THE JOURNAL. Coudersport,. ra. Wednesday, Sep• 2,8,1864 M. W. McALARNEY, Eriroi NATIONAL UNION TICKET FOR, PRESIDENT, liEltAHAla LIC.UCOLN, OF ILLI:EIS -... FOR VICE PRESIDENT, ANDREW JOHNSON, OP TENNESSEE ElectoFal SENATORIAL. - Marton WMichael, Philadelphia. • Thomas Cunningham, Beaver County. Representative. 'I R. P. King,- •13E. W. Hall, .2 G. M. Coates, 14 C. 11. Shriner, 2 Henry Bumm, 15 John Wister, 4 Wm. H. Kern; 1G David IrConaughy, 5 Bartin.H. Jenks, 17 David W. Woods, 06 Charles M. Runk, 18 Isaac Benson, ?I Robert Parke, 19 John Patton, • :11 Aaron Mull, 20 Samuel B. Dick, 9 John A. Hiestrind,2l Everard Bierer, 10 R. H. Coryell, ,-- - - 2 John P. Penney, 11 Edward Holliday, 23 E,. M'Jnnkin, 12 Charles F. Reed, 24 J. W. Blanchard. Union County Tieliet• For Assembly: Won. A. G. °LUSTED, of Potter county Moo. J. W. GUERNSEY, of Tioga.- For Treasurer : _ARCH. F. JONES, Coudersport Borough For Commissioner E. 0. AUSTIN, of Sylvania tqwnshili For Auditors: .LTICIEN BIRD, of Ulysses township,' and B..GRAVES, of Clara township. Niass fileetings • AT LEWISVILLE, Sept. 30th, at 1 o'clock • Gov. .l'ierponl, rf West Virginia, and • Col; lloutgoniery, of . 'will address the peeling. 'AT °SWAY°, Oct. 4th, at 1 o'clock, P. 16 Gco. TY. Landon., of Pe?nzsglvania, -will address the weetir,,,g. AT COUDERSPORT, Oct. sth; at 1 o'clock, Ron. Geo. W. Landon, of :Pennsylvania, and other Eminent Orators,. will address the meeting Rally to the cause of Freedom ! Atlanta luts Fallen I Mobile is under our prOteellcn I Grant's success is certain I Give a day to the cause of your Conutry Show the Rebels in the Field and the Rebels at Home that you .are determined that their efforts shhil,prove fruitless. [Come one, come all ! Come men, •women, and children I Come with your •wives and your sweethearts, collie with' . the •old and the young, until you make the apol ogists for traitors hang their heads at the vis ion of the certain defeat that awaits them. Come as the winds *come when fin.ests are rended ; . Come as the waves come whoa navies are •* stranded! A Meeting Will be held. in the SCHOOL HOUSE in BOULET, Saturday evening of this tve4 A. N. COLE, Esq., of Wellsville, N. Y.,1 will address the people. Turn oat • F Au Epigram. . 1 . [Written on the occasion of McClellan's Re ception at Trenton after being relieved of his command.] , . BY W. A. (MOFFAT. Ye Gods I How easy public sense was cheated What cheap applause the Jersey welkin shook, When "Little Mac" was glorified and tre As he the-saddle for the stump forsook. Pope was the only foe he c'cr defeated Trenton the only town ho ever took I i "Take two of earth's detested, names 'lscariot' and gaga,' And''treinbling coward,' and_you kayo The conclave of Chicago !" ne,.. The democracy of Erie and Ci'awfOrd counties have tioniinated Dan liico for the -Senate to run against M. B. Lowry. If Dan ‘accepts it will be the biggest joke he ever got -Off! Ile has been playing the foot some time .for nay. It won't pay to do it for.: such a Party. i • Glorious Nev-va SHERIDAN WHIPS EARLY ; 'Tlie Rebel Forces Bootee! I Gen. Sheridan has fought three battles during the last week witlithafebel forces under Early, in the Shenand r oah in each of which the rebels were badly beaten and daiven back until their retreat became a perfect rout. !The rebel loSs is estimated at 3000 killed, 5000 wounded, and-tve have capturedabout 8000 prison ers, 20 guns, and a large- amount of am inutaition_Jtncl provisions. Our loss is'not yet estimated, but is reported compara tively light. The last reports stated that Gen. Sheridan a'as 'expecting to capture the wholb of the Shenandoah valley rebel army. Nothing important at Petersb l urg er Atlanta. Surrender of Mobile. ' The Memphis Bulkeia of yestertlay publishes, IT what it regards as trust worthy author'ity. the substauee of d, dis phtith received at Holly Springs, an -nouncing the unconditional- surrender of Mobilo to our gunboats. No tlate l .; l are given. The gunboats apprciautiedl;the city so close they could have destroyed it without difficulty. Some people were credulous enoucth to believe that McClellan would refuse to run on the Chicago platfoim. The fallacy of`their belief is apparent since his letter, accepting the nomination has appeared. He talks. all around tho white feather platform, but does not repudiate; it. So, he stands upon a peace platform asking support as a war democrat. He; believes in the ,practicability tat coercing the re bellious States back again into thb Union. His platform repudiates coercionl So he is at variance with the platform which foreshadows tho policy he is expected to adopt if elected. • Really, this reminds us of the old farce of "Buchanan, Breckenridge and Free Kansas," which Border Ruffian Democ racy played out in Potter county in 1856. It won't do, Messrs. Vallandigham & Co. A war candidate on a flag of truce plat form is just a trifle too re faced. Try some shrewder game.