Dean" of riltd..Geta. Sumner. The death of Major General EDWIN Vosz SUMNER took place at the residence of his eon-in-law in Syracuse, on Satur day morning, March 21, of congestion of the lungs. His illness was but of few, days' duration, and although he had reached an advanced period of life, being in his sixty-seventh year at the time of his death, his vigorous frame and active habits indicated a much longer date to his efficient military services. General Sumner was born in Boiton in 1796, and at an early age exhibited a de cided taste for the profession of arm.— Unlike the most prominent officers in the / regular army of his standing, he did not reeeivelais military education at the West Point ,Academy ;( but after pursuing the usual studies in the best schools of Boa ton . and its vicinity, he received the ap-; , pointtrient, of Secculd Lieutenant in the :;clßegireent of U. S. Infantry, in 1819.1 became a 'member of the staff of Ma jer-General Brown,.and remained in that regiment until 1883, showing distingi,sh ed, conduct . and gallantry in the cam ilaigns against ,Black Hawk. 'He con tinued in, service on the Indian frontier,. with the exception of a limited period during which he commanded the school! of cavalry practice in Carlisle, Penn., un vil the entbrealt of the Mexican war, hay. ; ing, in the mean time received the corn-1 mission of Captain in the 2d Regiment of! Dragoons' raised by Gen. Jackson. Inj Jane, 1846, he was promoted to the rank vs'f_ Major, and placed by Gen. Scott in 'command of the mounted rifles. At the; battle of Cerro Gordo, April 18, 1847, he+ led a decisive cavalry charge, plunging! into the thickest of the fight, and escap-1 ing'with a severe wound. For ; his dis-1 tinguished' services on this occasion, he; vaceived the brevet of Lieutenant=Colonel. I Ile commanded the corps de reserve at the battles of Contreras and Churubusco, ; mud the cavalry at Melillo del Rey. in which he held in check a large force ofl Mexican lancers who threatened the left' flank of the American army. His cour •age and ability in this battle pained for him the brevet of Colonel, and in July, 1346. he ; was commissioned as Lieutend Tmt-Colonel of, the, Ist Regiment of Dm.' -goons. &t the expiration of the war with; Mexico, from which he brought a suc-1 ;cession of the most brilliant honors that ;could gratify the pride of a soldier, he) was placed in the command of the De :pertinent of New Mexico, where, on the withdrawal of Gov. Calhouain 1851, be - was the only representative of the United -hates - Government. In 1854 he visited Europe on important official business, and ' , the following year was promoted to be 'Colonel of the Ist Regiment of Cavalry.' Vhilelu command at Fort Leavenworth, -Kansas, in 1856, .his eonduct in the dis turbances between the Pro Slavery men - and the Flee-Sellers, brought upon him thc,displeasure of Jefferson Davis, then Secretary of War, who, true to his in *tit:lets in hostility to freedom, summarily removed him from the post. In July, 1857, he commanded an expidition for alio:punishment of the Cheyenne,lndians, l and defeated them in an engagement on i branch of the Kansas River. The fel= lowieg, year he was appointed to the com mand of the Department of the 'Vest. Be was selected by Gen. Scott to accom-I pony President Lincoln from his home in,, Springfield. to Washington, previoui to I lila inauguration in 1861, and on March'' 16 was appointed Brigadier General in the regular army, in place of the traitor <len. TWirs. He was then ;mimed to the cotntriatld of the. Department of the Pacific, but, owing tohis urgent desire to take part in the operations in the field, beavas recalled from the poAtion, and in Marolt ' 186:3, was appointed commander of the First 'Arinv Corps in the Army of I the Potomac. Ile commanded the left I wing at the siege of Yorktown, and was = conspicuous for his energy and zeal in,the Chickatiorniny campaign, during which he was twice, wounded: . His gallant vices before Richmond were rewarded with the appointment of Major GerMral ut Volunteers, dating from July 4, 'and l Brevet Major General in the regular army daring from May H. On the reorganiz ation of the