other officers Will be selected , as soowas the company is full. The Olow init. is alist of all absentees of the drafted men and their substitutes, with the rea son for' the absence, of all who started with us, so far as is,known to me. 'Allen,ShePhercl, enlisted in Cavalry. A. Fisher, sg Leopard Davis, Hubbard'flaines, Johnltoseiieb. le .„ Benj. _F.. Lyinan ' J. W:, ~ deseitedat Elmira, :Edward,Plaabi;deserted at Harrisburg ‘"Dennis i anSWered for by'Ed.How ard until we got into Camp, when Ed: en liped.in a Cavalry company: This leaves us - 34 men only in camp 'with 11' enlisted for the war or deserted. We will *be mustered. tuto the service • next week, when it is probable, we , shall, leave for narrison duty along the line. E.G.A, 7,122 '1,895 . AterThe clap - trap , outcry tmetist the Taiation made necessary to defend every. thing we hold dear under good 'tient, is hypocritical or-it:Means Repudi ation. 'rho* former ,annoys and injures' the, public interests. The, latter would rob Soldiers,: discredit the - doveron3ent, break . .Banks, defraud those who loaned monerto"nieet The public wants, and in fliet.more.woe and ruin: than half n cen tury of taxation. A. National debt will hive (together -with Its 'eVils) two-good effectsz-- - -it Will 'bind our - people in , strotig self : lntm:est ; _and it will make them more careful in, electing, and tend to Cheelt`the rage foreitravagince corruption, and high salaries.-=Star andC Chronide." EIEM 6 . 4 ' MP 5111131019, Oct. 24th, 'ISO lIM A True In the. Cineinnati Times gth inst i Ve find the fidlowing sketch of, itspeeolifile. livered - by a prontioeet in Ohio, at:al late war meeting. It should be ead by every man in. the Union, and especially iii-Tenuiyi'vania, where We have . so many whose conduct is very little Short.of rankest treason. One thing. we think, is clearly established, that wherever you] find a _conditional Union-man, you Can set him down atonce as an unconditional traitor. .But to the noble _little Speech iti qttestion: .- Says the Times : •- - Patrick l!l'Groarty, Esq., of this cityij made aspeeili at -Spritigfield,•':Ohio, on Saturday.. Hr. M'Gr3arty flie l was, an old line`Detnocrat.' . . Ai. a' Demo crat.he had come, o Springfield, to appeal' to Men to go to war to put - down the re= hellion'. He Would ricit'discass whetherl fire-eaters or Abolitionists brought on the] .war.. Rebels were - in- artni against the] Government.' Let us put down the rebel.] ion,' and then settle political . questionsl Abut It. It - didn't Make ant difference 1 whether 'Joshua Giddings or Jeff. Davisl got up the rebellion. 'There it see who is in it, and we must put it down. He,apPealed to the old Democrats. He . would ask them : Are you going to see the COnstitution upset and the ,Union• disk solved, becanke you think some one up in Ashtabula county may `go to Congress? If you are, you , are just as big a traitor as Jeff.' - Davis; Are' pia not goitin% to war because Linccde may' /lei° ;violated- the Conititution Y Who made you the Judge? " He was ,elected properly under the Con stitution. 'I 'didn't vote for him—l troilldn't vote for him now, but I sun for putting down the rebellion. Now this is the fact. Anbody who won't go to war for the reasons I suggest, is afraid to risk it, or he is a traitor. That's the whole of it. Is there any man Who can put his finger on any injury done to the rights of the South? Not one, not even a slave holder. We old line Democrats. were always determined to . maintain the rights of the South :e Not one, not even a slave holder. We old line Deinocrats were al ways determined to maintain the rights of the South. We gave ;them more than they were entitled to. How, then, why this rebellion ? Not because Lincoln was elected, nor because Breckioridge wasn't nor Douglas wasn't. Not a bit of it. , It has been working, for thirty years. But are twenty millions of people to be whip