THE JOURNAL. Wednesday, Nov. 30,1864 The reels have abandoned the central South to SILER3IAN. This is the moaning of the advance of Boon into Tennessee, that he despairs of overtaking SIIERMAN. . That General can work his will, unopposed by any army ali'd the def Ace of Georgia is now eotfusted to the winter rains, to the bridge•bu"rners, to the selfsacrificingspirit of the Southern people. They are called upon to defeat: Sherman py the destroc., ticm of their own property, and by antici. pating the devastation they fear from him. /t Is the strategy of Moscow that is to , ruin his campaign. Senator. Hill appeals to the people of Georgia to fly to arms. Seddon approves his words. Beauregard dealands that the roads be destroyed, and predict: the starvation of our army. Lea ding rebels of Georgia publishes a call, e%- claliaing, "Remove your negroes, horses, ' , cattle and provisions away from Sher ' ID an's army, and burn AThut you cannot carry." Not the negroes, we trust though slaves have suffered such martyrdom.— ' Ilut not one word is said, of an army to -meet oar own. Beauregard promises to joip the Georgiarts;• but not 4o brio" , an uriay with him. The appeal resembles almost exactly that wade to PeutSylva minus. when Leo crossed the Potomac in 1863. What coultf- we do then against ' a great vetran army ? We sought to rouse the sp:rtt of the people, but with all onr bUCCCB3, and with aid from other States, 'nothing saved the State from devastation but the prompt arrival of the entire Army • of the Potomac, and the victory of Gettys .burg. The parallel of the Georgian and Pennsylvanian situation is close enough to show the folly of supposing that effec tive resistance can be made to Sherman the few men who have been . left in ' , civil life by the perpetual rebel ebnicrip. Lion: • Sherman cannot meet his Gettis. burg till he loses a battle to Hood, and Hood at waynesboro, Tennessee, is now two hundred and seventy-fire wiles from • • blatian. By no possibilitiKanannother Amy. be organized out of the scattered crebel garrisons in tithe to give Sherman •any, real trouble. . Difficulties, of course, lie will encounter. They are registered in his programme, and anticipated- in his preperations, The rains will fall, and the roads be clogged with -mud. But it does not always rain, and November in Georgia is as mild as early •SepteCober in the North. Fruit, trees were blossoming,at Atlanta on the 11th of this bond'. Provisions will be removed, roadsl will be obstructed, bridges destroyed.—{ .13nt there is but one obstacle that Sher- Irian cannot surmount—an army us largel , 41 his own, commanded Lll a general as Ile Vas gone upon this bold. and rang ty expedition not recklessly, but with thorough knowlege of his own re .sources and those of the enemy. For two obuths he prepared for a movement, which was contemplated six months ago, : sad was' known to General Grariat. the Secretary of War, and the President, when • , Our army Ent Marched from Chattanooga, • in . the' early summer. It is not likely that the improvised and unmilitary oppo sition of the citizens of Georgia will cause a week's delay in the colossal and titer roughly orgatiiied campaign of a first -class army.. Georgia is abandoned to her fate, to the mercy of her invaders, and the courage of her people. This terrible situation Hood is doing .a'l in , his power to retrieve. His advance upon the Tennessee border was an expect ed result of Sherman's strategy. To wait in idleness in. Mississippi would be folly for thed. ..Nothing. could be gained by inactivity ; much more might be lost.