army in 'Virginia, he was ap -Isjinted.lto the command of the Second Corps, in which capacity lie received a wound in the battle of Antietam. He was subsequently transferred to the com mand of the right division of the Army of the .Potomac,., and after the battle of Fredricksburg, Dee.l3, 1862. on the tic cession of Gen. Hooker .as General-in- Chief, he was appointed to the Depart invent of the South West, and was about to assume the command when he wets at tacked by the illness which terminated Lis life:: , Gen. Sumner was a soldier by natuie,' brave almost. to rashness, with less StrZite fiy than enterprise and reslution, a faior: ite with his men, ardently deviated to the cause of his country, and a strenuousiad-; vocate of the establishment of peace by a vigorous prosecution of the war. , The New York Herald is responsible for.the following, and whether it be Prue that it ,originated at the White House or not, every one will acknowledge that it is '.‘a palpable hit:" - When' our good President heard of the recent rebel raid at Fairfax, in which.it brigadier general and a Humber of valuable horses were captured, he gravely observed : am sorry for the horses." "Sorry for the horses, Mr. President !" _cxelaimedF Beereiary of War, raising his spectacles nrid,:throrrip , a himself back in his hair astuisluent. "Yes," replied Mr ;Lincoln, ".I . Can make a brigadier'geeeml in five minutes, but it is not so easy re. place a hundred and . ten horses." THE JOURNAL. Couoiersport' Pa. Wecinesday;Mar, 2.5,1863. 31. IV. Iic.ALARNEY, EriLron., • , The Superinte¢idenCY• When Gov. Packer took the State Ex ecutive chair it will be remembered that the patronage in his control was with drawn from Republican holders and en joyers, and given to members of his own party. We do not knot that anybody complained of this. It was expected, and acquiesced in / as a thiog of course.— Wlitever may be said ofthe democracy,. as r 'party, it was never ~ f orgetful of its own interests. It was trite to its constitu [ ent members always; never ashamed to bestow its favors on its Own family, and never making, any shot,' or pretence of magnamity to; its foes. When.Gor: Packer went out, or in the spring preceding his going out, be gave the Able State Superintendent of Common Schools, Mr. Hickok, the privilege of re , signing. Mr. Hickok resigned, and the preeent incumbent, Mr. Burrowes, was appointed in his stead. We regretted tile,. Hr. 'Hickok,' was the ablest, the most indefatigable worker in the clause of Common Schools iu the 'State. He had entered upon his office in a dark and trying period of the cause, bad overcome great obstacles, uprooted prejudices., and fairly set the machinesa-going. But he tea not a democrat. 4.Nor would he stoop to hide his political opinions on any pro. per occasion for revealing them. Yet he was not a politician. He meddled with no.imata's belief, nor did he promulgate hid own except in ,proper places. But deuiocracy . demanded his removal. He was removed, in a . polite way. There were no charges against him. We do not suppose Gov. Packer objected to him pe6onally. But Gov. Packer was only the orient of a power bellied the throne. We now desire to call the attention of Gov. Curtin to these facts Land to sug gest that retributive justice is the only , sort of justice to deal out in cases of this kind. We know no'gr'eat ill, in portion of Mr. Burrowbs • but then,. we knew i no ill of Mr. Hickok ' . Jet Mr. Hickok was removed. \Shy :shouid not Gov. Curtin quietly send into the. Senate the name of seme excelledt Republican, and I so quietly remove. Mr..; Burrowes? 