flic Democrat. HARVEY SU KLEK, lidttor. TUNKHANNOCK, PA Wednesday, June 15, 1864. •. M. Petteugtil St Co.— No. 37 Psrc Row Jfaw Yobk, k 6 Statk St Bostoiv, srt our Agents fer the N. B.Jiemoeraf, in those cities, and are author ised to take A'lvertUamenU and Subscriptions as at eur lowest Rates. MATHtIR As CO., No. 335 Broadway, N. Y. are our Authorized Agents to take Advertisement* •r this paper, at out published rutcs. t*r Our acknowledgments arc due to Hon. 11. W. Tracy for a list of the Penna Wounded received in the Hospitals since the fight of the wilderness. JD3T A bill to repeal the S3OO comtnuta tion clause in the conscrint ion law, is now pending in Congress. It has passed the Sen ate and will probably pass the House, ft is recommended by Old Abe, Secretary Stan ton and Gen. Fry. It is said that most of the money from this Source have been expended" on and fse ia tho list of drafted men as published by us a day or two since, it seems will not. now be called upon to wear the blues." The draft, to that ex tent, it is now said, was wrongfully made. The additional fifty per cent to cover exemp tions having been by mistake twice added to the respective quotas. The list as published by us in to day's j a _ pet, is a carefully corrected one—the names of iho 108, overdrawn, being omitted. These gentlemen, most of whom have already received their notices, will no doubt feel il.at they have been sadly hoaxed ;..but we imag ine tney will take the joke in good humor. ''A miss is as good as a mile." saith tho olu adage. - The Hand of Provldcuce. Tha hand of Providence is in this war ; so aay the Infidel preachers whose hands are reeking in human blood. We find the fl lowing incident in an exchango. How many euch are transpiring every day, which never become known to the community : "Mrs. Betsey Elliott, whose husband is in the 17th Maine Regiment, was found dead in Portland a few days since, on the floor, there being no bed or furniture in the house, and nothing to •at. Her daughter, about 15 years old, was tho only person with her. Tho corpse was lying upon a few rags, and there was nothing in the house to cover it with. She died from want. THE RIGHT NAME, AT I.AST.— Up to the present time, the Administration presses, Radical Abolition as well as moderate Re publicans, have cautiously styled ''the pres ent deplorable civil wu -I ' —(-;e unmiiu >us resolution of Congress, July a war for (he I nion Xw, however, emboldened hv the assumed support of a large army, and the patient submission of the people to the unconstitutional measures which have been enforced by the authiritv of Presidential Proclamations, they are throwing of the mask, and beginning te cail tilings bv tneir right names. The Philadelphia Bulletin of Thursday evening, speaks of "the present War of Emancipation." If that had been the declared olject of the War at the outset how many supporters would it have founJ ? Pennsylvania Reserves ivere originally, three years ago f,fv C n thousand ' strong. They returned on Monday the Cth ' instant to the Capitol, Ilnrrisburg, fifteen hundred strong. One in ten. Aitn->t a Maiathon—the difference being American i thousands 6even fold greater than Orek hundreds— counting thirteen thousand live hundred modern democratic to tw hundred ancient, 1 o swear by 'he names of those j that died at Marathon was for centuries the ' most sscred csth known at Athens. IIow! hailowcd shall that adjuration be which takes the boons oft be Penns/!***. lWrvesfiri - Kg*. , The Shoddy Convention • i The Uncoil Shoddyite Convention a sambled at Baltimore on Tuesday last. It was made up chiefly of persons under special obligations to old Abe. They assembled in j the Front Street Theatre, whers a Rev. gen ! tletr.an from Kentucky made his " first ap pearance on the stage." There was consid ! erable discussion about alio admission of del egatee from the seceded States. Thad, Ste vens took strong grounds against their ad • mission alleging that it would be - equivalent ; to recognizing their rights in the electoral college. The correspondent of the New York I Voilii, classifies the members OD the committee of platform thus : ! Oppoiition to arbitrary arrvt 0 ID favor of liberty of the pre ti 0 Maintenance of the Monroe doctrine 0 Against violation of the rlghi of asylum .0 j Iu favor of a constitutional currency .0 Suppression of the rebellion 5 1 Laudation of the a ministration 10 Abuse of the copperheads 10 Buocombe .