--'Agitator A Warning to Patriotic Dem- crags. The Selinsgrove Timesboasts that from the first it has, consistently opposed any armed coercion of the !insurgents in the Southern - Stateg. One of its expressions was that any Democrat who enlists is an Abolitionist or fool ! Pn the subject of Senator for that district, the Tinzs of the 22th ult. gives the following omenous hints : . . "We hope We shall I le able Conscien ! tiously to support the !nominee, Whoever he may be. - Unless we can do this upon the great question now before our coun try, of war or peace, We shall prefer to support no man. If this war ism, be pros ecuted beyond the year 1864, ire much, prefer that Abraham Lincoln shall have the privilege antk. pleasure of doing so. Before we consent to support any man who is in favor of this war, we shall pre fer to consign 'our establishment to the flames. There is not a corporal's; guarsl of war democrats in the whole of Snyder county, and for cot!' democrat to come out on a war platform, will be utter, Jolly, for certain defeat will be his doom. And• so it ought to be." WE this week put the name of A. G. 01,:usT.En, Esq., upon the ticket, as one of the candidates fort.he Assembly for this district. The proceedings of the Conference will he- found in the local column. It is hardly necessary for us to multi ply words in setting forth the cilaims of Mr Olmsted to the fvllest confidence and support of the freemen of Tioga,! Those claißs are disputed by no true friend of the country Personally, we know 'him to be a man ,of unblemished integrity, both as a man and a legislator, and a pa triot as true as steel. In private life he one of the most genial men with whom it has been our fortune to meet; and we most heartily endorse the recommendation of the Harrisinirg Telegraph, and several other journals that he be the nest Speak er of the llouse. Ms prospects arc first rate.—Agztator. MUST SUBMIT !—At the opening of the new Club 'louse, of the Keystone Club, Mr. Chas. IngeriAl struck the key ,note of the party fur the campaign. Ile declared that if Mr. Lincoln is elected, as ho most assuredly will be, it will be REVOLUTION 'There can be but one nterprctation to such language. A revolt in the North is threatened if McClellan is defeated. In this the party is consis tent. Jeff. Davis declares that the ma jority should not rule, and his Northern allies make haste to endorse the doctrine. The issue is 'fairly represented. If Mc- Clellan is elected we will submit : but it must be distinctly understood that, if Mr. Lincoln is re.eleeted, the Copperheads must aad stun: submit. The rule must work both ways. THE PEACE PARTY.—On Monday last, at the Meeting of the Keystone Jlub in Philadelphia, John Bell Robinson, a well known Copperlicad,publicly declared that he thanked. God, that ho had never since the commencement of the rebellion, said a word, written a word, or thought a word in favor of the war ! His reason for this was, that the North and not the South was to blame for the present strife. And :vet Mr. Robinson, supports McClel lan, whose only reputation is Co be found in his military record. Is this not sus picious ? Will the friends of. the living and dead heroes of Our gallant army vote A?r a candidate who is found in such com r pally as that of Vallandigham, Wood, Ingersoll and Robinson',? The Inconsistency of the Couporheads is exhibited• when they proclaim their opposition to the draft, and yet hurrah for the mau who urged a draft more strongly than anybody else. HEAR, WLT.AT THADDEUS STEVENS SAYS:—Eldet-IWClellan tend the Repub lic has ceased to exist. _ On its • ruins will spring up numerous petty empires, whose future coudition *ill be one of per petual wars and of grinding slavery.