'We are not aware that Mr: Burrowes has be come a fixture, nor that he has distils - - duished himself greatly in his official rtca pacity. He is not entitled to any favors Above other men of like capabilities and attainments. And the Stale has dozens, or scores of men as talented, and as well adapted to the position as he. The above. article which serves to in traduce a recommendation of Prof. Chas. h. Coburn, of Bradford county for the 'position of Superintendent, we copy from ;the Tioga Agitator. Mid below we pub lish a letter to the Harrisburg _Telegraph proposing the re-appointment of Mr. Hickok. If a Republican is to be selected no one better fitted for the position can bh found than the man who engineered the Common School system of thieState ,through its (laciest period, and who-when he had just begun to see some of the good results of his labor' as removed for 6pin. ion's sake. We Nape known Mr. Hickok since 1553 and havie always found him earnest and active in whatever he under took. We hope Goy. Curtin will consider I the claims of- our first Supetintendent, - and re-appoint hinni • "Several respectable gentlemen 'have been proposed through your columns for the office ;of Superintendent of Common Schools in the State; Allow me to add the name of Hon. Henry C. Hickok to the list. Under his recent administration of that office, our educational system for the masses received a greater impetns i in effi ciency and pc,,nularay, than during any similar period df time since its inception. His was a. transitin period, full •of the most anxious cares and onerous responsi bilities, requiring a man of peculiar qual ities to meet and :mould every obstacle. The time and energy devoted to the emer gency by Mr. Hicdtok—not only in, the executive duties of the department at home, and the Meditations of private hours, but also in !traveling, by night and by day, over nearly every county is the State, addressing (often when hardly Able to stand) scores of the largest and mo.7t. intelligent audiences—eauuot be readily estimated, but wure most timely and val uable in placing the system upon a solid and tlitchanyingi /oasis. Although Mr. Hickock's reappointment was urged by those best acquainted with Our daimon schools and withilds merits, Gov. Packer saw fit to bestow' the honor upon one of his political friends. Justice to the man, and deference toithe wishes of those most identified with the system, point to Mr. Hickok as the °tie who should be restored to a station he so well and acceptably filled. As .to the great question 'of the day, he is for crnshing the rebellion and restoring the supremacy of the General Government i withont cavil, equivocation or reservation; find' whatever incidental influence the office might exert under hisi care, would be in the right direction. UNION." The Viceroy in. Egypt has placed at the disposarof Frapco eight hundred negro staves. They are ` to be embarked in a French war steimer,and sent to Mexico. - COPPEPMEAD FUSSES. The traitor. Wendell Phillips, in a speech -recently delivered _in New York, used the fol lowing treasonahle language : "Liberty to the slave ordeath to the Union." - tie is the leader of the Administration party, whtch, in, the eyes of abolitionists, it is treason to oppose. Clinton Democrat. Of all the villainous . falsifiers that; ever', cursed a nation the copperhead press of this Country is chief.. In this itenapf half-a-dozen lines there are three assertions *hose truth ive deny and whose falseness we ,lthink can I be proven. • I. Wendell Phillips in all his, speeches since the war'began has steadily Maintained a firm conviction that the Rebellion would be crushed and the •Union restored—that in the restoration of the Union slavery would be done away with, but that in any event the Union must be restored—and has never in any' speedb "recently delivered in. New York," made us, of any language such as he is. here , ' charged with.We• read all. his published speeches, a thing we do not believe this big oted partizan scribbler dare do, and have•not found any such doctrine as is here asserted His speeches are, all anti-copperhead,-peace, comprorniserarmistiner&c: . 