A TRAGICAL DELUSION. The tragical delusion of the madmen of Charleston Jour years ago, that they could overthrow a great nation as easily -as they could fire upon a provision ship or upon a little isolated garrison, - is viv idly illustrated by the two following ex tracts. The first from - the Charleston Mercury of the 10th of January, 1861,1 and the second frOm a letter to the Tri-, tezirre,"Written in Charleston on the 20th, of February, 1865 "The exbulsion of the steamer Star of the West from Charleston harbor yester-1 day morning was the opening of the rev- 1 olution .... would_not exchange or recall that blow for millions .... The haughty echo of her cannon hqs ere this reverberated from Maine to Texas, thro' every haridet of .the North, and down along the great waters of the South-west. And though . greasy and treacherous ruffians may cry on the dogs of war, and traitorous politicians may lend their aid in deceptions, South Carolina will stand under her own palmetto-tree, unterrified by the snarling growls or assaults of the one, undeceived or unde.teri l ed by the wily machinations of the other. And if that red sea of blood be still lackine• to the patchment of our liberties, and blood they want, blood they shall have, and blood enough to stamp it all red. For, .by. the God of our fathers, the soil of South Carolina shall be free!" So wrote men who were ready and ea, ger-to smother in blood a C.iverrime4 which they did not pretend had ever harmed them _and which they had abso lutely controlled. Pour years pass. One by one their hopes disappear. And now amidst the desertion, according to Gov.; Vance, of half their army, ernidst the: imprecations and cries of the Richmond! journals that their, leaders shall not flee: by the mere wind cf Sherman's Thunder-: ing march, Charleston falls without al blow, and the crazy city that causelessly , defied a Government as stropg as it is benign, is thus described "The wharves looked as if thlry had! been deserted for half a century—broken I down; dilapidated, grass and moss peep-: ing up between the pavements, where once the busy, feet of commerce trode in-1 oessantly. The warehouses near the river; the streets as we enter them; the houses and the public buildings—we look at them and hold our breal in utter amazement. No pen,no pencil,uo tongue can do justice to the - scene. No nation can conceive of the utter wreck, the universal ruin, the stupendous deco laden. Ruin--ruin—ruin—above and below ; on the right hand and left; ruiol ruin, ruin, everywhere and always— staring at us from every paneless win dow; looking at us from every shell-torn wall; glaring at us from every bat tered door and pillar and verandah ;I crouching beneath our feet on every sidewalk. Not Pompeii,nor llerulaneurn, nor Thebes, nor! the Nile, have ruins so complete, so saddening, so plaintively I eloquent, for they speak to us of age not' ours, and lOng age dead, with whose pen-, pie and life and ideas we have no syrn-1 pathy whatever But here, on these ; . shattered wrecks of bousqs—built in our' own style, many of them doing credit to , the "architecture of our own epoch—we read names familiar to us all ; telling us - of trades and professions and commercial institutions which every, modern city reckons up by the hundred; yet dead, dead, ;,dead; as silent ias _ the silent gtave of the Pharoahs, as! deserted as the bazars of the merchant ptinces of Old Tyre." 1 BURKEVILLE, VA., April 17, 1865: My DEAR SIR : When you and my other associates of your office asked me to let them, hear from me t the front, I hardly expected to be able in this short time totell you so much; ' though I had no doubt All, or nearly-ally would occur in'cood time. After a 'probation of a week at .Carlisle , Barracks, the most unple l asant week I I ever spent anywhere, I calle, on via. Bal timore, Fort Monroe and City Point, tej the left front of our lines below Peters-I burg, and near Hatcher's Bun, and was,l with all the other Potter Men who came i out at the same time, asir , tted to Ahel t 1 99th P. V., Ist Brigade, 3 livisiorOdi Corps. This took place n the evening of the 24. th of March. 0 the morning of the 25th we were aro sed by sharp t.) firing, some half mile in ur front, and in sight. This was the c mmencernent of the big move which to ned the Rebel lines a week later. 