— Re-elect the calm statesman who 11017 presides over the nation, and he will lead you to an honerabl3 peace and td. per. maneut liberty. REMEMnEtt When yon hear ;McClellan peace makers profess loyalty to the Upion, that in the campaign of; 1860, tio 0110 of the three parties was more vociferous in its profession of fidelity to the Union than the party headed by tho man who is now a - Major General in the rebel army —John Breckinridge.. Puss Llair Lae rosig:wd Lie po..t tun it. U.o•:.lleettifp.m ut cjiltv i,u ' 0.1:1.:11 UPP4Ltt:d. Gla frioppericad. r,roin a Proch,linltion to t'. l Soldiers of the United Slates, 20, 1 ; 1730. • fron are promised liberty by the leaders of par affairs, bat is there an individual in 'the enjoyment of it save your opprcs soils ? Who among you dare speak or write what ho thinks against the tyranny that has robbed you of Your property, iMPrisons your sonsj drags you to:, the field of battle, and is daily deluging your country with your blood? Dour country once was happy, and had the prof e:ed peace been embraced, the last two years of misery had been spent logien°, and plenty, and rcpairiug the deiolation of a quarrel that would have set the quarrel of Great Britain and Ainerica in a true light, and cemented th6ir friendship. 1 wish to lead a chosen band Of Amer icans to the attainment of peaed, liberty mid safety, the first objecti in taking the field. What is America but a land of widows orphans and beggars ."—But what need of .argument to such as feel infinitely more misery than tongue can express ? I give my promise of most affectionate welcome to all who are dis posed to join me in measures necessary to close the scene of our affliction, which must be increased till we are content with the liberality of the parent country, who still offers us protection and perpet ual exemption from all •: - ,axes but such as we shall think fit to impose upon our selves. BENEDICT ARNOLD P.,-.Dont, you hear some people talk l.r the same strain, in, our. dry Traitors and sympathizers with earl country's foes seek to scare and coax the people into a short but dishorierable -)cLy - Jabt when our hopes ate brightest, by hypocritically Mpanino• ainut the "blood:they tra.ve . sbe - d tb'emserve, and ',lre ‘.‘widows, orphans and beggars" they are making! "Come back tc l l. icing dcoro.e and good 'Royal times," cried Arnold and his Teri* "The Union as'', it was, Isvith Slavery for ever ? cry the Georgeitel of our day. I. 4tar - The draft is not a very pleasant thing per sc. But there is no use in ma king one's self f) . . fool about.it. It is idle to; charge the draft upon this Adminis tration, and to resolve to vete for Mc- Clellan, or Tom Tether, because it has come. The draft is a necessity of the War. It comes because the war wants soldiers and must have them, or, stop.— Lincoln didn't get up the war, if some Copperhead did say so. The Rebels, with Davis at their head,got up the war and Lincoln is trying to put them down i find restore the nation; and he is slowly doing it. And he is sloWly doing it he eCuse it is so large, and determined, and diabolical. Now do you . Want the war to stop by giving up°, to the rebels and di- Viding the nation? If you do, resolve to Vote for Peter Funk or his brother for President, and to decry the darft. Go in With the Copperheads and cry peace, while peace means "Confederate indipen deuce" with "original boundaries." War means fighting; and fighting somebody has to do! Will you daend your coun try, or let it go ? The draft is not Lin coln's measure more than of other good men. It was proposed. by McClellan ; was advocate by Archbisbp Hughes, and is now deelared to be the right chino. by Grant and Sherman. Keep cool, then; and if the draft comes, as it will, act the Philosopher and the man of sense. To School. noirectors. • 13ROOKLAND, Sept. 20, 1864. To THE JOUIZNAL: While the wages of laborers,mechanies,Government clerks, soldiers and officers, are advanced with the advance of prices—while several coun ties haveraised thd salary of their County Superintendent of schools, we seem to say nothing On the subject, apparently for getful of the fact that since the sarary of our Superintendent was , fixed at 6500, nearly. all things he has to buy for family use &e., has doubled in price.; I suggest the callinc , of a Convention of Directors to raise the salary—and suggest $BOO as the price. As is now pretty well under- Stood, this Will be merely saying to the authorities. "you may pay our Superin tendent $BOO out of the General .Lund, instead of $500." It would not decrease our "State Appropriation" to schools. • What says any Director to this propo sition—needed but not solicited by our Superintendent ? As over, a friend of schools, N. D. .1:3--Major Gen. McClellan in accept ing a nomination for the Presidency:from LI Convention demanding that "immedi ate effort be made for a cessation of hos tilities," says that "he is happy to know i.iiat when the nomination was made