11. It is here asserted that "l e is the leader of the Administration party." We are sur prised that any one claiming to he an intelti gent reader of his country's history dare pub lish such a palpable falsehood. Does not the editor of this second edition of the Patriot t Union know that Mr. Phillips and his peculiar party not only opposed the gallant Fremont, but that'in 1860 he made some of the most violent speeches against Mr. Lincoln, main taining that the election of a Democrat would sooner accomplish the end for which the Ab olition party was organised ; that night after night Mr. Phillips lectured to crowded houses in Brooklyn denouncing Mr. Seward and 't Republican party; that he was mobbed, ikt New York city, and the Republicans con demned him as strongly and even more strongly than Democrats, as the latter lOoked upon him as .asFisting their party. Does he not remember the mournful speech of Nir. Phillips after it was known the Democracy had split at Charleston, and that he then said he was anxious to have Democratic rule four years longer, which he conceived would end Slavery by the destruction of the Union, and he thought the Democracy were the'ouly Par tizans who would ever dare its destrnction. He expected the Democratic party at the , North to have taien a more active course than they yet have, but this was ail owing to the haste of the Southeners, if they could have had six months more to talk about it we have not a shadow of a doubt but thatalmost the entire Breckinridge' party at the North would have openly assisted South Carolina, ! as their course since plainly demonstrates. His relation to the Administration can be said to be this: when he saw that the Democrats were for the disunion of the country,he worked with them for what he conceived to be Freedom's sake; after a civil war had been precipitated upon the country, he supportel the Administration because he saw it would save the Union and that Sfavery must be de stroyed if the Union we saved. 'That is Wendell Phillips' position as we understand it. .lie is now making Union speeches throughout the country the same as Demo-) erotic Andy Johnson, of Tennessee, who the copperheads at Harrisburg refused:to hear. We do not defend much of Mr. Phillips' ca reer but believe in: giving justice to When he was with the Democrats he was Dis union but now ho is with the Administration and he is Union. 111. "It is treason to oppose the Adminis tration party." Who ever said so—it . is news to us. But we hold the following to he trea son, which you may mean when you say oppo sition to the Administration : . Opposition to the Proclamation of Freedom—which has be come a law of the land, not , only by the Mili tary power vested iu the President but also by the law of nations. John Quincy Adams, on the 14th of April, 1842, in the Congress of the United States, said: "Play this down as the law of nations. I say that the military authority takes, for the titne, the place of all municipal institutions, slavery among the rest. Under that state of thinga,so farfrom its being true that the States where slavery exists have the exclusive man agement of the subject, not onto the President of the United States, but the commander of the army, has power to order the universal emancipa tion of the slaves." And then again he announces in words fur ther applicable to the present hour: "Nor is this a mere theoretic statement. Slavery was abolished in Colombia,first by the Spanish General, Murillo; and secondly.i the American General Bolivar. It was abolished by virtue of a military command given at the head of the army, and its abolition continues to be law to this day." The representatives of slavery fumed and raged at these words and at their venerable author; but nobody answered them. And they have stood ever since in the records of Congross, firm and impregnable as adamant. —Opposition to, the Conscription Bill, and at tempting to rouse the baser passions of men by constant perversion of the , meaning of the Jim/ . advocating, $3OO clause m/ . advocating, indtrectl,y, thF desertion of meu from the ranks ; fatal tfind ings with President and 'generals; cries , against taxation, declaring An t i they are levied for the: good of the negro alonet,rd for the purpose of making him equal with:the White min . ; prophecies as to our soon ha ying a negro Pre-= ideat ; and cries of fraud! fraud!' 'The cop= perhead press are guilty of all these and many more treasonable acts. All: this bitterness against.the Administration is not simply the offspring of paitizan: spirit; it has something more closely allied with treason for itsinien tive. It is followiag the plan mapped, out by traitors like Vallandigham, ..Jeff. Davis, Co,i Floyd, and Fernando Wood. items like the above,whether true or fatse,car be of no good to the country, and any one do ing so makes himself liable to the truthful charge of—traitor ! II I NEWS A Teconnoisanee underGen.