1 On the 29th March the 2d corps broke camp and'inoved down the left some eight miles when our real C i service business comma cgd, for, from this time on until Sunday the 2d of April we were under arms and u der fire always nights and mostly days, iving and tak ing hard knocks all the while. I need tt i i not be very minute in thls, for the press has long ere this told.yo of everything in general, and I have no space for many particulars, The "little 'Jokers" were particularly 'compliment ry, and it re quired constant vigilane to escape them, Saturday .evening the act on became gen eral along the whole liney and we could hear Sheridan thundering away at the Johunys, far on our left After a night of ceaseless firing and without rest, we passed through the enett*'s lines, captur iog many. prisoners. Toni; the Boyd town Plunk Road, (by-the-wzy"the plank are ail goue,) and moved di;ectl .for Petersburg.. We found the' town II d a fort or two iltl4 by tbo coemy. 'l3 moved on to the bights overlooking tb forts and town, reconnoitered, and threw up breastworks, all the while compliment 4 by shells from the enctnyie batteries. I n the morning the birds; (as designed,) bad flown; Rich-, mond was evacuated, and we all flew, after them. IVe pressed on' fait, only, pausing to rest a little r and picl u the deserting Johnnies,, of which the Woods were full, The ;pad we traveled was the one the main body , of the' markedenemy ;Moved, upon, and his route u 43 marked byireat numbers of his horses . and mules !dead along the, road, and great quantl'Os of accouterments which his tired add de l _serting soldiers had thrown away' r f i The roads too were strewn with tobacco for miles, mostly in leaf;"enough and of a quality to call out the admirationi of the most fastidious smoker and chewer.. we moved on in their immediate rear, the cavalry trimming them on their flank and taking a large portion of their wagon train, until the morning of the 6th of April, when after marching two roil'es we came up with them near 'a little hamlet called Dratonville, when commenced one of the most singular running•.rglit's of the whole war. It wits the fortune of .__. ... oats me fortune this Brigade, and particularly of this Regiment to take n cOnspinuous I To.rt in it. The older portion of the Regitnent, (and many of the men date their service from or near the commencement of the war,) was, recruited in Philadelpfiie, and brave and devoted men they are. i Our Colonel, Biles, was wounded in the action of the 25th of March; and we were led by our ssnior Captain, Gillet.. Ati them wo went followinetheir skirmishers, much of the time at a double quick and always close on the enemies' beel4 until he succeeded in planting his battery on one of the many high ridges the country abounds in. Here we • were obliged ,to pause for a few minntes, When the com mand "forward boys, chaige thenl out," was given, and on we rushed. We had to Pass over one entire small ridge; across a ifpilaw, and up an extended slope to their breastworks. C Nearly the ; whole way we were exposed to a galling; fire of shells and musketry, and many a brave fellow was struck, particularly while pass. ing over the last one hundred rods to their outer line of works. Our Regiinent was immediately in the front of these works. Reaching these -we paused a moment for breath,exchanged a feiv shots and rushed for a partly demolished rail fence, a few rods in advance, and giving' us a better opportunity to dislodge theM. The Johnnys tried a flank on our left' under cover of some buildings, but a few vollies of our Well directed muskets soon convinced them that that, was impranti- I , cable s , when with a yell, such as lies often I carried terror to hebel,breasts, werushed ' upon then, and succeeded in securing' iheir works and a large number nf pri. oilers. They got away this time however I With their battery. Our loss was quite 1 heavy, but \ I believe but one man from Potter county was killed. ' I Our stay here was short. We formed our line again and soon .encountered their skirmishers. Being slightly ele- 1 I vated above our skirmish line and badly , , I exposed, part . of the rbe delivered its fire on the enemy, whedfairly breakin g e. from i l all control several re g iments, ours among the foremost,' rushed' , after the flying , \ Johnnys, and in a few . -minutes we had ; their battery, its accempanying train and I quite a number more prisoners. Here, I after ref i orming we retired fer a little rest, !after a most . exciting chase\nf perhaps sit miles. We were close upon the main portion of the enemies train, still left:by the cavalry. The right of our Division I took up the chasb in our steed, andiin the !eveninci we had the satisfaction of seein. , 1 the whole of this train in our posiessiou with upwards of stloo prisoners. 