— Hood is compelled by his own precarious situation to try conclusions with Thomas, and a rebel vivtory in Tennessee would be -the most e ffi cient service he could render! io Georgia. A. decisive victory over our troops weed. compel Sherman to return, and, until his return, would leave Nash ville and all Tennessee at the mercy of the rebel army. Desperation in such a case is - widctotn, and if Hood has an arruv ca . liable of lighting a tattle with any hopes of success, all sound strategy would jus tify the risk of defeat. But it was plc oisely to make such a misfortune imposi 'ble that Thomas has beau reinforced. The rebel general is reported to occupy Way nesboro, Tennessee, threatening Nashville seventy uiiles distant, and con - fronted by portion of our army at 'Pulaski, forty miles away. Paducah, which Hood is in teorrectly said to threaten, is one hundred "and twenty miles away f andite would not dare to march upon it without first de stroying the ofitnsivepower of Thomas. The more prudent course of our.Ceneral might be to postpone-a battle as long as possible, and content-Visa with 'thwart. jug the euetny, But it is possible that he . 'may do more than the country expects.of ;him. In the meanwhkle. Lee is imprison. ed at Richmond, and Sherman pierces :the heart Al the rbelliou. This is the, situation, and all 4s advantages :and hopes 'Aro ours; alt its perils and despairs are; tir, foe's..--Phil'4elphia Press, Nor. 26.1 LIEUT. GEN.. GRANT, during his late visit to New York, paid his • respects to .Cien, Scott, who with the hero . of ; .Chattanooga with a-copy of his 44,:uttibigg -zaphy, written on the fly leaf of orief „the - volumes, "T.royi the oldest to the best Aol.d.ter in the world" Such a eompli• went from such a,man, is worth fighting for during.a life-time: ~, Coudersport. Pa. 31. W. 31cALARNEY, EDITOR. TIRE SITUATION. SIIINGLE HOUSE, Nov. 20,1361, ED. JOURNAL: Last evening I was agreeably surprised to meet- Lieut. J. E. Terwilliger; of the 85th N.Y. Vols., who with the Brigade.tn whieh.that,Regiwent 'was serving, was .ea 'Anted - in ;April . last, at Plytnopth; N. C.'' ' . Lieut. Terwilliger" with Npt. D. A. Langworthy, Capt. Q. 11. Aldrich of the t4th, and Capt. Cady and Lieut. Canby' !of the 10Ist, together with four officers - of.the 24th N. Y. Battery, and several' other' made their eseapo from the mill ' tart' prison at Columbia ' South Carolina, on the 11th. of October last, and finally reached our lines near Kno;vil/e, on the 13th of the present month.. His account of their escape and the perils-of their journey through the moun tainous portions of the Carolicas i is thrilling indeed, and adds the testimony of another!, true and bravo man - `to, that already piled mountain high, of the fiend ish torture 'by the Rebels of, our noble boys who are prisoners in' their' hands ; and.also to the fact that the Blacks where ever mej, are. the true friends, not only of our soldiers, bat of the cause for which we are fighting. . Lieut. Terwilliger was confined at Charleston, S: C'for a time, leaving that place on the 4th of OCtober in. conse quence of the prevalence of the yellow fever.,. His description .of the sinks, of death in which our Privates arc confined in Gezlrgia and South Carolina, and his accounts of their torture by starvation, neglect and exposure, bre painful to listen ' to or rep'eat. . . ' Below is a list of the th=: . aths in Co. D, since their capture, and, ars„Diany of that Company were from Potter county, it may be aciournful satisfaction to their friends to see the list published. . Sergeants, Israel Wales, Elijah Gilbert, Corporals, I. D. I;tabauk, Hiram Pierce; Lyman Dewing. i Privates, Richard Matteson; Joseph , Pierce, peter Rockafellow, A. W. Kin- 1 ney, James S. Bissell, Allen C. Barnes, David B. Terwill;ger, Hosea W. Palmer, Albert N. Laugdou, I. W. Vesper, Win. Tubbs, Alfred Chapel, A. I, Smith, also W. H. Kenyon of Company 11, who for- .. Merly resided in Sharon. , ' Lieut.Terwilliger avers that-the rations filloWed the prisoners was - frequently nothiuz more' than a pint of corn meal, and never more than that and two ounces of spoiled bacon per day. How long is this to continue ? - L. H. KINNEY. Teacher's 41.,astitute. On the 22d inst. quite a number of teachers met in the Coudersport Academy for the purpose of bolding a County In stitute After Prayer by the Co. Supt. Mr. Clafflio, the following persons were elected to preside over their deliberations : President, R. T. SCLArELIN ; Vice P., „Miss Jane Ifydorn ; Secty, - Miss Libbie , Yeomans. The exercise in Grammar was con ducted by J. 1V: Allen ; Geography, by R. T. Chan, who confined himself prin cipally to the Mathematical branch of that study; Intellectual Arithmetic, by 0: 13. Bird. In the evening a lecture was delivered by 0. B. Bird 'on' thr; subject of "Phre nolog,y in connection with Teaching."