-10 ; N'g 05 Total 100 | The following is an estimate of the per tonel of this Convention : Office -holders 86 Relatives aul friends of office-holders 120 Contractors and fast frieu is of contractors•• -90 Congressmen - • • • : 14 S'ggrs 10 • Elitors of { arty journals - 20 The rest are unaccounted for, but it is be j licved that they will all bo found in the ! three classes first mentioned. The platform consists of a scries of eleven resolutions, which areas follows : j Resolved, That it is the highest duty of every American citizen to maintain against ; all their enemies the integrity of the Union ! and the paramount authority of ihe Coueti ! tution and laws of the United States, and that, laying aside all difference and political opinions we pledge ourselves as Union men, j annimated by a cenuion sentiment and aiin ; ing at a common object, to do everything in ; our power to aid the government in quelling !by force of arms the rebellion now raging against its authority, and in bringing to the 1 punishment due to their crimes the rebels and traitors arrayed against. (Prolonged \ applause.) Resolved , That wa approve the determi nation of the government of the United ) States not to compromise with rebels or to ! offer any terms of peace except such as may I be based upon an " unconditional surrender" lof their hostility and a return to their just allegiance to the Constituting and laws of ' the United States ; and that we call upon ! the government to maintain this position, ' and to prosecute the war with the utmost possible vigor to the complete suppression !of the rebellion; in full reliance upon the | self-sacrifices, the patriotism, the i heroic vbr and the undying devotion of j the American people to their country and its j free institutions. (Applause) ! Resolved. That as slavery was the cause and now constitutes the strength of this re bullion, and as it must be always and every where hostile to the principles of the Repub lican government, justice and the national j safety demand its utter and complete expia tion from the anil ol the republic (applause,) and that we uphold and maintain the acta &nd proclamations by which the government in its own defense, has aimed a death blow to this gigantic evil ; we are in favor, fur thermore, of such an amendment t the Con stitution, to be made by the people. in con formity with its pri v.sicns, as si.all terini nate and forever prohibit the existence of slavery within the limits or the jurisdiction of the Lniled Slates. (Applause.) Resolved, That the thanks of the Amer ican people are due to the soldiers and sai lors of the army and navy, who have periled their lives in d"fen*ethas added so much to the wealth and developement of resources and increase of power to this nation, the asylum of the oppressed of all nations, should be fos tered and encouraged by a liberal and just policy. Resolved, That we art? in favor of tho speedy construction of the railfoad to the Pacific. Rtsolvtd. That the national filiih, pledged for the redemption of the public deb', must be kept inviolate; and that for this purpose we recommend economy and rigid responsi bility in the public expenditures, and a vig orous and just system of taxation; that it is the duly of every loyal state to sustain the credit and promote the use of the national currency. (Applause.) Resolved, That we approve the position taken by the government that 'he people of the United States can never regard with in difference the attempt of any E iropoan pow er