Cljt Btmocnit. HARVEY SICKLER, Editor. XXTirKXIAtrNOVK, PA. Wednesday, Oct. 22, 1862 tar The late call fora"metting of the Tax Payers of Wyoming County" must have hit the Tiffany's right on the knob. They attended of course. We leatn upon good authority (hat Tiffany says, that the man who is to suceetded him in the office of editor of the Republican \a more thoroughly abolitionized th an he is If Tiffany should swear to this, and it should turn out to be half true, which under such •circumstances it might not, it is enough to damn that sheet to all eternity. Congressional returns. The following is the vote for congressman In this the 14th. district. Tracy Clark Bradford, 3,577 4,035 Wyoming, L 333 1,113 Columbia, 2.820 1,467 Montour, 1.183 807 Sullivan, 007 281 9,520 7,703 7,703 Tracy's ma j. 1,817 Tiffany announced the fact last Week, that the " old Keystone," had " gone for the Union, the Constitution and the enforcement of the laws." We think it has too ; not for a union with niggers— not f<>r a constitution that places them on an equality wi h tree white men—not for the enforcement of the arbitrary mandates of any Tyrant, as Tiff thought it had. Bu' for 'fie restoration of the good old union of sia.es as the) were, under the nobie old Constitution a- it is and for the enforcement of all just, whot.vune and proper laws, including those against peijury. Tiff stand from under !! Tiffany on the Result. In the last issue of the Rejiublican , the Tiffanies claim that in the late election, the Republican party have " a gam over the dem ocratic Ticket of 1860, it not less than one ' hundred and fifty votes, c >ns dering," say! they, ♦* the faci" that "three hundred re publican Voters have gone out 'of the county, j while there is not m ire than one half of that number of democrats gone." We suppose ! these " Babes in the woods," r fer te the soldiers, when ihey speak" f men who have j gone from the county. We never knew, iev er asked or wanted to know, the exact or even approximate ratio of Democrats to Re i publicans in the army fr :n tins county Men of all parties have gone, Democrats aa promptly r.t,d in. {is lat-e uumbers In localities where we are acquainted, as ' those of any other party Few, if any, we: regret to say, of the Tiffany str pe have gone. ! One of that firm, however, did, we believe, •crew up his patriotism (?) last summer, to I such a pitch, that he went with a company of men down as far as Harrsburg arid af ter getting a suit of clothes and a free ride at t.ia expense of the government, returned all ocvered with glory (?) or something else. Let us for a moment exitnine the assertion that the defeat of the abolition ticket in this eoun'y, is the result of the withdrawal of their voters from the county, while demo erats have staid at home, for we believe, there are some besides the Babes, who give curren- I ey to this opinion. Men whose simple state- I ments are worth more than all the " facts" j of the Tidanies with their oaths to back them : Never, but once, we believe in the history ' of this county, was there a larger vote ! polled, than at the present election. At the i October election in 1860, 2558 votes were ; polled for Curtm and Foster—a greater num- ' ber than at the Presidential election. At i the present election the vote on Auditor, and several other candidates exceeded 2500, or i within less than 50 voles of the largest ever polled in the county. This serves to show that the voting portion of the soldiers what ever their political opinions are, which were actually out of the county on the dav of elec tien is small. In this connexion it should be borne in mind that one company was sent i back ialo the county, on the eve i f election, for the purpose we believe of carrying the ' election agains* us. This trick, however, of Cartift's to drag through his old friend Wil aiot proved abortive. The soldiers we ho e and bel.eve, did not all vote against the white man's