the record of his public life' was kept in iriew." Will his friends permit us to agree with him without calling us libel ers? The one thing thatjs plain is his record is that he never fdnght if he could help it.. So long as the P,ebels wouldiet him alone, Stove pipes in position, as at itlunson's Hill, and Qu l aker guns as at Mansssas were quite enough to secure a Cessation of "host,ilitie.s", on the part of the Quaker Major-Genurai. Go iu Yes ' men and patriots, go to. New is the tier to do something for your country. Give your time, your mon- Oy„ and in all ways do:yoUr utmost to get votes for Lincoln aue Johnson in Novem ber. Organize by Sebool Distriets—eir- Oulate doeumen LE...Jdd. neiLdiborliuod moot. itigs, iu short, laldor etic.iy day fur the c an.4e fium .e tau (Ly of .d..e• OMB 3ffeClel3.att at Malvern We find the following stittem4t about McClellan's retreat from INlalverninill, in the Rev. J. J. Mark's able history of the "The Peninsula Campaign in VOginia." It is a portion of history which will be difficult for General McClellan to eltplain- The statement is the more Impo4nt just now from the fact that the Rev. .Mr. Marks wrote his history immediately afr:er .Me- Clcllan abandoned the Peninsula.l It was not written for any political effect ; nor by apolitician, but ab army chaplain, , who was a faithful witness of the scenes which he describes. We copy it now for the benefit of the people who are invited to vote for the sweet-scented General Who ran away from a victory which the - glorious old Army of ihe Po. tomae had won. Mr. Marks says.: Giiiiens and issued OctOer The, battle was over, but the emiaonad log still continued, and shells and balls of every kind tore through the woods in a ceaseless whirlwind of fury. 'En the meantime thonsands of the Confederates fled in the wildest disorder from th!e, scene and hid themselves in swamps and hol lows; Esoldieri without guns, hdresmen without caps and swords, came to the hos pitals in the battle field of Glend4le, and reported. that their regiments. and brig ades were swept away, and they alone were "escaped to tell tho tale." It is one of the strangest thins in this week of disaster that General 3le Clellan Ordered a retreat to Harrison's Landing, six miles down the Jame River after he had gained 83 decided a Victory. When this order was received by the im patient and eager army, conste6ation and amassment overwhelmed our itiptriotie and ardent hosts. Some regu * Sed to obey the command. Gen. illa74indale shed tears of shame. Tho brave and chivalrous Kcartley said in the presence of many offieMts : I Philip Kearney, an old soldier, enter my solemn protest against this order for re treat —We ought instead of retreging; to follow up tho:cnemy and, take Richmond. And in full view of all the responsibility of such a declaration, I say. to You all, such an 'order can only be prompted by, eovrarioe of trerron. And ith all,hopelessness and flespair succeeded the flush of triumph. ; In si lence and glo•om our victorious, arMy coin menced 'retiring from an enemy !utterly broken, i scattered, and panic stricken: And When there was not a foci within miles of us we left our wounded jbehind to perish, and any ono witnessing the wild eagerness of our retreat, would have supposed that we wore in the greatest peril from a vigilant and triumphant en emy. Who go for Mee Vallandigham, the traitor, goes.! for 3.1! Olellan Vial!, the notorious NOW Jersdy cop perhead and traitor, is for Every man who elmors for pevice and disgraceful submission to traitors, is a Dr. Clellan Man. Ever'yr man who utters the standing lie that the "Abolitionist commenced the war," is for M'Clellan. Every rebel General;Colonel and Cap tain is in favor of the election of George, B. M'Clellan. i , Every Knight of the "Golden Ciro le" is for Id'Clellau. Every officer who bas Been diShorter ahly dismiesol,frotu the army, will vote for • Every contractor svlibbas been ;detect ed in defrauding the Government, haz zas for 111'Clollan. Everj,deserter from the army is for M% Ciellan Every man who voted against he law allowing the soldier a • vote, goes flor Every man interested in the rel4l loan, such as, the British rebel agent, 4ugust Belmont, of New York city, is a warm friend of M'Clellan. - Such; is the character of the leading snpportere of M'Clellan. Fi:ender of the Union, 'what think ye of them ? PAST AND . FIITITEE.—The first plank in the Chicago platform declares "that in the future, as in tho past, we will tadhere with unswerving fidelity to the ,Union," &o. In the light Of the history ;of the past four years, this reads very tenth like a joke. 