— lie recommended to teachers a knowledge of its principles for the better understand. ing of the characters of their pupils. At the close of the lecture a discussion of the resolution, "That P 11 1 .0001 0 ,4 should be taught in Common Schools," was:con ducted with considei•ablc interest. On the second day there was an exer cise in Arithmetic by Miss Hydorn; an !interesting , lecture upon the Spencerian System of Penmanship, by J. W. Allen; la lecture by Mr. Clathiri upon Ortho graphy; an exercise in Reading by .Mr. Allen; an exercise in Grammar by Mr. Harris, of Keating; and questions from the " Query Box," were also solved. The Co. Supt. and Mr. Allen were ap pointed a committee to recommend 'a se- ries of books for use in the schools of the county, to report at the March session of the Institute. In the evening an Essay on School Governmen(was•read by Mr. Allen. A discussion of the resolution : "That the slanderer is a snore pernicious character than the flatterer," was conducted by 0. 13. Btrd, and H. Harris, neg., at the close of which the resolution was adopted by a vote of the members present. Miss Jane Hydorn . nrcceived a perma nent certificate much to the satisfaction of all. . 13 The ttanks'of the teachers are due Mr. Allen for his efficient services. bliss I r aBBIE YEOMANS, SSC. A very curious sea-monster indeed was taken iu the harbor of New-Bedford last Friday afternoon. It is now in New-Bed ford, and its possesors say they will take it at the National Sailors' Fair now in progress there. The fish, the like of which ail the old shipmasters in New Bed ford say they never saw '.before,, weighs about four hundred pounds, and is thir teen feet in length, of which nine feet ta per down to a serpent-like tail. It has the mouth of the shark, With two rolis of teeth, a fan on the back, and a full eye like a bullock. In color and motion it resembles a serpent in the water, and _is believed to be the veritable great sea-ser peni, whose mysterious visits have peri odically created so much excitemet shore, .and which until now hai .eluded his balllad prirsuers. 'There is said to be:in the ULited States 50,000 heathens, Idol. Gods are_ svorthip . - ved igtsolheatwaen temples in Sao Fran cisco; TUE GREAT WEST. When Gem Taylor was chosen Presi dent 'only sixteen years ago, he did tot receive.a single,Electoial Vote from the States lying north and west of the river Ohio. - Abraham Lincoln, fa'vareci by the dia'ensions among the opponents: carried all those States in 1860, some of them by ,bY naeai%er thajoritie,but reeeiveditearcely a tenth of the. Popular Vote of Missouri. Now, he - carries every oue of them py general increased majority, and Missouri with them by a very decided vote. tie has also carried the new State of Nevada and has large absolute majorities in Cal ifornia and Oiegort, ,where though he carried their • Electors he had barely two-fifths of the Popul ar Vote in. 1860. His majority in that greatsection, which is soon to preponderate in our National councils, may be roughly stated as follovis Lincoln's Maj. Electors. Onto, 60,000 - 21 . Indiana, - 36,000 13 Illinois, 80,000 16 Miehig_ao, • • 10,000 , 8 'Wisconsin, 15,000 Minnesota, 5,000 /oica, 40,000 Nissen - li, 20,000 • 11 Kansas, 10,000 . 8 Nevada, 3,000 3 California, 20,000 5 ... 