to overthrow by force or to supplant by fraud the institutions of any republican gov ernment on the Western Continent [prolong ed applause], and that they will Yew with extreme jealousy, as menacing to the peace and independence of this our c >untry, the ef forts of any such power to obtain new foot holds for ruonarchial governments sustained by a foreign military fore/ in near proximity to the United States. Truth from an Unexpected (Quarter. The Lincoln faction, sa.vs the N. V. World, squirm painfully under the truth-telline expo sures of General Fremont's letter. The Re publican organs have for two years been pouring contempt on the Democrats for their persistent denunciation of the conduct of the administration in trampling in the dust all our constitutional guarantees of civil and per sonal liberty ; in prostituting the war to sel fish, corrupt and personal ends ; in betraying the national honor. All such denunciation has been pronounced by these time serving office-holding patriots to be treason itself, "copperheadism." They have extolled the very blunders of an imbecile cdministrtfion; they have justified us arbitrary ami illegal Violations of inviolable rights as necessary and lawful, and, instead of protesting against the crimes of our rulers, they have done nothing but denounce the protests of those wlio suffer by thr.ir crimes. Suddenly these wretched panderers to power discover that their wholesale libels upon a liberty-loving people have not merely failed to silence the indignant outcries of thair political opponents but have extorted equal indignation from the lips of their political friends, Ii their own ranks suddeuly rise up thousands upon thou sands who, like the Democrats, will not con sent to sacr iice to an imbecile and corrupt administration all that heritage of freedom which make* a government worth the dtvo tion of free nen ; id who, in tlio spirit of freemen, refuse to surrender their liberties to the custody, or intru-t their ag'airs to the management of such faithless and incompe tent men. Ihe spectacla is comi" rting to men who had a most despaired of tree instituti >ns when | they saw the party in powar wielding a pat- • rouag* enormous beyond precedent, driving j the people to choose between disunion and despotism. But it strikes terror into tho 1 hearts of those who cringe, and fawn, and liatter at the footstool of power. More Assaults on tho Poor Stan, Lincoln and Stanton have appealed to Con press, to repeal the §3OO draft commutation. , They would like to have it believed that their ! object is simply to get men to fi'l up the army j but honest intelligent people will not think 1 so. If the great matter is to get men, by : draft, for military service, why .not close all doors of escape, against all able bodied men < f proper age 1 Why repeal the §3OO clause,' and leave the substitute door open ? Lincoln ! and Stanton both know that the §3OO com mutation has saved many a poor man from ' being dragged away from his family, and ; that if it is repealed, there wdl be no chance ; of escape for any bat the rich, or the sons of' the rich, for substitutes would advance to §IOOO or more, far beyond the reach of any pour man however many friends he may have. No, no, Messrs. Lincoln and Stanton, if it j is men you want—able-bodied men—then say so, honestly, and c ill for and take rich ana poor alike. Away with y.>ur unjust dis- ' crimination. Strike out the substitute pro vision.as well as the §3OO, and put all on the same platform, or strike out neither. i A\ e trust Congress will consent to no such j ' proposition ; and that they will catiso the : §3OO and substitute provisions, to stand or fall together. The life of a rich man is no morn valuable to himself and family, than is , j tiie life of the poor man to himself and his family ; and this Lincoln Stanton effort to ( discriminate against the poor, cannot be too j severely repudiated.