'Dare the party refer to itsrpast" fidelity to the Union ? The people have not forgotten that the "past" history of the Democratic party is associated with the treason of Jeff. Davis, who prated much more loudly than his modern dis eiplers of his devotion to the Unioi:i!, while he was plotting its overthrow. The"past" indeed ! If we are called upon to judge of the "future . ' of the Democratic party by the ('past," we shall lave a rebellion inaugurated upon Northern sail,Lif the mechanics and men of toil do not in No vember; kneel and Eck the feet of, Davis and his arch tonspirators, by endorsing the Chicago platform. Until the porno cratic party can wipe ont of existence the treason. of Breckenridge ; Mason, §lldell, Boujcniin, and their co-laborers ,in the cause of treason, it would be well tb avoid all allusions to the "past." Weld° not desire a repetition of tile Unionisui of the "past." The people have had pnOngli of the devotion to the Union that findi its only expression iu the murder of Four fa thers, sons, and brothers upon the battle field, fir no other 'hiTense that that the Democratic party of the "past" was de termined to ignore the ductrine that the majority shall rule. the whole Uniori Tiehet .Don't b "fouled' by offer. 3 to `ltrutle." Our Ticket i .2a.4 couuL:l, lEW Mr. Traiecon Little iliac. RUCKAwAY-OIL-TUE•slA,Stp.ll,'6l. To Jill-Gen. G. B. NeClellan,Orange, N. T. DEAR SIR it is a mean thing to listen at the key-hole. It is' meaner to open a private letter.] It is the meanest of all to accept hospitality and abuse the host. But these mean things _ 'are Christian vir tues compared to the sat of accepting the nomination oj j 'a party in order to destroy it, A platform is a party's soul. A can didate is the party's body. Separate the body from the soul, and death ensues. It is as difficUlt to sit between two stools 'as to sleep with-one eye open. You can not worship cod and Mammon. lloneS ty is not only the best policy, but the only one for an honest man. To cheat in politics is as Wicker' as to cheat in money. Yon' know, the Peaco men controlled the Convention. They gave you a plat form that wad neither fish, flesh, fowl nor mackerel.. Hence, the Daily News, the Metropolitan Record, Freeman's Journal, and Ohio Crisis fly.off from you like hoops from an effervescing barrel. Singleton will follow. Toed Vallandigham will fall in, and in two weeks Pendleton will de cline to be shipwrecked with the rest. "Come oat from under'the bed," said the indignant wife to her undecided husband. "Not," said ho, "so long as I have the spirit of a man within me." Mark my words, General : you will not carry a single State except Now Jersey, and you wilt sacrifice seven Democratic members of Congress out of ten. Look at Vermont. ! Maine will be the same. Indiana will :only lead the other State's by a month. You will find it as hard, as the rebels have to fight such Democratic names as Foot,Tarrag.ht, Porter, and DuponEon the sea, or Grant, Meade, Burnside, Sick les, Hancock, , Thomax, and Sherman, on the land, all of whom are against you. The late letters of Sherman and Grant rattle through the Democratic ranks like lightning through a goosebury bush. It only costs tWo thousand doll&rs to. - get tip a McClellan ;meeting. Yohng lictehuin said so. If the explosion of a limited quantity of ;gas in Union square killed two men and wounded several the other night, what' rill bo the dis7stor when your whole, party bursts up in November? James Buchanan said that he was no longer J. 8., but the Cincinnati platforni. Yon reverse it, and .say you are not the Chicago platform, but G. B. Mac. Bulger said the "pen was mightier than the sword." . Then he bad not made your acquairitance,.General. Nominated on your record? Yes. The draft. The proclamation. The suspension of the ha beas corpus. The arrest of Legislatures.. Military at the polls and disobedience of orders. Is, not that 'your public record ? Do you mean; by alluding to your record; that you will dO the same again I "GcsrtsuM•r: I have the honor to acknowl edge the receipt of Your letter, informing me of my nomination •(of course, who else did you suppose it was 7) ' by the Democratic National Convention, (certa'nly' it was not the Repub: lican National j Committee,) recently assem bled at Chicago, (that's so ; it didn't assemble at Cleavoland or New. York,) as their candi date at the next election for the President of the United States, (Exactly; it was not for the last election.) It is unnecessary for me to say that this nomination comes to me un sought." (Why sny it, then ?) Take the whole letter, paragraph by paragraph, 'transpose it as I havo this sentence, andlyoul will .find it as weak as dishwater--anclecieed, inconsistent, un grammatical, and egotistical. The six allusions to the Union remind-one of the stereotyped cry in the Fortunes of 1.