3,000 Oregop, Tokal,l2 States 256,000 —These States gave an aggregate pop; ular majority against Lincoln in 1860. they now give not less than 2.0.000 for him, with gains of ,Uetnbers of Congress in every. State where there was anything left to gain.. And there is no pretense that anything was lost to his adversaries through divisions. The vote of the Nor:b-West is 'the strongest guaranty yet proffered of the perpetuity of the Union. • -The alienation l of the North-West has been plotted and 'sought tor years. To this end uncounted lodges of 41.c.nights of the Golden ,Cir cle," '‘Sons of Liberty," &a., have been organized. To this end, New-England bus been persistently defamed and milled by the basest of her •renegade sons. To this end, constant stimulus ' has been giv en to the Western jealousy and hate of the East. The Puritanism and fanatic-; ism of New-England have been inculpated as plunging the country into wgigantie civil war for the benefit of her cotton-mills —as if cotton-mills luxuriated in the .dearth and dearness of Cotton—and now the Great West responds by larger, more decisive majorities for the War, a hearti er support to the Administration, than ; are given in the East. And the rattle ; of riven fetters in Maryland is more than ;paralleled by the crash of the prison ; house in Missouri So let us rest in the confident assur ance that the Union will endure forever under the gnardinship 'and protection of the Great because Free North West I-1 Tribene. "Give Vs Thick Our Old Conn • 'pander."' For months past, Copperhead speakers and orators have asserted that the Army. of the Potomac were longinig, panting and groanin , * for a chance to vote' for their Old, Gyro ced leader, McClellan! Well —they have had that chance—she eneiny were burying the dead they had just lost in au attact on our line, sp that our men were mostly , freo to vote—and the "re turns from Pennsylvania: soldiers foot up as follows: . Pennsylvania Regiments, Majfor Lincoln. 11th 17 " 41st 190 11 43th 194 •, ' 50th 68 " 51st ' 108 67th , • 65 is 88tli • ' 76 100th 171 " 118th ' 21 sc 200th 156 " 207th • 805 208th 122 is 209th 57 • " 110th 73 " 211th 289 ft Bat. 1). Ist Pa. 31 • " Lincoln. McClellan;' sth - 114 89 27th 95 83 53d • .122 • .71 56th 96 95 68th ' 209 • • 80 • • 69th 6 112 _ 81st • 23 .44 83d 120 52 84th • 116 46 91st 142 67 93d - 184 25 99th 147 81 105th 136 73 ' 106th . 3 107th . 102 .96 110th 91 114th ' . 185 . . ;64 'll6th, in part, 42, 48 121st lO3 14: 140th, in part, ~ 11 141st .194: , 5 142 d - • 133 55, 143 d 186 100: - 145th ' '9 B ,; , 148th - 'l37 — ' :72 , .149th 188 102 , 150th, in . part : 113,' - 155th. '. 195 5 .-157th - •' • 5B . • ii c 183 d 5B 47 184th 160 • 94 _l9oth - • ; 150 :.::53 • 191st " 122 70 = .198th , '••..336 142 150th- • 67 1 B, Ist. Pa..: 50 88 • • 2d Pa. .Car. 180 71 3d " "in part, 89' 4th " r 257, 109!'"- 1.6t1a « ' , 217 IlidonSoldiors in Fishing Creek-Co ii fideraCy-50 majority ,for Lincoln. Soldiers at Washington give Lincoln 1140 majority. , Maryland Soldiers-20W for Lincoln; 92 for McClellan. . Nashville, Tennessee, 1292 ' majo'rity fsr "Abe and Andy." In short, "the Old Commander" the earnest Soldiers want is evidently no other than "FATELEa, ABRAHAM r• CHEAP DRESS . Eta GENTLEM.EIf. Those who are fond of seeing for facts on .which to found disheartenirg generaliza tions, might easily find them, to all ap pearance, in the cheap dress .of the day. Of course we are not alluding to the dress of the. ladies. That has attained the degree of luxury which makes mat rimony one of largest' financial un dertakings in the market. . Wer• are speaking only of the humble dress of;the male sex which seems alMost to have reached the verge of work-house cheap neis. While the ladies &fe.ffauncin'g in costumes which are den'atinced from the pulpits of unfashionable churches, :the men have descended step by step,through every degree of cheapness until they have altogether deserted the old fashioned five guinea coat for suits which look pas sion..' well for half the money. They can not. be strictly said to have clothed them selves in back cloth and ashes, but they certainly go as near the penitential. style, in some of their,tourist garments, as de cency will allow. The days of "guid braid claith"—as Robert Ferguson, the poetical progenitor of Burns, puts it—are as much things of past as the days 'of hair powder, patcheS, and satin breeches.