— Jeffeisoniun. j EST When Mr Seward fir st announced that there was a "higher law" than the Constitution, there was a goad deal of dis pute as to what he meant. Since he aid j his party have been in power, however, it ; has been put in practice, and the country now can understand what the " higher law" really is. It is not God's law—for it vio lates the most obvious dictates of justice j nor man s law, vrhxh is contemptuously ig- I ncred; it is ihe law of Messrs. Lincoln, Seward and Stanton's hates, caprices, and follies. This is the " higher law" to which we are Indob c-d for the violation of the right of asylum, for arbitrary arrests, and i for attacks up >n the liberty of the press. It is for the people to say whe' .or they want j to continue it for another f ss. Benjamin Roscncrantz. Ly inau Swartz. LEMON, 8. i Ezechiel Meed. Amos Snyder. Robert Shales. Daniel Steniples. Milton Easier j Geo. M! Harding. James Ilovey. Wm. F Hi lie. MCIJOoI'AN V.4 Daniel Adams. Geo. W. I'otter. Geo. C. WoodrufT. Rolla Whipple. MONROK, 14. John all. Albert X. Bowdish. Ezra Thompson. Henry S.Gilbert. Jabcz C. Freeman. John Schooley. 0. C-Bigalvw Harvey Root. John L. Parrish. Francis Cook. John Ilalstead. Wm. Ilerduiau.— : Adam Bellas. W in. D. Ffear. MESHOPPEN, 20. i P. C. Clay ion. A. W. Mefcalf. Nelson 1 I)o< little. Benj Corvrin. Geo. Jennings James R bi is. Jdm M. Pneunain Si'as | Vernoy A J Cortiight. S.J. Cor night Ahira L. Bunnell. Henry Dunlap. Wm. Mowry. Wm. 11. Ccrtripht. Jstin„ B B aven. James N Baker. Gab.iel C Vv tie.at. Burton Bowman. John Leddy,— 1 Hiram Baker, NOR CHMORELAN D, 20 Chas. Fitch. Titos. S. Wat res. Philander 1 Race. Asa Hadsall. Ledgerc W, Avery,— II wsce Halieck, Win. Corwin. George Myer. Chester Brown. George Winters. :D. W. Jaques. Wm. W. Jenks. Chas. Tu r ; rell. Wm, Ilouser. Daniel Blizzard. Spen cer Furgerson. Chancey F. T-rry. Joan, tiian E. St rev. Jessee Dexter. Zura Swart wood, Ira Swart wood. NICHOLSON, 12. i James Cobb. L. G. Stephens. Dallas Tiffa i ny. Sterling Ross. Dana Shaw. Hat man I Brown. Stephen Buchanan. II- N. Kelly. Truman Stephens Parley Bacon.— Ebenszer Stephens. Iluxiliri Benjamin. NORTH BRANCH 3. Samuel Valentine. Wm.C Garey. Nicholas I .Stafford . OVERFIELU, 9. Brooks Austin. Cora C Myers. Squire D j Lattier. Henry Burgess, Andrew Acer llarris HI Daily. Miles Avery, Miles Sickler. Martin Philo. TTXC BOROUGH, 13. Chas. P- K on. Daniel Casobier. Wtn A. Thompson. James Young. Martin Dewitt. Wtn. Eustick. Ilentj, Barhatn , Chas M. Koon. Fisher G Osterhoui. Henry RJS engrant. Jacob Fritz. Cortland Carpenter. D. C. Kitchen. tcnk. township, 29. Geo. Stoeckles, Ttiuxion Stansbury. Geo. Shnpp. Oliver Ball. Ph'liipp Shupp. Jo seph .C I)etrick. Fredetick Mdler. J) D Dewitt. David Tillman, Sylvester Grego ry. Nathan Billings. Evans W. Drake.— Perry Billmgs. Geo. Willhtns. William Bail. Philip Cipwford. John Flutnerftlt. John Barry. David S. Crawford. George A\ alters. Caleb J. Bates. Philip C. Kuua man. Win. D.x n. Harmon Bdl inga— t'has. Wagner. Garey Sickler. Chas Ter ry. Geo. N. Bunnell. Theodore Jackson. WASHINGTON. 8, Daniel Carney. Charles Place. Lewis J Carney. Benedict Taylor. Daniel Walter. Jer. me lb n inirgton. John S Walter, U >bort 11. A'kmson. WINDHAM, 10. E. S. Thompson. Moses W. Iluibcrt. Mer •it W. Smith. Nathan D. Rss. Geo. W. Smith. Nelsm Merritt. Chas. F. Cham pin. Emmet C. Farr. . Isaac Rosengrant. Mer ton Comstock. Bradley Garey. Win, T. Oaks J B Parks. Wtn, Garey. Ehjth Greon George Allen. Chek.rfi i. PnosPi CT.—Col. F< rniy, the Republican Clerk of the U. S, Senate, in a letter to his Pices, under dato of Washing ton City, in speaking about crushing out the rebellion, says : 1 The vast reserve army—the men i* civil life, the men of middle age, and the youth between seventeen and eighteen years, will, in all probability, be called fur to help to !i n ish thv work," About Lawyer Generals. 'I he New York limes champions Mr. I.in oln bungling!