Ticket, as they were expected to do ; but for the party that are in favor of th con- 1 stitution and the union, the same that our soldiers are periling their lives to maintain and restore. And again how does it com - i port with this lhenry, tlint the vote polled by Bhe democrats of the C"Unty,i over 300 great r than at last tail. Les* ifian 10U0 men in this county l ist fall voted for that staunch aid Democrat, Col. Tate. This fall every reg ular candidate, on our ticket received over 1300 votes, and one, Vaughn, 1442. Does the absence of Republicans, increase the ac tual number of democrats in our county at Ihil, to them, fearlul rate ? If, to withdraw aa it is alledged 300 Republican" from the cowoty, will bring into existancu an equal or greater number of democrats, we are decided- 1 ljr in faror f sending all the " wide awakes," j i "Home Guards" ''Post office" aspirants, non tax paying, lying vagabond printers, there are in the county, down south, to est&bliah nigger schools, drill nigger brigades, drink nigger whiskey, and astonish the natives with their profound contempt of the union the Cftns'tihition and laws, and of the solemn oil gation on an oath. We will then supply their places by white men, who pay their taxes before voting, and who when they are sworn to tell the truth, do so. Resistance to the Enrollment in Luzerne Co I We regret to learn that serious trouble ex ; ists in Luzerne county, growing out of the draft. In the town of Blakely several fruit , loss attempts had been made to make the en i rollment, and on Friday last a military com pany was taken to the place, when a fight with the citizens ensued. The military was ! | obliged to fire upon them, killing four or five, ; and again on Wednesday 200 of the military, with a small cannon, were taken up, when, the affair assuming a serious aspect, the citi zens desisted from their opposition, and the enrollment was completed. 4 he same trouble hf.'s been experienced in Carbondale. The citizens residing in '.he 1 lower wards have resisted so stubbornly that the enrolling officers have beeu unable to complete their labors. Also in Scranton the same resistance was shown, but the officers succeeded iu complet ing the enrollment. Ihe same spirit, it is said, has been mani fested all through the mining region. Tlkj Carbondale Advance says:—" We have melancholly news from Aorhbald. A death iias resulted from a renewed effort to take the enrollment at that place. We pub : lished, two weeks since, an account of the manner in which the enrolling officer and j four or five assistants had been driven froin the town, bloody and bruised. We learned, about noon yesterday, that the enrolling offi | cer had arrived upon the ground with a large posse, unarmed, for the purpose of taking the enrollment peaceably, if they could, but with ; a company of militia in attendance, tinned, to execu'c the law forcibly if they must. Dur- ; ing the afternoon six women were arrested for disturbing the peace, and Scut to jail at W ilkesbarre. No serious difficulty, however, occurred until the officers were returning ! from their day's business to- the hotel. A ri ot then occurred, with these results: Pat- I rick Gilmartin, killed, received about ten shots. His wife was badly wounded. Pat rick Co'egar, sh t thr-ugh the hand ; Micha el Caflrey, severely wounded with three balls; and John Catfrev with two balls. Several others slightly wounded. None of the mill- j tia were hurl.,' The Draft and the War. We publish to day tie list of persons j dralted in this county numbering 06 in all. I his draft, (hough light, as it may seem to be, to apparently disinterested persons, (alls upon some districts with terrible weight, 1 and upon some families with ruinous severity, j Indeed in many cases it seems ii )a t the very ones, least able to leave their homes and tainil es are the ill faded conscripts. We have heard it intimated that another draft is soon to follow the one now made. We hope however, that our people will not ; be forced to drain the very dregs of this last ! cup of bitterness. How long at this rate will (hey "give their voices for the war."