\110.el —"wdtches, clocks, barnacles." The bright boy who cried "barnacles, watches, clocks," introduced a now idea into Scot land. • , "If a frank, earnest, and persibtent effort to obtain those objects should fail, the respon sibility for ulterior consequences will fall upon those - trim remain in arms against the Union. (Why not say war right out, not dodge round a corner this way? Dou't for get that old CaSs killed himself with the Nich olson letter.) Believing that the views herd expressed are those of the Convention and - the people you represent-, - I accept the nomina tion." You don't believe anything of the kind. You knoW better. The Northwest were all peace:, So reads the platform. Five hundred delegates unanimously agree upon a platform. Here it is : Resolved, Tq please you, they have war. Resolved, To please Pendleton, they have peace. ' Resolved, To please all the outs, the war go on till the peace is signed. Remember I that ithe Royal George in British Channel went down with all on board, the result of tri4ning. , 'Walter Swage Lander wrote on the Georges : "George the First was reckoned vile, Viler George the Second, And what mortal ever beard Any good of George the Third.? When from earth the Fotirth ascended, God be praised the Georges ended." I condense your, letter in two lines : "GENTLEMEN : I accept the nomination, bu t acknowledge myself totally unfit for the po sition." , I mean nothinrankind in this,'Gen eral, but you know that you are a - lair mark, not a large ono, for all to shoot at. GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN. vZ-I,fillen Elarris & Long denounced Mc- Clellan in the Chicago Convention as a tyrant and Usurper, the only defence made for his conduct was the plea that lie acted upon credible evidence of traitorous purposes of the men whom he imprisond. Very well, if that be a good defence, why not allow the same force to the plea of other pulrliu oficers who have done aeb t;ti Tilecl ion Preclanuti tor: ViERSUANT to an Act of the . .G: , neral Bei:1114 of the Commonwealth.of Pennsyi. intitied "An Act relating to the Ek e . tions of this Commonwealth," approved th e sef.ondday of Ji ly, A, 'D. one thousand - e i g h t htintirdil and th rty-nine, I, D. C. LABRA.. BEE, 8p eri IF of t o county of Potter, Pennssi. vania, tlo . hereby ake known aPid gi ve no _ tide to itie electo • of ‘ the county aforesaid, that a General El ction will be held in th e said. county of Pot q) on the Second Tuesday .(EleVeath) of Octo er; 186.1, at which time District and County Officers, as - follows, are to ,) elected, to wit: One perso for Co Eighteenth District, c ) • !Tress, to represent the quposed of the counties of Lyccitnincr Centre ; Clinton, TiOin. antl_Pot ter, lin the House of Representatives of tlio Uniteil,States. Two',:persons for Menibers of tho House of Representatives of the 'General Assembly o f Pennsylvania, in conjunction with theemontr of toga, to represent the counties of Tioga and ,Potter. One person for Treasurer of the,county of Potter.: One person for. Commissioner of the county of Potter. One Person for Auditor of tho •county of Potter:' . . One person fur Coroner of. the county of Potter.) I nisi) make known and give notice, as in and by the 13th sectilm of the aforesaid nett am directed, that.overy, person excepting Ju stices of the Peace, who bold any office or appointment of profit or trust under the Gov ernment of the United States or this Stitte, or of any city orincorporate district, whither a commissioned officer or otherwise, a.sitiblir 7 dinate n1:floor or agent, who is or shall be em. z ployed,under the legislative, judiciary, or ex'.; ecutive depp.rtments of this State or the United Stat6, , l or of any city or incorporated district, and rilsn that every meinber of Congress and of the State Legislature, and of the select and common council of any city, or commissioner of any incorporated district, is bylaw incapa ble Of holding or exercising at the same time the elide or appointment of Judge, Inspector or clerk of any election in this om m onwealth. Also: that in the fourth section of the Act of Assembly, entitled '•"An Act relating to