ped by six ? We can't let this war run] on one or two years. Men must come' out to stop it. If they don't come vol untarily, ' the Government , will make them come, and it ought to make them' come." The Pennla Iteserve Corps. To be deprived of all the comforts of life, to undergo unusual hardships and, exponres, :and to risk not only the chances- of battle, but the • pestilence which is begotteu in swamps, would seem to be enough to'ask of our soldiers, with lout robbing- them of the credit due to brave men for gallant conduct. The Pa. Reserve; : so long under Gen. McCall, but now led:by-Gen. Meade, has deserved as well of the country as any command in , the service. From the time of he Drones- ! ville - fight to the recent bloody -battle near Sharpsburg, the Corps has taken a prominent part in every engagement of the aruiy •of the Potomac; qid! often sus- I tained without - support the assault of Rebel forces three, times as large as it ' Self. Some of the gallant regiments which left Pennsylvania a year ago with full racks are now so Sadly; reduced that they are regiments Only in name, and by vir tue of their glorious deeds. W nen they reached Fredricksburg,• on their way from the PeniOsultoo Pope, it yds sad dening enough to see their dress parades. Three hundred or three linttdred and fif ty'bettle-worn,• hungry, ill-clad veterans were all that Adjutants could return as fit . for duty. The restfilled bloody . graves won 'at each of the Peninsular battle fields,' , or had fallen victima to. disease. But when the-line of march from Fred ericksbitrg was taken up the men stepped out as briskly and talked as cheerfully as if the regiments were marching to their first battle. - . In the battle of Sharpsburg the Corps performed prodigies of valor, charging the enemy over and over again, driving superior forces from chosen positions, and contending for hours and hours with fear ful odds. Their bravery may be meas ured by their losses, wnich were more than one seventh of the force engaged. We should not think it worth while to say this much in jiefense of a command so noted for bravery, and steadiness as the Pennsylvania ReserVes, 'were it not for an unmanly and untruthful slur upon them recently made by the Herald.: This paper bad the.efirootery to say that the Reserve i had broken in several battles, and the friends of the Regiments feel a' natural indignation at the Tribune-1 , .A SAFE Clitincit.—The N. Y. : Tribune apropos of the Episcopal_Session ; in that city , says : The, persistent energy, work sr hial a great many_ u:keinbers of' this 9013- vention wish to do nothing and study to say nothing,. justifies the shrewdness of the ,old - judge in 'Northern view York, whose stolid conservatism was a miraele perfection. Being a man of influence, wealth, and family, he found if necossarY to join , a church. He pondered for a long time, and finally selected"the Notes. tans Episcopal Inatitution, Upon being questiioned for Lis choice, he.replied, tr . !. uniphantly : 4 You see' .T. Wee, perfectly safe in joining the Episcopal' Charch;f*Or it never mcddlealvith - eitheir temperance, morals, felities, or ' . MALE or PEVA GENTS TO-SELL.' : 600 0 14-- 4 00 'LLO'YD'S new steel plate'eonnty mitt) o f 'United Suites, Canad 4; and-New Brimswick. . '`-From recent sure coniplettst : Ang.lo, 1862 P cost $20,000 to : .,i - engEttve it and one thee. , .Siipeelor to any s2ll„map eipr mnile,by,9ol;. ton-eir Mitchell, and sells at the low prie_Cof 'filYtY cents; 370,000 names are engraved. on this, map. ' •, •:. It is not only a Coutityliny, hitt it is also a County and Railroad Map cf the United States and. Cana;ine 'combined in one, giving every ' Railroad Station and distances between. Guarantee any woman or man $3 to $5 per day, and will take back all maps that cannot be sold - and-refund-Abe money. , • . Send fur sl.wOrth to try., _ Printed 'instructions how to'canvass