}*. lis editor writes a book showing what a 'brilliant general " Honest Old Abe" has prosed to be, and then, doubt less to relieve his conscience, writes an arti I cle in his paper aboat civilian generals, ia ' which occurs the following terrible criticism upon the subject of his book eulogy : " Not one solitary civilian, from the be- I ginning of the war until now, has shown hitii elf competent for high command. The folly of trusting military empiracism has j been written out in letters of blood, with il lustration after illustration, during this war, so that now uo observing man in the coun try can possibly gainsay it. The truth | ought to have been plain enough at the ou*- I set. that military science demands as systc- I matic and protracted study as that of law or medicine ; and that it is just as absurd to ' improvise a judge from a schoolmaster, or a physician from a mechanic. The want of profr:onal training is just as sure to make | military charlatans as to make legal or tned : ical charlatans." This is all true euough, even though it was written by the author of the new " Life |of Lincoln." The following document givos ! it particular point: EXKCUTIVE MANSION, ) W ASHING i o.\, February 3 1862. £ j MujirGenn a I McClellan, MY DEAR SIR : You and I have distinct ! and different plans for a movement of the ar my of the Potomac. Yours to be done by the Chesapeake, up the Rappahannock to Urbana,and across and to the terminus of the railroad on the Y'ork river [the very I point where Giant now rests his base ;] mine to move directly to a point on the ] railroad southwest of Manasas. If you will give me satisfactory answers to | thai following questions, / shall gladly yield j my plan to yours : Ist. Does not your plan involve a greatly larger expenditure of time and money than ! mine ? 21. Wherein is a victory more certain by ! your plan than mine 1 3d. Wherein is a victory more valuable by your plan than mine ? i 4th. in fact would it not be IPSS valuab'e 'in this, that it Wou.d break no great lint* of the enemy * communications, while mine i would ? i sth. In case of disaster would not a re treat be more difficult by your plan than | mine ? Yours truly, ABRAHAM LINCOLN. Bu) nside and lluukcr both tried this Law ' yer's plan, or line to take Richmond. Gen. i Grant recently started on it, end, according ' to Stanton, said he would " hgnt it out on 1 this hie il it ink 1. m all sun. met but Lee appears to have slid him off East, into ' the swamps, and the public would find him after the loss (according to the N. Y. Trib j une .) ot so.-.-e 6(1,000 killed, wounded ami i missing, in the tracks made by McClellan i two years ago, and where he could have gone, by water, with the lose of scarcely any i men 1 'lhus, it Grant should capture R'ch ' mond, he will do it, with "shovels and i spades," instruments which were much de ■ ruled by the Lincoln Abolitionists when re i sorted to by McClellan, and not by the Law j yet plan or line of Lincoln, on which Grant : %tai ted, but by the plan and Hue recom mended and attempted by McClellan. And trns Lawyer General Lincoln who | as " commander-in-chief." withheld promised i aid from McClellan in '62, and who staited Grant MM his recently abandoned plan and i line—is presented bv the Abolition-Repub ; beau ' invention of Edtim >re, Lr the votes i ol the people as commander-ill chief for an other lour years ! 2 IST" '** things American citizens will do weli to remember : 1. The Republican Convention at Haiti moio indorsed till the arbitrary at rests, the abrogation of tfie liberty of the press, free dom of speech an 1 of person, and the inter leience of th military with Ireo elections, as unswerving fidelity to the Constitution and the principles of American liberty," 2. It indorsed the corruption of the most important of our elections, by Mr. Lincoln's one-tenth rotton borough system, in admit ting the delegate* without a constituency from our centers of m litary occupation along the southern coast.