— Materials which, at one time, would have been considered only fit for hearth runs now from the favorable 'walking dress in the most refined eities.—Loncion trews. 103 ISTII DESTIUCT. Tll6 following is the official returns in this district for Congress, including the soldiers vote : Wilson, U. Wright, D Centre, 2454 3141 Clinton, 1337 1977 Lyeorning, ' 2843 • 3090 Pottes, 984 582 Tioe, 3615. - 1291 \ . ; Wilson's inaj., 852 The Richmond Whig criticises Davis, proposition to employ slaves in thic`artny and, navy, and wants him and the Rebel authorities to mind his own business,which is to enforce the military laws they now have. It says his arguments are the ar guments of Seward and Sumner, and if true; slavery is wrong, and the sum of all barbarism. Affairs around Richmond and Peters 'burg remain unchanged, but the rebels are unanimous Oat Grant will yet deliver .a'great battle before winter comes, and that he Will be assisted in the movement by the James• River fleet, which will pas 2 through the Dutch Gap Canal- Rebel editors are greatly excited over Jeff. Davis' recomendation • to congress that upon him should be conferred pow er to exempt those editors whom he may think proper from military duty. This is looked upon by the Richmond press as a vile attempt to erush_the liberty of t4e press. Hon. A. H. Rice, chairman of the con 'ffressional naval' Committe, said, at the reception of the heroes of the Kearsarge, at Feneuil Hall, Boston, on Wednesday, the 9th inst., that the navy bad captured fourteen hundred blockade runners du ring the war, worth over fifty millions of dollars. A chaplain iu mimosas says that a man buying furs was conversing with a woman at whose house he had caned, and asked her if there were any Presbyterians around thers. She heSitated a moment and said she guessed not—"her vitsbancl haelm't killed any siaci titer lived there." ,A conspiracy has been discovered among the copperheads and refugee rebels in Ill inois to fire the city of Chicago and re leasesand arm' the rebel prisopers at Camp Douglas. A number of the conspirators have been arrested, and arms and ammu nition found in their possession. Mr. Reynolds, the dramatist, once met a - frce and easy actor, who told hjm that he had passed three festive days, at the seat of the 313.9uis Mad 'Marchioness of without, an' invitation: ' He had gone there on the assumption that, as my lord and lady were not on speaking terms, each would suppose ttfat the other bad asked him/ and, so it turned out. . • The United Statps Government, bas k.nowledge that not only great numbers.of refugees in the British Provitices' were plottiug to pomp over to vote, but that large quantities of Anna are already in Canada, designed for Alistribution among the Sons of liberty tbrougtioUt the North - j 1 DiscOveri IS defeat, howevet. Rev, Dr.' Kennard, of Boston, has in l i forty six. years. preached 110,000 ser mons baptized 2,033 persons married 4,- 039 couples, and attended 3,9.00 Itinerate. ',Bizty: thousand •.offtaers and men- are now in our navy.: : • • Callifornia rill, wake I,ooo'ooo gallOos of ohne ,this year. 11,53 q. 10,681 10,681 SHERIFF'S SALES. Y VIRTUE of sundry _Frits of:VindigOii. JUD Exporms, Fieri Facies Lind Lievari retl4s 'bleed out of the Court of Common Pleas of Rot ler:o,9enty, Pennsylvania, ,and to me direetexl, .1 small expose topitklic sale.or outcry, at the Court souse in Coudersport, oriIIONDAY, the - 19th .cla,y_of Dec., 186.1,-41 o'clock, is: m,, the fat boicing described tracts or parcels of 'land to wit: 1 AR those six certain tracts, piece's or par ' 61s of land situate in Pike and flectortown 'ships, being lottery warrants nos. 5122, 5123; 5124, 5125,, 5126, 5127, and conveyed by Patents from the Commonwealth of Penn-. sy nia to John Nicholson, dated the 29th & 30 'daystot Apri1,.1794, and named. Darby Goshen Saint Thomas Fairfax Concord & Rich mond. and each tract containing 1099 Acres, or 6594 acres in all, and being the same as conveyed by John Nicholson and Hannah his