-Averill was made across the Rappantioek,,onitho lithinst. They , forced their way - itcress the river in'the lade•of rebel 2 eiharp:sheot , -ors. They were met by a body Of Stuart* cavalry,',when a series, of : conflicts took place which lasted almut tive,hours.Y !Our cavalry charges were acknowledged by the rebelsas the most brilliant - of the War. After hav ing.accomplished their mission, and securing'about 80 prisoners, iameng whom is Maj. Breckinridge, our forces re.' [ Awned, having whipped the rebels so Cour pletely that they coultr not annoy - them , while recrossing. ! Col. James B. Fry, Adjutant General of the United 'States; Army, ..has' been ap pointed Provost Marshal General ot 'the United States, in purtiance ofsection" five Of the act of enrolling anclealling out the National forces, and for other purposes. Be is accordinglrauthorized and Tequir ed•to perform ail the duties of Provost , Marshal General set forth iti the said set; I and such ether duties .as may properly_ pertain to his.office. • The Union-Committee of . Pennsylvania have called a State Convention at Pitts burg on Itbe 'lsth of ' July, to sneminate candidates for Governor and Judge of the Supreme Court.. ,The Committee ,also passed resolution xecoininending the or. ganizatibn of the' Union Party in each. Legislative District. 'Kentucky bezins to get on the track again. At the Union Convention at Lou isville, the loyal feeling . wasrwonderfully strong. ; In the afternoon, • Wickliffe in troduced Cravens (appropriate name,) the Copperhead' Congressman ; but the Convention would not liSten to him, and 'he was kicked out amid} groans and jeers. ;All the counties except those bordering On the Tennessee line were represented. ; • Our entire loss in the late cavalry fight was less than ,40 in• killed and wounded. The buys brag of it as the greatest.liand. to•band conflict that ever took•place on this Continent. • MALIGNANT TO THE LAST.—The Cop perhead. Legislature of Illinois spat upon the grave of STEPHEN A. DOUGLAS,' by voting dean an appropriation fora tuc,m. umerit to his memory. .:Most of ;the Re- publicans voted for the appropriation.-- Govi YATES, himself urged the paesage of the appropriation. Our Washington correspoildent - says that ! information has been received from GairO indicating that the YazooiExpedi tion /has been successful, and, that Vitals burg is practically ours. No date is men tioned for the Cairo dispatch. We have had so many, rumors and assertions that have proved untrue, that it wilt' be hard to Make the people believe anything with out 'More bpecific proofs. The City of Jacksouviile was taken by Week 'soldiers. on the 10th inst. The people were in great fearof an indie.crint inatc massacre;but the negroei behaved with prgriety, and no one was harmed: On the llth 'Col Montgomery',;of the 2d Colored Regiment, went with about 200: men three miles out , of town', and mct about 200 Rebels, 'with' whom' he had Ei sharp skirmish. Baldwinsville, the junc.., doh of d the, railroad. from Jaehsonville •to Tallahassee, and with that from Pernan. diva to Cedar Keys, is suppred to be the point aimed at by the' expidition Desertions from the Rebels continue quite frequent. Five• sailors from the Rebel cunboat Savandah reached Fdrt Pulaski on the mizht of the 14th; bringing with them a Lieutenant as prisoner. 11 dispatch to St. Louis _ says that the Union guribbat Chilicothe' bombarded Fort Netherton, on the Yazoo, for .two days without decisive results. Re en fiireements were going , fOtward, ' and it was thought that the fort Would soon be reducetV . , Correspondents in !le Pot Oman Army, say that the gallant cavalry fight by As- . • erill's wen the other day has 'put wonder ful lifMint s o that arm of the service. The woral effect is most excellent. ' The,St. Louis. Republican. states that the condition of the people of South-West Missotiri: is positively alarming, they be ing so destitute as to be . iu:danger.cf ac tual starvatio.o. . There was ti• report in Louisvillsion