1.1 am ' happy to say, that while all' did well, the '"new men, especially from POtter, were no 1 . 1 way behind their Ornrades, and were so noticed and commended by our com manding officers. , 4. • I should like so describe to you the scene and contents of the captured train,, but.space will not permit.' I will only say; that it appears that hoe•eake and not, i 1 hardtack appears to have been their i bread by the number, of ;old fashioned ' bake-kettles and spiders fobnd there and in their deserted camps. i They would number thousands in all. ; The 7th we were in linenearly all day with sharp skirmishing continually going on, but Lee evidently declined giving battle. More of his train was destroyed and the taking of prisoners had ceased to excite any edriosity. Dead horses and mules of their trains were lyina. along by hundreds, cases of ammunition met the eye eveiywhere, and burped caisons and cannon with damaged carriages were to be seen every fourth .ofiu mile. The chief feature on the Sth. was the coming lof vast numbers of Johnns, and the Bur -1 render of several batters of artillery, i ' their tir' , 3 liorse o s'beino. unable to drag them alo g farther. ; Thing' were now evidently approach-, l idg, a crisis. Lee could dot possiOy sus- 1 I fain himself longer. s; we came out I past a littlelamlet called, D• i ireT Store, one lof the grandest sighti wls to be seen r b 1 that man may ever i We were in I the Highlands and on a behold • ahead, behind, and on either ill ek, for miles .: away men and • horses wit , their accOm- Ipanying trains, might be Seen as far as Ithe bye could distinguish hem, all con verging to one pint,Clover Hill, some ten miles away.; The i34orning of the auspicious 9th hf .A.ni4l; dawned and found.us near Clover Etll*ti , close on the I ;cowed and *tiered army of :Richmond. (14 flag of trade, came in ta;ed. it was soon 'whispered that Lee was about surrender. 1 inn. . Bpand•bye aucall went out from u s and we saw the Arai Headquarters moving rapidly up to this froht, while the vast army paused; and ;rested on their .ansig in' a vat :fild. tt after three. I Bo on o'clock - P. M . ; ch - eers begs' to arise on our front ,and couriers to , rapidly past us crying' Chat '_'Lee has surrendered!" Then one loud and wild / shout arose from those dense thousands / 6f armed men, and such a scene was pretiented as may never nein be witnessed n' the world. Your enthusiasm 'at hothe, was great and un-, bounded, what.then must have been the feelings of this tired and bleeding army when their to l 2 ls were thus unexpectedly ended. Th report - could hardly be be.' Hewed not' Gen.- Meade himself rode through and amongst us, and, proclaimed it amid ch shouts,oheers, huzzahiogni, and, I . may say it without intimating that the men were womanly di childish, TEARS, I such as only a glad but determine& and valient army would show. 1 You will forgive me for indulging in a >little enthusiasm and glorification at this point, more on aceount of my com rades who have suffered so long. Their joy was unbounded, arid mine could not be otherwise. The boasted twenty years' fight in Virginia of Jeff Davis, was cul- 1 minated in six April days of 1565; his ablest Geoeral outgeoeraled, cornered, and surrendered, his tired and dispirited army, like the spaniels they likened us to, glad to lick the hand •(or eat the ra tions) of their eiiquerers, and go home as fast as policy would permit their de. partaire. f will not attempt to give you figures for the numhers taken or amounts captured; let it suffice that it was their all, and their Judas of a leader is now an outcast'and a vagabond on the face of the earth—another Gain ! The country through which we have passed is a beautiful one, and it does seem as if its i inhabitants would have taken the "sober second thought" before they invited its desecration lay an armed foe. It required but a little stretch of the imagination to see many a Paradise on our route, but in every case an ideal man might exclaim with the spirit in the poem : "Poor race of men, cried the