— World. jesr !he "off-hand"' man of the New- York Ledger thinks that the Ladies' absti pence—froin f<>reign-goods-exciteuient will be a nine days wonder, and then die out Whenever says fie, you see a hundred rich ladies promenading Broadway in American calico ureases, with American liay State shawls on their shoulders, and American straw hats tnnuned with American geese feathers, ami with American muslin for airings on their lu-ads, just drop me a line at the Ledger office, nnd 1 will invite you to dine with uie, at the Central Park, on birds that have dr. pped ready roasted from the skies, and on fowls that run about carrying knives anil forks,and saying, "please eat me," and we will wash down the dinner with a draught from the Lake, which will then bo full of .ce cold ch&rnpaguc punch. 'be fruits of tie nigger cinancipn tion proclamation, iho county hove bceu as surcn, was the addition to our armies of 100,000 Stalwart Americans of African de seen'." If there is this number ol fighting niggers in our armies, why don't we hear of their d dng some fighting ? Where is there sn equal number of white soldiers that have been as free f-om the shock of arms ? The truth is the dmkies can't be trusted in a fight Another reason, doubtless, is thai the "white ti.uh is considered of little account if only the niggers are spared. - <•+> Tbe grounds for , rebellion aeem to b# Southern grounda. LOCAL AND PERSONAL. Agent for the Democrat-- AHIBA GAT, has consented to act as our Agent in roeetvtng aad receipting subscriptions for the North Droneh Dem ocrat. Ail mouios paid hire either on subscription or for advertising will be duly accounted for aad red ited the same as if paid to us. Go to Well' 3 for Drsss goods, ready mada cloth ing, hats, caps, b-iots and shoes. Messrs. Shoemaker and Stone, have lately purchased and nre now putting up a steam engins in connexion with their tannery, at this place. The working capacily of this establishment will bs great ly increased by this improvement. Perclfer Lemon—formerly Associate Judge of this County, died at his residence in North Branch Township, on Monday evening last. Judge Lemon was about saveaty-five years of age, at tha time sf his death nnd a highly respactad and worthy citissn of our County. Sad Misfortune.—The son of William Bnrgess of I orkston Township one day last week while hand ling a gun loaded with shot, accidsntly shot himself through the hand. The bones and muscles of the palm of the hand being so completely destroyed as to leave little else than a ting of flesh by which his fingers werß held. Rr's, Becker and Dennisou being called, decided to save, if possible, the forefinger and thumb by cleaving! the hand lengthwise frrrm between the first and second finger to the wrist joint, which they unjoiuted as to the three other fingers which were amputated The patient at last accounts was doing well. The three fingers and part of the hand taken off may be seen at any time at Dr. Becker's office in this Borough. This operation was doubtless one >f the most delicate and difficult that has been performed in this region for many years. Normal Musical Institute,—Our realers will learn from an advertisement in another "OIUDDD, that the first and only full term of this Institution, will commence at this place on Wednesday, July 20:h, vnd continue six weeks. This will be the first Institution of the kind ever held in Pennsylvania, In New York and the eastern states, they have been in suc esetul operations for years—producing some of the best vocal and instrumental performers wo have in the country. They indeed afford facilities for a thorough musical education ; atnl wherever their advantages have been improved, musical civi ligation has lollowed ; and the army of ignorant, natal-voiced '• singin misters." who have corrupted the Soiil of If irnionv, and made its science a re pror.ch, has rapidly di minished. The young ladies and gentlemen iu this section of the State, who bav e attended the Hennas eo Institute, of whiclj Prof. Perkins was one of the principals, will now have an opportunity to continue their studies with much less trouble and expensa M arried. .sT bI'IIEXS—SMITH—At Nicholson, Saturday, May 14, by N P. Wilcox Esq , Oscar M. Stephens, of Nicholson, and Sarah Ann Smith of Lenox, Pa. ALLEN"—FARR—Ry A. P. Burgess Esq. of Fork rton Alba Allen Esq. of North Branch to Orcela E. Farr. of Mehoopany. Special Notices. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. WHEREAS, letters of administration has been granted to the subscriber on the Estate of George W. Fre ir late of Fork-ton, Wyoming Coun ty, Dee'd. All persons owing said estata are' re quested to 'make payment, anl persons hwving claims against said estate, will presuat them duly authenticated to the subscriber at Forkston, Pa. JOHN G. SPALLDINU, Administrator. Juno 6, 1861* substitotks; " Substitutes can be procured for Drafted men upon application to Wm M. PIATT A Tunkhannock R. 11. EVANS. June 15th, 1864. The Substitutes furnished w!ll not be liable to the Draft, the quota for Townships will thus be filled and men liable to the draft relieved from any further call. IDTIAF'T M m - M. Piatt, will be at his office to attend to the Draft for Wyoming County, from the Ist day of Ju ly, until the examinations are closed by the board of Enrollment. Tunkhannock, June 15, 1564 A GENTLEMAN, cured ol Nervous Debility. In competency, Premature Decay and Youthful Error, actuatee by a desire to benefit others, will be happy to furnish to all who need it, (free of charge ), the re ipo an I directions for making the simple remedy used in his case Those wishing to profit by his, and possess a Valuable Remedy , vy> 11 reieive the came, by return mail, (carefully sealed.) by addrceeing JOHXB. OODEN No* 66 Nassau street, New York. v 3 n4O-3m0.. LADIES I LADIES I I LADIES !l\ Don t fail to read the advertisement in this paper I headed ' I IMPORTANT TO FEMALES. I)R CIIEv.SEMAN, of New York, has devoted I the lastthirty yenrs of practice to Female coin \ plaints His Pills act like a charm. The* are \'rcliablt and tuft. SWALLOW two or three hogsheads of"Buenh 1 "Tonic Bitters,*' "Sarsaparilta." "Nervous antidotes," Ac., Ac.. Ac., nnd after you are satisfied with the result, then trv one box of OLD DOCTORa BI CIIAN'S ENGLISH SPECIFIC PILLS-and restored to health and vigor in less than thirtv ,i„ v . They nre purely vegetable, pleasant to take, nioinnt and salutary in their effects on the and shattered constitution. Old and youn* e nn take hetn with advantage. Imported and sold ; n th. United States only by JAS S. BUTLER, Station D, Bible Uo US e, New York. Oen era j Ageat, P S.—A box sent to any addr c , s on rec ,,p t ,f price—which i? OueDollar—pvstfreo; \3-n3l-3tn M. A Co. DO YOU WISH TO BE CURED Y—iT BI CHAN'S ENGLISH SPECIFIC PILLS cure, i ess than 30 days, the worst cases of NERVOCSXESS— Impotency, Premature Decay, Seminal Weakness. Insanity, and all Urinary, Sexual, and Nervous Affecticns, no matter from what cause produced.- Price, One Dollar per box. Sent, postpiid, by mail on receipt cf an order. Address, JAMES S. BUTLFR, Station D, Bible House v3-n3I-3m.M. A Co,. Hw T*k. USE NO OTHER l-BUCHAN'S SPECIFIC PILLs are tne only Reliable Remedy for all Diseases of the Seminal, Urinary nnd Nervous Sys tems. Try one box, and be cured. ONE DOLLAR A BOX. One box will perfect acurt , or money re undod. Sent by mail on receipt of price. JAMES S. BUTLER, Station D. Bible Pouso New York, General Agent v3-mil-Jm M. A Co. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE, jVTOTICE is hereby given that letters of Adujin ll istration in the matter of the estate of Jacob D. I lummerfelt, late of Meshoppen, Dcc'd. have been issued to John Fluiumerfelt. All persons in debted tr sail estate arc notified to make payment, and all persons having claims against said estate are requested to present the same duly authenticated, to the undersigned at the House of Samuel T, Flum mertelt, in Tunkhaunock Towr.ship. SARAH M FLUMMKRFELT? .... JOHN FLUJIMIIRFELT, j Anm