Saturday that ; the Union forces under Stanley - had met and defeated John Mar van's Rabel cavalry at, McMinnville; on ' Ban's pievious day. * • . •; • It seems to be pretty certain that The Rebels are abeut to abandon FrederiCks ! burgoind fall back nearly to Aichmond.' t They; fear an attack' by wayr of 'James' River. WASIIITdTON, March 23 The following 'was received here this morning, addressed to Col. Stager, by steamer to New York: • MarcS . OETU-WEST PASS, ch 1.5. • Corn. Farrapt, leading' in tire Hart. ford attacked the Port lied- onlbatteries last night ae 11 o'clock 'with - hifleet The steamer Mississippi ran, ngrolind was abandoned- and burned: The ,firing on both side's was rapid and severe. The army is within five miles of the enemy's works, in good' spirits and bound to Cavalry skirtnishos' have been the only fighting as yet. • • • • t CUARLES BERKELY. The amount of money I to be paid into th© United States Treasury, for exemp-, tion from.,military duty, , the Friends of Indiana, will be two hundred and fifty three thousand dollars.. ; serAll persons w o servo two years* dthing the war; or khose who are..dis charged by reason of woiridk‘reOelved lin battle, within two y ho 'ars, and Ile' heirs of my thoielwho.die or killed While in i t theAervice, are 46 - receive ~all pay','dut3 them, and $lOO 'to 'nty:: ; If the soldier deceased . was marrieil, the wtdeoW, gets he bounty ; if no widow, the .children or, ,is legal heirs ; if unMarad, payment 'in 3 1 made fiat to the father ; if . the fathe is dead, Jo the ruotheti if hotbare dead to the brothers and sinters. ' Those Who' are disabled while in ha service, reeeive a pension accordin to disability. A deceased 'soldicer wid w, or, it no •widow, Ilia - children; if-nocleri 16 years' of age ) , get a pension in addition to the bounty. Any. agent. or attorney who shall tie mend; or receive any greater compensation than five dollars for preparing,and pre senting- ' • any' 'Claim, ' bounty 'or ' Penion, i (-with one dollar and ' fifty cents for ash 'additional affidavit! necesiary,) shal be deemed :guilty Of a high misdemeanor, and uperci • convictio'i, shall. for each ofz fence, be fined not : ;exceeding. $3OO. or imprisoninent at hard labor not exceAing two years, or both; nccordin* to the cir cumstances and aggravatichi df the Depose. Every-person t;hose business it is to prosecute claims in anY of the executive departments of the federalgovern eat shall be deemed,n ,claim 'agent, 'ad, as such, must take out a license wed r the Excise Tax Law, arbe subject to th pen ( alties therein prescribed. . .. i " ' : . ..-----.. . ~,, ..—. Ilox. D: WI - this:Yr.- 7 -Th conertration of Judge . Wiltnotlis ajudge of the Gunn of Claims will belhailed with satisfaction 14 his numerous friends. It was a mer ited complimient to a deserving-ar, and the fact that it was ablest a spontaneous act on the part di the President iocireases the value of the , emnpliment. The posi tion, under the olevir law just passd, to ; aganizin3 the Court of Claitus,.in next ib the i highestiin the Judiciary.' The now is ty nlependent of Congress, and its decisions are final, in certain ca ses,. and in all Ftbers save by apinal to the Supreme Court. • Formerly the Conn- Was a mere appehdage - bf Congrqs, and its decisions wer • submitted to the action of both Rouses. business hereafter, Will be very 'h•avy, owing to accidents and incidents of war.i * We eongratt4ate l i , the country up4l th,elappo'inttnen of the right roan"to the place, one who' ill' not knowingly suffei a peony -of the ihmmon, tteasnre to finditS way intoidisloyal pock: eta.-:—Agitator L 1. ipondeot writing from ;r date of Morel 13, says the ,Efouse anrte)ided the 11the Tonnage Tax to. all reeting the Attoritey Gen- Buhl for the mOoky Joe they Tax was repealed. reirA corre :Harrisburg undl "Yesterday, bill to restore 'Railroads, by di, oral to institute the Statd whei The proceeds theSe receipts tp _o into the sinking On its finulipassage. the vor Stood 34 •Rep., 16 .Eetu.-50 YEAS • • and, 2 Rep.,. , 34 I. etn.-46 N,ltYs .1. • 4 Mhj,,.hitter and Strouse voted Yea. Absent,;Cessna, and 3 others. Some voted NO because they whuted the recovery of the money due, tseparated frpin the reinstatement, of.. the Tax.