pitying spirit, DeaHy ye pay for your primal fall; Some flowers'of Eden ye still inherit, But the trail of the serpent is over them all." The blight that Slavery has left may everywhere be seen, but thank Gcd, the flaunting strumpet shall no longer put to blush the virgin maid of Liberty. Vir ginia now alone needs rest and she will rebound stronger and fairer than ever before when she could justly claim to I be the "mother of Liberty." ; The: contrast between our 'going to wards Lynchburg and coming back, the inhabitants must have noticed. Then everything useful was taken and much that was immaterial destroyed. Now nothing is injured, and we march almost as if passing through our own fields. As we were marching back to this point, long columns of the Johnoys might be seen moving parallel to us towards their homes without insult or derision. They appear satisfied, and its most cases profess themselves glad to get out of the scrape on any terms. There are exceptions however, and yesterday thirteen of them wero to be bung for stoping on their journey, with their paro!s in their-pock ets, and tearing up the Railroad above Baksville. . The weather_ . ..has generally been,fine, 'with now and ',then a rainy and muddy day and night. The chase . has been hard but manfully borne, for 'we could see the end What our destination now is I know not, nor can I guess, fdir our news is yet too meager ; but it is expect• ed, that as soon as te affairs can be ar ranged, and with safety left to , take their own and usual course, the army will be greatly reduced and we shall return to once more mingle our congratulations vcith yours that the Union is forever safe, and Freedom a second time won. , Yours truly ; E. O.AUSTIN. L\E. COLE, Esq. Large Playcards have been posted ou the dead\ wall.s of Liverpool giving the passage from the eighteenth chapter of Reveltionii, beginning "Babylon ' the great is failenl " ? as appropripto to the fall of Charleston. They will have to put up larger ones; now. A Nationalbatik of the United States is to be imnie , iatlY \ established in Rich tnond,where subscription to United States bonds will be received, at' the rates estab lished in the Northern \cities. The worlds fair for 1867 will be at Pans, and the building for it will cost from 86,000.000 1 to 8,0 0 0,000. The building will be made to bold 200;000 people, and everything will be on the grandest scale possible. ‘, A Nassau letter of the 16t11:\ states that there were over two and a ion pounds of bacon stored , at that port awaiting a chance to be carried through the blockade. Much of this bacon is from the Northern States sent there to run the , blockade. Record your Deeds.—The attention of par ties holding unrecorded Deeds is directed to the provisions of * the Act of Assembly, which requires that— " All deeds and conveyances for real estate in this Commonwealth, shall, be recorded in the office for Recording Deeds in the County where the lands lie, within six mohthi after the execution of such deeds and conveyance, and every such-deed and conveyance not recorded as aforesaid, shall be adjudged FRAUDU LENT AND VOID against any subsequent purchaser for a valuable consideration, un less such deeds be recorded before the re cording ,of the deed or conveyance nnder which such subsequent purchaseer or mort gaga shall claim. A SOAP Question Settled !moire at STEBBINS' APPEARANCE OF THE CogPs.—Death bas fastened into his frozen fice'all , the eharacter„and idiosyncrasy of life. - ,He • has not change:a one line- of his grave, grotesque countenance. nor smoothed out a single featUre. The hue' is rather bloodless end leaden; but he was always Sallow. The dark eyebrows seemed ab ruptly arched;: the beard, which' will grow no more, is shaved close, save the tuft at the sharp, small chin. The nitintli is shut, like that one who had put the foot down ftrm,and so are the eyes,ivhich look as calm as slumber. The collar is short and awkward, turned over the stiff elastic antral', and whatever energy or humor or tender gravity marked the hy ing face is hardened into its pulseless, outline. No corpse in the world is better prepared as-cording to appearance. The white satin around it reflects suficient light upon the face to show us death is really there; but there are sweet' roses and early magnolias, and the blamiest of lilies strewn around as if the flowers had began to bloom even upon