wife by deed dated.the 16th day, of March, A. D. 1795. to John Ashley, and recorded among the laniirecords of Potter county inDeed Book page,l47 &C.. excepting one piece, contain ing 100 acres heretofore conveyed to B.S. Mor- , ton, one piece containing - 30 and acres con reyed to S. H. Martin, and one piece contain log 72 And .the acres conveyed to WM. Mc- Dougall. Upon which tract rd laud are the following improvements, viz..On warrant No 5127 one of about 5 acres improved with 2 frame houses, one frame barn, one blacksmith shop, and one.saw mill, now occupied by, widow, Imps On.; .one lot_ of about 2 acres improved, one log, house and one board shanty thereon, now, occupied by S. Darrow: one lot of about 29 acres' improved with one frame house, one board shanty and some fruit trees thereon, now occupied by Sam'l Decker and one lot, about 20 acres improved,'with one frame house,. one frame barn, .one saw mill, oni blacksmith shop and some fruit trees thereon, now occupied by H. D. Frost. On warrant No 5122, ono lot-about,2o acres Improved with one frame barn and some fruit trees thereon ,:one lot about 15 acres improv ed, with two frame Louses, one log house and some fruit trees thereon ; one lot about 4 acres improved, with one frame house and one board shanty thereon, now occupied by C. W. Ed ition& ; one lot about 5G acres improved with one frame house, one fame barn and some fruit trees thereon, now occupied by Charles Pritchard; one lot about 2 acres improved, With one log house thereon, now occupied by Chester Ells Worth; one lot about 45 acres improved, with two frame houses, one frame barn, one frame shed, one saw mill and some fruit trees thereon, now occupied by A. liil born; and one lot about 35 acres unproved, with one frame house, one frame barn and some fruit trees thereon, now occupied by Curtis Kiihourn. .On warrant No 512:3, one lot about twelve acres improved, with one frame house thereon, now occupied by John Razey ; one lot about GO acres improved, with one frame house, one log house, one frame barn, one corn house, and some fruit trees thereon, now occupied by John Sunderlin ; One lot about 12 acres improved, occupied by Simeon Ellis; One, lot about 5 acres improved, with one log honse and one log stable thereon , now occupied by Al Robbins , One lot about 12 acres improved, with one frame Vous° and some fruit trees thereon, known as the Chas, Parker lot; One lot about 10 acres improved, with one frame Louse, one log stable and some' fruit. trees thereon, now occupied by Wm. T. Leach. On warrant No 5124, One lot about 8 acres improved; with one frame house, one frame barn and some fruit trees thereon, now occu pied by Wm, T. Leach, Jr.: One lot about 5 acres improved with one frame house thereon; and one lot about 1G acres unproved, with one frame house, two frame barns with cow shed and corn house attached and some fruit trees thercOn, now occupied by John "Scut. To be sold, as the property of aunsieker Garlock. SO - A certain tract of land in homer tp, begin ning at the north-east corner of lot No. 50, surveved to Nelson Black, thence north 87 grid 5410thg rods, • thence west 133 rods, thenc(south 175 rods. thence east 72 rods to the south-west corner of lot No. 30; thence.' north by west line of said lot 8 and 5-loths rods to a hemlock, thence east 50 rods to the place of beginning, containing One Hundred and Fifty acres more or less, being.lot No. 31 of the allotment of Keating lands in Homer tp., Potter county, Pa., and part of warrants Nos. 212.1, 2131 and 2136 ; about ten acres of which are improved, with one "same house: one frame barn, and a good apple orchard thereon. To be sold as the property of Giles GuStin. ALSO—A certain tract of land in Hector tp. bounded on the north by B. L. Wilbur, east by Benjamin Dickens, south by Albert Wilbur, andwest by C. P. Kilbourne, contain ing Sisty-rice acres more or less, about thir ty-five acres of which are improved. with one frame house, one frame barn and Some fruit Woes thereon. To be sold as the property