— Others voted thus because thdy wanted nothing but a t!iace, unconditional -repeal, which ,bill would have . gone to, the Su• preme .Coutt for. decision, .anti• -left . the question opeo i and do rev - Cone, for another year. For all practical good, t seems to roe now to be lin lhe best shape as a sure revenue measure, which may go into effect at once, and thus substantially cure the financial loss bf the bills of 1861, which laid so, many . politicians in early if not unhormred grhves." l . _ _ _ AL'; , EIVED TREASURY ‘ NQTEB.—The counterfeiter- have ,copmenned altering the one awl 'wo dollar ,Treas,Ory notes to those of higilier denm m oatiens. Already tens, fifties, dud one hundreds have wade their appearance. : llJususpecting persons would be very likely to take these altered bills for theli. apparent valuelbut-a slight exatiiinationlonly is necessary to discover the different s. IVtc give .the- following description. f the genuine E l, plates, and would advis our readers to But, it out and paste it up. f/ni refrence: t Ones- 7 , --vi . large oval portiait of Chase ' 1 oti left end. I . '.rwos—vi Jorge oval portrait of Ham ( lithe on low' r left 'team. : I. ,Fives-, - --v g.-, liknness , of. Hamilton . on. right:end ; tatun of female _representing. Amerien onl left end. - • i . , irgns- r , vt,g..eagle on' opper eentre,, oval portrait of Lincoln on upper left end. TwentiesEvig. statue of female with shield and swot* representing America; in centre 01 . n0t01. , , I.- , . ..:-; _ Fifties-- 4 ,vig. ,Ilarge • ovo portrait of Hamilton 4p upper;left centre.'; .; . _ ,_ One oa uPP' ;once and ob: Uwe in the us, last Sal __Jy, that one soldier op owed to the;Etna:peinationPrue 7 laination—and:he was drunk Burnaidtep 9th Artni. Coips:oaluio n 'stiidolize him- HoOkeVa (men - itrust him, like, .a 'faiher, the men afe ‘ earnist. an , n, : they'want t to light, this Rebellion, .selean down, at once, J an - dfor el er i an ,no room for affer elaps, Be says,' they ate most ifldignand• at the Copperheads of the North, and many tlthern asked him why the peolihe here did• not ptring them"np, and thualatittelch ,theirtreasOn ! -- .46101:8- .•• • StcfrAnd 'darnivicre • 'Nei or marry tit ove: ONE S , COLUMN CZN;MMiI b' ... Y,tir GOODS SOMETHING ELSE NEW t! T HE atil:r3eribers at their t• - , . OLD. STAND ON MIN STREET : ' • - - . H. COUIjERSPORT, Offer to their old cnstoraers and the public generally for Cush, United States Treasury Notes (which by the way are toren at Par 44 Wheat ; Corn, Oats, Buckwheat, Butter,Meet*, Hides, 'Pelts, Deer Skins, and all other kind* of Skins, such as Calf Skins,_ Icc. t also] Bees, 'Venison, and some other thi n gs . thAt taut be thought of, A LARGE AND WELL•SELECTED ASSORTMENT: OF DRY. GOODS, BOOTS & SHOE‘ DE ADYMADE CLOTHIN G GROCERIES, i 1 I Hats & Caps, Iron, -Nails, Hardware, DRUGS 8:: MEDICINES,. Paints, Oils,.and Dye aSiuDiy Togethe l r iv, l ith some of the best ' ' iiIEROSENE OIL„ , Far superior to the Oil Creek or_Tidiortle Oil.' . „ , LAMP & LAMP FIXINS,: Also 'fete more of those Superior CANDOR PLOWS, sLElpgsgoEs, 'GLASS, SASH, PUTTY, INK, PAPER, ENVELOPES, And other kind's of WALL PAPER, , . WINDOW CURTAINS Aod oilier aiticles which time alone for. bids us .to mention, all of whipb' sold AS 10 W as the WAR PRICES' will allow--for strictly • • , READYTAT • • And' for those articles we take, the high est market price will be paid. f We are dist> General :Agents for DR.' D. JAYNE'S Family Illedicineit, DR: 1 DR. AYER'S 'Medicines• eagle BRANDRETti'S ,PMB, KENNEDY'S :Medical Disnoverh And all the standard MediCknee , of the day CALL FSEE! AND . C. s. & A : 3QIYES: Tile pay for tiooder toast' be tie hand when' the' Gads are delivered, as we art deteinained , to live to the: motto of "Per 's You Go." f/n4one thing.inore. !ll‘eAsnigraelty,oete! an& book',accoopts,which me have on itsee, inuit'be settled and closed upimmedistely et we fear they wilt be increaseti fasteitho tb s usual rate of latirto, Deal/ AND iffilli MEI 7 =MI 7 PROVISIONS, Mil I. POCKET CUTLERY, STATIONARY. ME
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