his coffin. We look on unterruptedly,. for there is no preasure; for henceforward the plaCe will be thronged with gazers who will take from the sight its suggestiveness and re spect. Three years ago, when little Willie Lincoln died, Drs. Brown and Alexander, the embalmers or injectors, prepared hisbody so handsomely that the. President had it twice disinlerred to look upon it, The same men, ini the same way have made perpetual those beloved linea• clients. There is no* no blood is the body. It was drained by theju o ciar vein and sacredly preserved, and through a cutting on the inside ,of the thigh the empty blood vessels wore charged with a chemical preperation, Which soon holden ed to the consistency of stone. The long and bony body is nowjhard and stiff, so that beyond its present position it can• not be moved any morn than the arms of legs of a statue. It his undergone many chan g es. The scalp has been removed, the brain scooped out,, the chest opened and the blood emptied!. All' this we see of Abraham Lincoln, so cunningly con templated in this spltndid coffin, is a' mere shell ; an effigy, an sculpture. He lies in sleep, but it. is the sleep of marble. All that made this flesh vital, sentinent, and effectionate is gone forever. —The expedition under Maj. Gen. Stoneman, which left Knoxville Tenn., GU the 10th ult., struck the East:TermeB- see Railroad on the 14th ult., at Wythe ville, Christianburg add Salem. Between these points thirty tree bridges were• burned, and „twenty-five miles of track totally destroyed, and !besides many pris oners were taken andlconsiderable quan tities of corn and other stores destroyed. On the 6ingt., Gen. Stoneman moved,via Jaiksonville, Danbury and Maiksville, arriving at Grant's Creek, five miles from Salisbury, N. C., the "Rebel line for the defense of the town, ht 6 A. M. on the 120 inst. This line; defending by ar tillery and infantry, wns now foreed,and our forces entering Snlisbury,at 10 A.M., capturing 8 stands of bolors,l9 guns,ll64 'prisoners, 000 stand of arms and accent: rements, 100,000 round of small ammu nition and 1000 rounds of fixed ammuni tion and shells, 60,000 pounds of powder 75,000 complete Suits of clothing 350,000 army blankets ' and 20,000 pouunds of bacon,loo,ooo pounds of salt, 20,000 pounds of sugar,27,ooo lbs of rice, 10,000 pounds of saltpatre, 50,000 bush• els of wheat, $lO,OOO dollars worth of medical supplies, 7,000 bales of cotton Thirteen pieces of artillery were brought away and a.ll other stores not needed for our immediate command were destroyed The greatr bart of the supplies had just been received from Raleigh- One, large arsenal, machinery complete, with depots two engines and trains, several bridges between Greensboro, and Danville, with several miles of railroad track were de stroyed. Our loss was very few in killed and wonnded. Among the latter Capt. R. Morrow, Assistant Adjutant-General of Stoneman's Staff. —lt was ascertained some weeks ago from personal friends of the late Presi dent that he bad received several private letters warning him that an attempt would probab y be made upon his' life ; ict but to this b did not seem to attach much if any i portance. It bas always been thought that he was not sufficiently careful of his individual safety in his last visit to Virginia. It is known that on freqent occasions he would start from the Executive Mansion for his summer .[ country residence at the Soldiers , Home without the, usual cavalry escort, which often hurried and overtook him before he had proceeded far. It has always been understood that this escort was accepted by him, only on the iinportunity of his friends as a matter of precaution. The. President before retiring to bed would, svhen important military events were pro gressing, visit the War Department, gen. orally alone, passing over the dark inter ironing ground even at late hours on re• Peated occasions, and after the .warning letters had been received several close arid intimate friends, armed for any ewer• pixy, were careful that he should not continue his visit without their company. For himself the President seemed to have no fears. . ' • The London correspondent of the N.•a Herald states that within a couple of years the Prince Imperial of France is to make a royal visit to the United States and take a tour in the country: Re is:to , be attended by a Splendid fleet and two or three Ministers of State, and move about with a brilliancy which will corn. pletely, it is said, eclipse the late tour of the Priuoe.of ales. , VIE END APPiROACEING; -- - 1 WAR AfEWS:-. ri It JO IiiISTON SURRENDERS t • !