? A war i that has already taken from theirhappy homes 1 and peaceful firesides one out of every three, of the laboring men of the north. A war that has desolated thousands of hearthstones; left thousands of helpless innocent children to struggle on in orphanage through long years of gaunt poverty and want, uneducated, unfed, uncared for by fraternal hands. A war that has furrowed with tears its thousands of wid- j ows cheeks, and left its thousands of wives mothers, daughters, and sisters, trembling with weakness and want, without the strong arm of husband, father or brother to support them. Awr that will send back upon an already overburdened tax-ridden impoverish ed people, thousands of its maimed, crippled, helpless and dependent victims. llow long shall we invoke the presence of '■ grim vis aged war." before we may again look for the coming of the white winged angel of Peace ? j Some, (not an inch of compromise), " abo. j litinnists may charge us with belonging to the " peace party'' with being a traitor and prove his own " Loyalty', by hissing through i his wolfish teeth at Democrats with infernal ! emphasis his favorite word sccesh. If to regret that when terms of honorable j Coinnromise were offered which would have 1 averted all the calamties that have since be- ! fallen the country, they were not accepted, if, ; we say, to regret this, is to make us the Peace j Party, then are we the Peace Party. If to hope and pray that an internecine war which lias already drenched this fair land in blood, may be brought to a speedy and an honor able close is to be traitors, then are we trai tors. If to clmg to the constitution as the sheet anchor the shield and charter of our liberties, and the I nlon cemented bv the blood of our fathers, as our only rock of! safety is secessionist!), then are we secession- j ists. . Cen. McCall. 'I he renegade, traitor, and abolitionist, j John W. Forney, in the Press of the 18th I inst. speaking of the defeat of the brave Geo. j McCall, who was beaten f r Congtess, in the ; Chester Co. district says: The people have decided that Gen. McCall should not represent them in Congress Wby should tfie President not decide he should not represent them in the field ? i 7he tune has come to dispose of doubtful men. Why is a man who walks behind a j 1 chimney sweep like a card player ? Because j : he " folio wo soo/." < The amount of wheat raised in upper Ca nada in 1860 was 24.520,425 bushels. * The Result of the Election. The result of the late election in the State i 8 now conceded by all parties to be a democrat ic triumph. Though but meager returns hate as yt reached us, enough is known, to war rant the conclusion, that the state ticket is elected by a handsome majority. The popu lar hranch of the state Legislature is demo cratic by at least twelve majority—sufficient ly 60 as to ensure a majority on joint ballot wh'ch will secure to us the next U. S. Sena tor, in the place of the abolitionist Wilmot.— Fifteen out of the twenty-four Congressmen elected, are claimed by the democrats. Grow of the Luzerne and Susquehanna District, has been beaten by over 2500 majority. The whole democratic ticket in Luzerne has been triumphantly elected. Allen McCain one of the bolting republicans in Bradford was beat en by only 76 votes, also Maj. Terry, his partner in the race, by less than 500. Col. Smith the candidate for state Senator in this district was beaten by about 800. The Result—ls it an Imloi semen tof the Ab olitionists f The Constitutional Union, a Philadelphia democratic paper in an article under the above caption says : As the smoke of the battle quietly lifts, and we get a view of the scene of contest, we are enabled to form something like a proper idea of the results of the battle. If, however, an