well, iarnislisd all our agents: , Wanted—Wholesale Agents for our Maps in every . State.Dalifornia, Canada. England, France'and Cabe:: A furtane --- .may be Made with a few hundrb'ddollars capital. No Com petition. ' T.' LLOYD, N 0 .164 Broadway.N. The War - Departinent uses:our Map of :Vir ginia, Maryland,andPeinsylvan.a, cost $lOO,- 000, on which is . marked Antietam Creek, Sharpsburg, Maryland Sights, Williamsport Ferry, Ithrorersville, Noland's Ford, and all others on the Potomac, and every other plate in Maryland, :Virginia, and Pennsylvania, Or money refunded. • Lloyd's Topographical Map' of Kentucky, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois. is the' only au thority for Gen, Buell and the War Depart ment'. Money refunded to any one finding an error in it. Price 50 tents, • From the rribune, August 2.—"Lloyfre Map 'of Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania. This I Map is very large ; its cost is but 25 cents, and it is the beat which can be pitrchased." Lloyd's 'Great 'Map of the Mississippi River —From Actual Survevii by "Capts. Burt and Wm. Bowen, Mississippi River Pilots of St. Louis, Mo., shoWs every man's plantation and owner's mimic' from St Louis to the Gulf of Mexico - -4,359 Miles—every sand-har, town, landing, and all' places 20 miles bail from the river—colored in counties and States. Price, $1 in , sheets. $2, pocket Them, and $2,50 on linen, with rollers. Ready Sept 20. NAVY DZPARTDIERT, WASIIINGTOM, • Sept. 17, 1260. , T. Lt.Orn.—Sii• : Send me your Map of the Mississippi River, with price per hundred copies. Rear-Admiral Charles 11. Davis,com mending the MissiaSippi squadron, is author ized to purchase as many as arc required for use of that squadron. 'GIDEON WELLES, Secretary of Navy. The Continental Monthly. • - Editors - lion. ROBERT J. WALKER, Hon. FRED. IL STANTON, CHARLES G. LELAND, .EI.IIIIND KIRKE, The readers of the Continental are aware of ' the important position it has assumed, of the influence and of the brilliant array of political and literary talent of the highest orderwhieb supports it. No pub7ica lion of the kind has; - in this equntry, so suc cessfully combined the energy, and freedom of the daily. riewspaper with. the' higher literary tone of the first-class monthly ; and it is very certain that• no magazine has given wider range to.its contributors, or preserved itself so completely .from the narrow influences of • party or olfaction. In times like the present, such a journal is either a power to the land or, it it utithin,r. That the Continental is not the latter' is abundantly evidenced by ,chat it has done—by the reflection of its councils in many important public erents,and in the char acter atid power of those who arc its staunch- i lest. supporters . . By the accession of Hon. Robert J. Walker and Hon. F. P. Stanton to its editorial'. corps, the Continental :acquires a strength and a political significance, v ! hich, to those who are I aware of the ability, and experience of these gentlemen, Mtitt i:levato it to a position far above any previously' occupied by any publi cation of the : hind in America. Preserving all "the boldness, v , gor, and ability" which a thousand journals 'have attributed to it, it I will (above greatly enlarge its circle of action. and discuss, - fearlessly an frakly, every prin ciple, involved in the ,great question! of the day. The first Mindi of the country', embrac ing men most familiar vitt. its diplomacy and most distinguished for ability, are to become its et;titributors ; and it is no mere "flattering promise of a prospectus" to say, that this I , magaxine for, the times" will employ the first intellect in A"meriaa, under auspices which no pithliention' ever enjoyed before in this country. - . . GI4RL ES . GODFREY LELAND,the accomplished 'scholar and author, %slid has till now been the solo Editor of the Magazine, will, beside his editorial