_• • • s'WA, tuNGToN, / April 28.''-1865.--A dispatch from' Gen- Grant dated at Raleigh, 10 ji. cu., April 26,juitreceived by tbia , DepartMent, states that'•letin stou surreedered the forces in his com mand, ethbracing all from hero to Chat , tahoochie, to Gen. Sherman on the basis agreed upon between Lee and myself for the Army of Northern Virginia. /EDWIN M. STANTON, Sec'y,of War. / The last•that was heard by Geo John- Skit] of the chivalrous chief of the last ditehers, Jefferson' .D., was that he had started away for parts unknown in an' ambulance and was supposed to be hid den somewhere in the mountains. May this be the end of him There coald be no more ludicrously insignificant tenni nation to the career of this arch „Rebel than in the flight which he has igdotnin icusly chosen. There is nothing ckf the heroic in this: Had he.bravely yielded himself - a prisoner with chivalrous Lee, i perhaps a bard or two n ages to cothe might have sunk, the life, fortunes, and tragical death of J. Davis, but now there will none be found so poor as to do him reverence. • Very little difSculty was expeilenced by the two chieftains in agreeing to the .terms of the capitulation of the Southern armies. Sherman offered and Johnston accepted substantially the same terms which were offered by Gen. Grant to Gen. Lee. Johnston further agreed to issue a proclamation to the Rebel Legis latures, calling upon them to meet at, their respective capitals and take the oath of allegiance to the Government of the United States.'l 1 John C. Bre2kinridge, who was pres,- ent on the grounds before the interview, evidently thought that, being a politician, he would be tibia to outwit Sherthan in obtaining for him a recognition of his right to treat with him ai• a civil officer 1 of the Confederate Government, who might be supposed to represent the views of its President. But Gen. Sherman ci foiled all his attempts, and erely ree I ()grazed him io his capacity as ieutenant General, of the Confederacy, and did not negotiate with him at all. During the day, Gen. Sherman cotn- i municated to Gen. Johnston the intelli gence of the assassination of President Lincoln, and it is only just to a sworn though honorable enemy, to say that Gen. Johnston was grieved by the news and seemed to be as,niuch shocked by it as if he were a Northern man and a friend of the Piesident's. Something being said about. State rights,iSherinan made one of his.charac teristic' remarks io reply Said he : "The Aliaorican citizen has some rights too. _ ) I have some rights, among them is the right to go where I please,.aud jump what ferices I please-" ..That,7 said .Jelinstil, "is because you ' have a large ftirce in back • you." Said. Sherwin; "That the identical thing:" . 1,400 LIVES LOST. ST. LOUIS, April 28, 1865. A telegram received by the Military anthorillies from New Madrid, says that the steritner Sultana, with 2,000 paroled prisoners.expluded; 1.400 lives were lust. Li test from Sherman ! & TAR, from North Chrolina, for !fqe by STEBBIN4, Administrator's Notice. t EtrftS of Administration having been grunted to the undeesigned on the Es tate of pENNIS MAGINNIS, late of Ge-esee township, deed, notice is hereby given to those irldebted to make immediate pigment, and - those having claims against the dame to presentlthem, properly authorized, to ANN MAGINNIS: , Genesee, April 25, 1865. I DIVORCE NOT OE. CYNTHIA J. BOVIER, , No, 27,Dee. Term by - tier next friend 1864, in the cora- JOSEPH MANN mon Pleas of Pot ti vs. f-ter County. Libel WILD W AM T. BOER Jin Divorce. To IVILLILAM T. BOVIER, Respondent above named t Please take notice that a subncena and alias sabpcena;having been issued and returned nihil; you are hereby required to appearl on the first!, day of next Court, the 19th dily of June next, to answer to the com plaint made , n this I case. I D. C. LARRABEE Sheriff. Coudersport, April 18, 1865. Administrat,or's I Notice. YHEA ER,S Letters of Aldministration to 'the Estate of JOHN BRIZZEE late of Oswalo tp., deceased, haVe been granted to the supseriber, all persons indebted to Bald Estatel are requested to make immediate pay ment,land those having claims against the same will present them, duly