of M.aleolm Tate. ALSO—AII that,certain two story frame buildirig situate in the •E.illage of Lewisville, said building is octagon in shape, and 18 feet across' each ;of the said` sides, said building being situate upon a certain lot of land in said township formerly owned by 'Burton Lewis, and bounded on the east and north by lauds of Burton Lewis, on the west by village lots owned by Thomas Parker, Richard Baker, and Larrabee SI; Lewis, and oa the south by the Highway and lands of Burton Lewis, con taining about three acres. To be sold as the property of O. A . . Lewis, Dan Baker, Charles Monroe,d:c., Trustees of the Ulysses Acad.ensy, Joint Stock Company. ALSO—Certain real estate in Genesee tp., Yillage of Ellisburg, bounded on the west by lands of A: C. and Wm. Ellis and by theDs wayo road, north by lands of ',Tarry Eilis,east by lands of Bingham estate, and south by land of Versel DickenNp,llastingslforley, Spencer Preston and JarneekLocke. ,Containing' Forty Acres, all of which Nj improved, with' one 1 Tavern House and two frame barns thereon. To be. sold as the property of Allen Sheppitid. • ALSO—Certain real estate in Wharton tp., bounded on-the north by lands in possession of Martin Bartcon, east by lands iwpossession of Betisle,ys', south by lot ,in possessicin of Stephen Horton, end west by the Sinnema honine• Creek. Containing One Hundred and nitietp , eight acres, with the usual allowance, of which about sixty acres are improved; with one-frame hodse, .she frame barn, one frame and so . me fruit trees thereon.' To, be sold as the property of James .13artron.. ' ' ALSO—Certain real estate in Genesee tp., • pe r janin g at a hemlock stump in . the ,north line of hat No. surveyed to G. W. Rice and the south-westenrner of this, lot, thence north ' a° west 84 perches to a post the north-west corner of this hit, thence south 89° east along I . the line 'of lot - No. 40 108 perehes to a post, thence south lA° east 84- perches to a post, thence north 89° west 108 perches • to. the place of beginning: containing Fifty-Three and five-tenths acres, with ,the usual 1410W anee . of six per cent:. for . roadsbeing lot No: and part of warrant NcE. 1281.-;;.ALSO —Another tot situate.as above being lot No: 40 of the allotment - of lands of: the Bingbant ' Dictate in Genesee tp., contracted to . bane Vi9zormati by R. If. Rose jiitip 230 1864, eon.. taining Fifty-Two anJ eight- teat% aerts more or less, there being on the two above ditieribitd lots about Fifteen acres improved, out frame 'wise, one frame barn and some: fruit trees tuereob. To be sold as t h e Properly of Chester Whittaker, ALSO--Certain real estate int the county o f Potter, and which on a certain map entitled Map of a part of the town of Germania and lends bilonging to the Penn's,. Land and Form Association, according to surrey m a d e by austere R. Winkle, in 1856, arelaid down numbered aud, described as follows.: lir.-- Section 30 in warrant 5074*(fire thousand and seventy-four) which warrant contains 47 sections and is surveyed by austere R.. Bri e _ kle from the south-west corner of said warrant east 215 and 3.loths perches, thence north, 75 perches 'to a post witnessed hy,3,lleiches, Maple and' 1-Hemlock . -This4ost is the place of beginning, thence east9.and3,-,lothe perches to a post Witnessed by Beeches, thence north 67 and 6-10ths perches to a post I witnessed -hy,3 Beeches,.:thencii - witelt,s9 and 3-tOths perches to a - post witnessed by - 3 Beeches and_ , l litentlock, .thence south 67 end 0--10ths perches back to the place of: ning. This section No. 36 (thirty) comet°, Twenty-Five Acres morn or leis.