idea of the result were not ascertainable from any other point, it would only require a comparison of the election editorials of our cotemporaries, the Press, the Inqurer , and the North American, to satisfy all that the offi cial returns very materially change the aspect of affairs, and put u the saddle on the right horse." In a word, the election in Pennsyl vania has been a great and glorious triumph for the conservative. Constitution loving Democratic party. True, the municipal election of this City resulted in the choice of the Republican can didates, but there are reasons for this result which, at a glance, overturn all claims to a Republican victory. As to its being an in dorsement of the Administration, that is pre posterous ; but it was brought about by the lash of power—by the threats of proscription, by unheard of attempts on the part of the Abolitionists to carry the day, is undeni able. Where, in the annals of our political his tory, do we find such an outrage as that per petrated upon the nation and the honest working men of our City, by John Covode's visit to and political mid day speeches at the United States arsenal and United States navy yard, in which he threatened them with dis | missal, and vowed eternal hostility to all fu j ture appropriations for the yard, if the men i did not vote as the Abolition party desired them ? Workmen of Philadelphia, where was your wonted spirit on that insulting oc | casion ? Why was not the man who dared to stilio the free exercise of suffrage, driven from your midst with bowlings and execrations ? But let us look farther. Read the printed 1 edicts from Merrick, Baldwin, Striker A Co., and other men who have large Government j contracts, and who are growing fat off of them. They too threatened the lash of pro scription. Look still further, hand see how the police force wero engaged on election day. We | heard an Abolitionist say on Fourth street the evening of the election, l! the police were worth five thousand votes to us to-day. 1 never saw ! them work so hard. They knew they would be turned out if Fox was elected, so they kept the ball rolling all day.*' i Look still further, at the, large number (f ! persons here who have Government contracts ; —not so large perhaps as Merrick's—and : who are deeply interested in prolonging the i war; and summing up all these suborning in • fluences, is it surprising that our municipal i election was carried by the Abolitionists ? ! And yet, with all these odds against them, ! with every morning daily except our own, pitted against them, with no public patronage | with which to compel subordinates to vote as directed ; alone, single handed armed with no weapon but constitutional right, and pleading no cause but the cause of their bleeding coun- 1 i try, the Democracy entered the arena, and | and more than thirty thousand of them record j id their vote against the treason of Abolition | Think of that Abolitionists ? think of that ! | Thirty thousand of tli people of Philadelphia i untrameled by administration influences, of j their own accord, in the face of opposition the i most uhscrupulous, of falsehoods the most | glaring, of official inlioence the mast out j rageous and unprcedented, dared to rebuke ; the Abolition faction. Another trial, and the j la-t vestige of that unholy faction will be i swept aside as chaff from the threshing-floor. | Take heart, Democrats, there is a good day ! coming! Take heart! Stand by your prin ! ciples, for the Constitution of the United ! States is " a strong rock of defence." Cling i to it ss the shipwrecked mat iner clings to the I floating plank, God in his providence, will ; yet rescue the people from the plague of Ab olition. Bcccher on the Union. Rev. Henry Ward Beecher, on Sunday last compared the Union with Slavery, to a bar rel with worm eaten staves, remarking that "As with States, so it is with the Nation al Governm nt. For fear of weakness in the original