authenticated, i for se ,tlemegt. to 1 r WILLIAM DEXTER, of Oswayo Village, Admen - Aril 17, 186 n. ;, Notice. I C RMANfI, Potteri, 1 63. T Co., Pa., Aug. i ) , 11 IV TICE is hereby given that Charie r . Be rg ishor, now or late of this county, balding thrj allowing described property. has nt yet pattiny, consideration whatever fcr theiSame, and ,ill persons are hereby warned not t per be or l p the decision of the Courtchtts ]usher n any of said property of the said usktor is g,i ein I this ease and C. Busher has paid to e the Ir c eii.nierittion money therefor. I The following is the property : j, 1.4 . t. A certain tract of land near, t Ger , manta, Mill, in warrant 5075. 'Abbott to i nship, pouer, county, Pa., containing 100 acres.— Also i 2s acres in warrant 5018- and adjoining the .bove. I ' 2dd. A certrin tract of la.n l d, with %H and I improvements theredn, near Kettle Creek, it warrant 5819, in Stewartsmi township, Potter county, Pa., containing about 204 acres. C. Bu ! 6hor holds, also in trust warrant no,. 2501, in Games township, T,iogo, county, Pe; on the road leading from Ge;rwania to Gaines, containing 850 acres.. tf , WM. RADDE. SINNONS' COLUMN, FRIENDS_ CTSTOMERS : i •- - 1 return you my einem!e t s Its for yourliberitlpstrenap, fort fiitast few ears, and would ssy.to-yets that 11 have locate ,mysilf at i Welleville, N. Yr, eod-Mayi hereither be found the EMPIRE STORE AND W YORK STORE (Hering bought out the Store formerly ocCu• pied by Geo. Aches.), I shall continue to WHOLESALE AND z.:lll4l„taa in both of the above Stores, and hope to all cif ray old friends and customers, as they are in want of Goods, and will try to sell them low enough to pay them for coming. Nit'e are now selling the beet PRINTS Ikon 12( to IS cents. - • Extra GINGHADIS from 15 to 25 cents. -• good SHEETINGS from 12 1 to 23 cents. TICKS, DENIMS, STRIVE', and all of he Goads in proportion. • ! CL 0 TiflLlr Gtood suits for $lO to $l5 and Extra fine suits in proportion. And as I have an over stock of Clothing I mill sell at Whole•- sale 15 per' cent. less than the same can be bought in-Neer York. BOOTS & SHOES, HATS & CAPS, StIAWLS, CLOAKS, &V, , at reduced prices, 4ROCERIES AND very low 1 1 itICH DRESS SILKS, -EMPRESS CLOTHS, POPLINS, :mi. all other styles of Ladies' Dress Goods. very low. Hoping to receive an early call, - I amain your friend, C. 11. SIMMONS. N Y:, March 15, NO. i '.FOR SALE • TE Subscriber oilers for Sale the follow ing tracts of land, to wit One tract of One Hundred and Forty-thrss and seen-tenths acres in Pike township, Potter county, on the Genesee Forks- Price $llOO. Sixty acres are improved, with one log barn, fraine iitcben, frame barn, forty good fruit trees, and two hundred sugar maple trees. The farm will cut grass, in ra good season, sufficient, at present prices, to pay for it. : llso,another tract of Fifty-six and wo tenths acres, in Eulalin township. fOur miles from Coudersport, Thirty acres or w!bich are improved. , with one frame house, log barn, and some fruit trees ther,on. .Price,' $450. . Also. n Wagon Shop and hair lot in gibe Borough of Coudersport, one lot west of P. A. Stebbins' k Co's Store near Glasstnire's Hoist The tools, lumber, kc., can be boOght rea sonably ; or a portion of them.if the purchaeor so desires. One half con be paid iu Wagon- Work. A reduction l of. ten per cent be mad* for Cash down. For - urther particulars enquire of lb. sub. scriber at his Wagon-Shop in Coudirsport. Feb. 20, 1865. W. Et' wfis. C 3 7 z - ~ c c F p4 i co V) i 1a 2 3 P, U 1 ta • I wish all persons having open' annalist with me to call and settle immediately. • I will sell - • Cheap for Cashi All my stock of Merchandise Coo - listing of CLOTHING, • BOOTS,. and - SHOES, IDETIOS CROCKERY, GROCERIES, TOOLS; ke g 1 Good llorse and Harness. j Wagons, 1. Sleigh., ti 1. Cutter, 1 Salley, 'The privilege of a good dant', in aim. plete working order. ,15 Cents paid for good ASHES; LUCIEN 811 . Broekland, Pa., Sept., 1864. WAGON SHOT T . BE subscriber having located in Lewis vile is prepared to dci.9.11 kinds of r.rork in his line, on short notice and in the beat manner. 4 ,. Making. and R epairing , of all kinds. lam enable d by the aid of a ' chinery to do work in the! wagon-line batter and cheaper than any_other establishme t ii the con,nty. lam also prepad to Aft_ COFFINS. EPS re ON ByD Ulysses, Penn's, Deo. 1, 1864 it El CROCKERY