•;--ALSO— Two lots in the town of ermania,„No 3.1-ott. Monroe Avenue, and No. 32 on Madison Are. nue, each of Said lots being fifty festotride in front and rear and one hundred feet in depth.. To be sold as the property of David Boyer. ALSO—Certain real estate situate in the Village of Lymansville, p.,Wended on the north by, the Lycoming and Potter Turnpike.r4d, on. the east, by the Highway leading.to Ayres Rill, on the south by lands of Nathan. Woodcock, and on the : west. by landaof L. D-Spatibrd, containing Nine, an Eight-Tenths Acres more or less, all.of which is improved, with one frame ho nee, two frame barns„ other out houses and a good bearing appleorchartland other fruit treas_tliereon.. To be sold as the property of Jonathan Glase.. \ -- - - C. LARRABEE, Sheriff.. . Sheriff's Office, Nov. 22. WISTAR'S BALSAM 'WILD CHERRY ONE OF TEE OLDEST AnD MOST UELIADLI EWES IN TEE WORLD FOR Coughs, Colds, Whooping Cough, Bron chitis, Difficulty of Breathing, Asth ma, Hoarseness, Sore Throat,' Croup, and every AffectiOn of THE THROAT, LUNGE AND CHEST, : 3NCIAIDING EVEN CONSUMPTION. • - WISTAM'S BALSAM WILD CURTLY._ So general has the use of this remedy be comp, unit so popular is it everywhere,that it is. spnecc!ssary for ran to recount.its virtues. itt fe'orks speak itir it, and find utterance in thir abundant and voluntary testimony of _the. many who from long suffering and settled. disease hare been restored to pristine rigor and health. We can present a inassof deuce in proof of our assertion, that CANNOT BE DISCREDITED' The Rev. Jacob Seel:der,- Well known and much respected among nit German population in this country makes th• following statement for the benefit of'tor afflicted :, HANOVER, Pa., Feb. 15,1459. Dear Sirs:—Haring realized in my family important benefits from the use of yotir valu able preparation—WisTAA's BALSAS! 07 Wit' Cur:nay—it affords me pleasure to recommend it to the public. Some eight years ago one of my daughters seemed to be in 'a, destine` anti little hopes of her recovery 'trete 'entet•- tained I then procured a bottle °fp:Mt...ex cellent Balsam, and before she had taken the whole of the contents of the bottle there was a great improvement in her health. -.l.bare,• in my individual case,- made frequent me of your valuable , medicine,. and have also been• benefited by it. JACOB SECHLER. rrom ,Bessie Smith, President of the Morris Canaty Bank, Morris town, New Jersey. Ening used Da. Wisna's &mut or Wri) CHERRY for about fifteen years,. and having realized its beneficial results irrmy family, it affords me great Manure in recom mending it to' the public as a valuable A.m.- ill- in cases of weak lungS, colds, coughs, ac., and a remedy which I . consider to be. entirely innocent, and may be taken. with peifect safety by tile most delicate in health." .1F;•orn lion. John E. Saint, A distinguished I,,ewyer in Westminster, 31d I have on several octagons used Da. Wrs va's BALSAS! OF WILD CILEDDY for serere colds, and always with decided benefit. I ; - ,nowof no preparation that is more efficacious or more descry ng of general use. The Balsam has &so been used witbex cellent effect by T. B. Elliott, Merchant, Hall's! •ross.Roads, Md. Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry; None genuine unless signed "1. BUTTS;'" on the wrapper • FOR SALE BY T. P. Drastionr., No. 491 Broadway, N. York, S. Nr. Fowitn. b Co., Proprietors,Boston: Arid by all Druggists Administrator's Notice: IVlitEitielEcsAtSateLoefttwersm.ofr.Adm,iiKnilisxtrlotne tot; Shippen township,Cameron county,deed,havit been granted to the subscriber, all 15rsonit indebted to said estate are requested to maks immediate payment, and those haviiie claims against the same will present them, dttly-au thenticated, for settlement to , JACOB JENKINS, Adm'r. .Cond'ersport, Oct. 25, 1864._ HOOP-SKIRTS,: and The ,DUPLEX ELLIPTIC (or dorible) STEEL SPRING SKIT. Tho moat popular atul usitosi STEBBINS COUDERSPORT ACADEMY J. W. ALLEN., sprluelp!g i , Late of the WellsborO :Academy; ,assisted by cOmpetent Teachers. _ The Term commences September IStit, and continues Eleven W ‘ eeks:; • „ • Tuition, to be paid at the Middle' Otth• term, $3- to $B.;- No scholar' schqtte(lfor less than - halrsi'term: `" " ' ' Teacherer Class will be instrocted_fieeof charge. " • ' By order of the Trustees: ' " D. F. GLASS, .; • " * A..STETION BOSS. )8134 * epi2dorsro4.; :.,t,
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