compact, the monster was admitted." ! The " National Intelligencer " replies : Mr. Beecher is so learned in many branch es of study that be may be excused for not ' knowing much about tbe history oftbel'ni ted States. As at the date of the formation of the Constitution, every State allowed sla ve; y within its bounderies except Massaehu- I setts, it follows that if the framers of that in strument had acted according to the idea o | Mr. Beecher, the Union would have consist ed of that State alone. , JKST" " If the minister's sermon make an gels weep and devils tremble, where were the good unless you do your duty. i E L ECTIO K RETURNS. OFFICIAL. . " '■ - ■ f' "" ' 1,1 ■' "■ " ! —■ ———————— A TOWNSHIPS * x I II ? j S j S 3 1 I >. > i 1 feM la ; H' i 53 1.2 ' S. S £_ 3 2 ? o" ; ?? S■ ® S S 3 2. ;r oiS.5 > 5- ? 3 > "** 2 t 3 a 5 a |!§ ? f M : IM 1I; * : m• * t i g • : : : . a : §\IS : : i § : §: $ ?- 3 2 1, : S 5 |: i : : : : : : ? ? : : : '• : s* |\■ } 8 8'• S j : : OF FI cER s. :: : :••••* : : • : : ; a. : : £; *: : : : j : • ;j!Jjjj jjjj ; j : : ! i j :;:j :j f j | j : j : : Auditor-Gtneral, !| I | I I I | | I i I ! 11l ! 1. Isaac Slenker,* i 22 j 31 i 59 j34 j 118 j 53 =36 65 | 132 61 157 96 49 :G3 i 137 72 79 81 1345 Thomas E.Cochran.f...| 67 j 109 j 122 jl2j33j 52 48 f 131 : 55 80 75 66 21 .1361 : jGC 69 74 1154 Surveyor General, ! | j j I \ | j , '• | P - B ? rr *i '• 23 ;> 31 59 34 j 118 52 35 Go j 131 63 156 96 49 63 138 73 79 82 1347 William S. Rossf bi < 110 ] 122 jl2 ; 32 |.53 ;50 131 5G 80 74 67 22 12 ; 63 68 68 75 1162 Congress, | j j j J ! > ! i • ; Ilenry W Tracy ♦ 36 j 33 55 35 } 84 52 39 j 64 133 62 158 98 51 55 143 72 : 86 83 1333 Robert F. Clark.f 60 111 < i2 O ;11 j 29 51 47 , 131 52 80 76 66 20 :10 54 I 63 | 60 72 1113 Senator , j I j I j I ) I ' i •' ' • Elhanan Smith,!. j4O j 33 58 33 j 79 53 38 63,124 64 157 97 49 | 2 1.31 76 86 84 1267 William J. 1 urrell.f ->1 110 121 \l2 . 28 \ °1 :47 ! 130 59 80 76 64 22 11 '• sr !55 39 72 1006 Jasper btark.jl •: i j ; \ o o |jI:: : : " : Representatives. . I I ' i < ( ' ' ' Gorge ... 24 ; 32! # Jj| 54 ;3Cj 00 | 132 01 157 08 50 03 J4O i 75 79 83 1301 .elm I Kill. .4 1,,, 00 ,-.4 1 2 (, ; 54. 30; 05 132 01 157 97 50 03 140 75 70 82 1303 Samuel Ilavs.f 6/ | 109 120 ;13 32 j 51 49 129 ! 53 80 75 66 20 12 tq 65 67 14 1140 Jacob Kennedy.f .4 68 t 109 j 120 jl3} 32 51 i 49 { 129 j53 80 75 67 18 12 24 64 03 73 1130 i; j I I I 1 " President Judge. William FJwelU 90 143 |\ m 48 ; 154 105 77 : 192 i 188 145 231 157 71 77 109 134 136 156 2484 W lluam Jessupll > | j ; 4 Coroner, | j • ■ | J. M. Carey.§ 2i j 32 56 ;35. ng • 51 36 • 65 132 61 155 93 49 CO 142 72 79 83 1346 County Commissioner, \ j \ j Theron Vaughn,* 24 j 32 j 65 ,34< n0 i 57 38 J 114 I 128 63 157 99 49 66 138 81 89' 89 1442 Allen Ja} net ' > ill 116 !1- 3ii 48 ,48 j ,6 ,56 SO 76 65 22 7 sr 54 69 69 1048 County Treasurer. James L Mullison,* ... 20= 31 52 34 I] 3 !; 50 36 > 72 133 60 154 96 49 gj p, r,5 82 79 1306 Palmer Jenkins.f 66 108 129 13 3 g 55 ,47 124 55 80 77 66 22 14 go 71 04 76 1165 j.|l|j>l| ; ; ; ■ . ; . ; District Attorney. | ' > I : | I 23 ; 31 59 36 : 122 j 54 34 | 67 134 64 157 97 49 63 144 70 80 79 1363 66 109 j121 12: 3 o j 51; 47 130 55 80 71 67 22 11 59 67 67 77 1145 ; ! j ; : Coun'y Auditor. II'?-' JohnG Spauhling,*... 24 j 32 60 ; 35 | 118 > 60 |36 60 i 133 67 158 . 99 50 63 142 72 75 85 1369 John L. llalip.T 66 j 107 122 .12j 32 43 \4B | 133 :55 79 75 ;65 20 \ A 65 . 7; > 7 o 1141 Z'SJ" * Democrats, j Republicans, Union, §Xo opposition, i| Scattering. Governor lurtln Demands an I . instigation. Governor Cortin demands an investigation ( of the recent rebel raid into Franklin cmntv. J He has heard a little thunder from that dis -1 trict apart from the thunder of the rebel ar ; tillery. The people, as we predicted, would | be the first to rebuke him, and nobly have they done it. Deserted by those whose duty , it was to protect them, they have turned to ; Democracy as their only hope, and have cleet ' ed a Democratic Senator and a Democratic 1 Congressman from a district so gerrymander ed last winter as to be considered hopelessly ! I\* given to Abolitionism. But we have deviated from our subject. 1 Governor Curtin demands an investigation of ! the rebel raid. Wc presume it will be in keeping with the investigations demanded by | him when the contracts for "shoddy blankets j and. overcoats," " wooden soled shoes" and " hidy coffee," were subjects of public consid eration. As in that case, the committee will, I of course, be appointed by himself, a set of j very respectable old gentlemen, who,uuac i qua in ted with frauds of the kind charged, i would be the last persons in the world to de i tect them. But such a committee would not jgo down just now. Let us suggest one far i more likely to ferrst out the truth, (if so dis posed) for the very excellent reason that they ; a;e with the schemes planned and carried out for injury to the public welfare. Here is the list—Alex M 1 dure, John \V. • Forney, Win. D. Kelley, Thaddeus, Stevens, ; John Hickman and niorton McMichael. This | would be a strong Haifa dozen, as competent I to ferret out rascality as any six we are ac I quainted witli Ex. • To Teachers and Directors. Examination of teachers will be held as follows: for Meshoppen, at Sterlingville, Oct. 31st; for Braintrim, at Laceyville, Nov. Ist ; for Windham, at Scottsville, Nov. 4th ; for Forkston and North Branch, at the Forks, Nov. sth ; for Mehoopanv, at Mehoopany village, Nov. 6th ; for Clinton, at Factoryville, Nov. 10th ; (or Nicholson, at the Wilkins School Houso, Nov. 11 th j for Eaton, at the school house near Halls, Nov. 13th. Examinations will be held in any of the other townships on request of the Directors. The examinations will commence at 10 o'clock A. M. Applicants must be punctual or they will not be admitted into the class They must coinc prepared with writing ma terial. The attendance of directors is request ed as a matter of official duty. They are al so expected io furnish fires if necessary. J. DEWITT, CO. Supt. Get. 22nd 18C2. HOST the Queen will return to England about the n.-iddle of next month, and take up her residence at Osborne, where she will re main until the second week of December, af ter which Her Majesty will go to Windsor, and stay there in strict privacy for about ten days, and then return to Osborne, where the Queen intends to spend her Christinas The P*mce of Wales will also spend his Christ inas in England—Court Journal. Important Letter from Cicn. Scott to Win 11. SeWard | The following letter from Lieut. Gen. Scot! , to M H. Seward on the state of the coun tr\. written two days before the inaugura tion of Lincoln, has just been made public. . It was read by .Air. John Aan Buten, in a , speech delivered by him a few days since, in j New York. It shows that the old Ilero ap . predated, in part, at least, the vastness of the undertaking, the party then nbftut to come into power, Were to undertake, hv rejecting, as it did, the terms of settlemei t then so ear jnestly advocated by tha" other Hero and Statesman, the venerable Crittenden. WASHINGTON, March, 2, 18GI, DEAR SIU : —Hoping that, in a day or two. the new President will have happily passed , through all personal dangers, and lind him I self installed an honored successor of the .great Washington, with you as the chief of his Cabiiet, I beg leave to repeat in wrfting j what I have before.said to you orally this ! supplement to my printed "views" (dated >n j October last) —on the highly disordered con jda ion of our (so late) happy and glorious , L nion. To meet the extraordinary exigen i cies of the time, it seems to me that I am I guilty of no arrogance in limiting the Pre?- j idenCs field of selection to one of the tour plans of procedure subjoined: I. Throw off the old and assume a new designation : the Union party. Adopt the' j conciliatory measures proposed by Mr. Crit tenden or the Peace Convention, and my life upon it we shall have no new casq of Seces sion ; but on the contrary, an early return of many, if not all of the States which have already broken off from the Union. Without some equally benign measure, the remaining slaveholding States will probably join the Montgomery Confederacy in less than sixty 1 , days; when this city, being included in a foreign country, would require a permanent garrison of at least thirty-five thousand troops' to protect the Government within it. 11. ( ollect the duties on foreign goods out side the ports of which the Government lias lost the command, or close such ports by aci of Congress and blockade them. 111. Conquer the seceded States by invad ing armies. No doubt this might bo done in two or three j'ears by a ) oung and able gen era!—a Wolfe, a Desaix, or a Hoche—with! 000,000 disciplined men, estimating a third for garrisons and the loss of a greater num ber by skirmishes, sieges, bat tles, and South-!! ern fevers. Ihe destruction of life and prop erty on the other side would be frightful, however perfect the moral discipline of the; invader. The conquest completed at that enormous waste of human life to the North and North west—with at least §250,000,000 added > thereto, and cwt bono ? Fifteen devastated provinces ! not to be brought into harmony j with their conquerors, but to beheld for gen erations by heavy garrisons, at an expense quadruple tho net duties or taxes which it would be possible to extort from them, fol-i, lowed by a protector or an emperor. *1 IV. Say to the secuded States—wayward' .sisters, depart in peace. 1 i In haste, I remain, V er y truly yours. - ! WINFIEL D SCOTT .- Hon. Win. 11. SEWARD, Ac., Ac. !l - ™i| Where Douglas Stood. -.j In the lest public speech of Stephen A, e Douglas, before the Illinois Legislature, a h-'W days before bis death, he defined his po : sition both towards Republicanism and Seces-' sionism in the following pointed language. 1 " I have no apprehension that any man in Illinois, or beyond the limits of our beloved ; State, will misconstrue or misunderstand my J, motives, so far as any of the partisan ques ' ,tions are concerned. I stand in equal, eler- I ,nal and undying opposition to the RKJU BU f CANS and SECESSIONISTS." ' With this language before them the aboli :• tion Republican Tresses and orators have the * audacity to claim that the lamented Douglas ' sympathised with their niggerism. v 1 zisr u -T my lad, keep away from the gals. Yen you see one coiningdodge, J nut •jjsuch a young critter as that young 'un clearing ■ the door step on 'tother side of the street, fool ed yer dad, Jimmy. It it hadn't been for her, you and yer dad might have been in' ' California hunting dunes, tuy son." Willard's Hotel, in Washington, is making a profit of § 1000 per day. The pres ent proprietors bought the property for $ 75, •000, 5'tST" Persons who have the Fever and Ague nre not.subject to draft. The law ex" press ly says that shakers are exempt. il THE LATEST STYLES OF Fall and Winter !j 4BQSHHBTB) and MILLINERY GOODS, have just hern received at the establishment of MISS I,or ISA HEPBURN, on Tioga Street, opposite the Post-office, where will be found Ladies. Chilrcn, .Misses, and Bov's FLATS, HATS, and CAPS; 11E AI >-JB R ESS ES, li IB BOX'S, IL OVERS, and TRIMMINGS, and everything in the line of Millinery, which will be sold at hit laitest Cash Prices. Repairing promptly and neatly done. Ladies will please call and examine for themselves. ! Tunkhannock, Oct 23, 1862.—\2nll—ly. NOTICE. NOTICE is hereby given that I have bought of J* M. I>epue, of Wind bum, one sorrel horse, with white stride in his forehead. I have also let him have to work, one gray mare, both of which 1 h ileft wi'h the said I>bpue during u:y pleasure, hereby forbiding all persons inolwtiug the same. " .% EZRA KEENEV. Laceyvillo, Oct 15, 1562
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