elections and fer other purposes," approved April 4th, 1800, it is enacted that the afore said 13th section shall : not ho so constructed as to' prevent any Military @nicer or Borough Officer from serving as Judge, Inspector,' or Clerk Of any general or special election, in this Commonwealth. It is further directed that theme rrig(:ifite return judges at the Court House n CouderS port to make out the general returrp, shall be the first Friday succeeding the specialeiCer-., tion,l.which will be the'l4th day of October. I also here make • known and give, notice that ;the places for holding the aforesaid sp.o.. cial election in the several townships and boroughs within the county of Potter, are as follows) to wit : _ For the township of•Abbott r nt the Germs-. nia. Hotel in said towt ship.• For the, township of Allegany, at the school house near the place formerly oivned by Ches ter Andrews, in said hiwnship. For the township of Bingham, at the Bing hamCentre school house near A. R. Lewis, in saidytOwnship. • For the township of Clara, at the school house near Sala Stevens', in said townsltip FOr the township of Eulalia, at the New Comi !louse in the borough of Coudersport. -For the township of Genessee, at the'honso formerly occupied - •by S. S. Basco, now N. Blackman, in Ellisburg. For the township of Harrison, at the House recently occupied by Ira Barthchomew,in said toltmshtp. Fvr the township of 'Hebron, at the school house No. o, near Henry Ingraham's, in, said township. For the township of Hector, at the Sunder lin sehool house, in saiOownship. For the township of Heiner, at the school house near Jacob Peet's ,in 'said township. For the township of iackson, at the house formerly occupied by B. Barse, now M. Chap pel inl said township. ' . . For'the township of Keating, at the honso of Pliny Harris, in said, township. For-the township of Oswayo, at the Centro school house in said township. For tie township of I Pike, at the house of Elijah Johnson, in said township. -For the township of Pleasant :Valley, at the schoOltouse No. 2, in said township. Per the township of Portage, at the Sizer gchool house in said township. For the township of Roulet, at the school house near George Weimer's in said township. For the township of Sharon, at the Sharon Centre School house, near John Voorhees', in. said township. For the township of Sweden, at the house late Of Aseneth Taggart, in said town - ship. • - For the township of Stewartson, at the New Norway,school house, in said township. - For the township of Summit, at the houso formerly- occupied by Jonathan Eedson now M V ;,ariabee, in said township: - For the township of Sylvania, at the school house near J. M. Rees', no said township. For the township of Ulysses, at the house of Atlas :Bennett, in said township. For the township of: West Branch, at the house of S. M. Conable, in said • township. • For the township of Wharton at the houso of Stesten Horton, in said township. For , the borough of Condmisport, at the Court Huse In said borough. ' Given under my hand, this 30th day o. August, ! A. D. 1864. D. C. LARRABEE, Sheri- ria'A NUMBER of years have elapsed since• the introduction of HOSTETTER'S CELE BRATED BITTERS to the public. The prej udiceiefisting in • the minds of many perscrna again t st, what are 'denominated patent medi-_, cines at first greatly retarded its sale, but, as its virtues and merits ,became known, this barrier of - prejudice was overthrown, and the demand[hvereased so rapidly that in_a. few years' scarcely a village existed in the United States in 'which the afflicted had not experi enced the benefits arising from the use of the "Bitters," c l ad at the present day there arc to be found in ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD vouches for the great merits of the article.' No greater core for Dyspepsia can be found. See Advertisement. For silo. by Druggists and dealers generally every Where. 1130Gii.AGENTS WANTED: T°lsdll by subscription, with sample, excel lent Popular Illustrated Family Works. Among !Abase is a low price . HISTORY pf the REBELLION, of which over forty thousand of Vol. 1 have already been sold. It is a good business for es-Soldiers, and others out of e.mployMent. Bello, for sale to,Pedlers, Merchants, and Agents,' Stationery. Packages, Battle Sceneg, Portrits and other pictures for "the Times," War Mcips, beautiful Album Cards, Currency licilder, etc. For Circulars, with particulars and terins, address HENRY HOWE, ; No. 111 Main Street, Cincinnati, 0. .. rull , Quc,tion sektkai STELTISS'