labors, continue his brilliant contri butions to its pages; and _Edmund Kirke, au thor of " - Among the Pines," will contribute to each issue, having already begun a work on Southern Life and Society, • which will be found fur more widely descriptive, and in all respects,-superior to the - Etat. • While tho Continnital will express decided opinions on the great questions of the day, it will not be a mere political journal : much the larger portion 'of •its - colordus will be en- ivened, as - beretofore,• by tales, poetry, and humor. In a word,. the • Continental will be found, under its new staff of Editors, occupy ing, . ix, position and presenting attractions never before found in a magazine, TERMS TO CLUBS. Two copies for one year, Three 'copies -for one year,. Six copies.for QUO ,yenr, Eleven ebpies foiiine year *twenty copies for one year, - '' PAID 4 4 AD YMic l ` ,kosiage, Thirty-six cents a year ; to be paid : by the - Stibieriber. • ' SINGGE-COPIRS. Three dollars a year, IN ..ior.,t2tcr.—Postage raid bx . the Publisher, JOON' 'preche St., N. Y. •,'Publisher for the Proprietors. • 4 ,.14-As. an inducement; to nrw subscribers, the Publisher offers the folloWing very liberal premiums ; „ •• ) 4 , 4 ;Any Orion remitting $3, in advance, will reeeivelhe Btagazinelrarn Julyc. 1862, to Alailgatl'ii.l4 6 4;:tlius sect/deg the whole bf Mr. Kimball's and Hr. ,Sirkell, new serials, which are alone worth the price of subicription: Or, if pieferred;-n sub.leriber can. take tbe ;Maga -4100 fpr 1863 and a copy-of fs4mong Me Pin," Ar:of lir:item . ..a:Titus of- Wall. Se ~' , R. B. , teunet,in - Floth (the' book 'to be sent postage paid): • ',v.e. * Arty "pergon remitting $A 50,, will re celve,tho,..lifagazikefrmo .its, commencement, 'Janua'r - y" thus' eeenritig. Kinbale Wfskireßacciseal?'sitisil Mr. Kfrkes: 0 4Mong the Pihei"-ited "Merckastei Story," . and nearly 3,oo4lRetamo, pages _of the best. literature in the world.: Premitim subseribers to'pay their . . • flitaiitEST , OPli LOUR kept coistantly oa 1. hand at the ~Post,ollgeeStort. N,o'COiliMN'r linal MIME NEW GOODS SOMETHING ELSE' T UE subscribers At their OLD STAND ON NAIN MOTs Offer to their old custiomers and tba pablis generally for Cash, United States Tritaanfy Notes (which by the way are tatest , at Pat,) Wheat, Cori 3, Oats - , Buckrimat, Butter ; Cyrus, Hides; Pelts, Deer Skins, end all other kind, of Skins, such as Calf Skins, Av., also, - flesisf, Beal, Venison, and' lota. other things that can't be tin:melt oi; A LARGE AND WELL•SELECTED DRY GOODS, DEADYMADECLOTHING GROCERIES, Hats & Caps, Hardware; DRUGS MEDICINES, Paints, Oils, and Dye Stuffs, Together with some.of the best KEROSENE OM Far superior to the Oil Creek or Tidioate LAMP* LAMP FIXINGS, POCKET CUTLERT r Also n few more of those Superior CANDOR PLOWS, SLEIG lI.SHGES; GLASS, SASH, PUTTY, INK, PAPER, ENVELOPES, And other kinds of WALL PAPER, WINDOW CURTAINS And other artieleS which time alone for. Ws us to mention, all of which will bs sold as low as the WAR PRICES Wig alloiv=for strictly $5 00 600 1"100 20 00 30 00 READY-PAY!! And for those articles we take, the WO est market price will be paid. We are aiso General Agents for DR. D. JAYNE'S Family Medicines, DR. AYER'S 'Medicines, B:RANDRETWS KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery, And all the standard MediSines of the day CALL . AND Si' C. S. & ,E. A., JONES. - N. B. The pay-for the GOOdi moat be el hand when the Goods aiodelirered, &swears determined to live to the motto of "Pry Si You .. • • • Just one thing more. .The Judgmentsmotes and book accounts which we bare ,cilkban 4 mnet be settled and closed up immeiCks)eil•tor we fear they will be increased fester tbilvt-he usual rata. of intermit. Rs" 117 En AND NEW Er COUDERSPOItT. NMI ASSORTMENT OF BOOTS & SHOES, PROVISIONS, Iron, Nails, STATIONARY. IE3
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers