®|e jptmocrat.- HARVEY SK'KM'.ll, Editor. fßT7fiiii ■ —-—-*- - _ . : * — . . fUirKIIANNOCK, PA Wednesday, Nov. 9, 1864. To our Readtrs, Now that the election is over, we shall de vote less of our space to political matters. More attention will now be given to the news, both local and foreign. The literarv selection for the oeming winter will be of such a character, as to make the Democrat an ever welcome fireside visitor. Will our friends aid us in increasing its circulation ? • TIIE RESULT. We have delayed our paper for a day or two in order to give the result of the Presi dential-election held on Tuesday last. We can offer to our friends no such tidings < f Triumph, as we had hoped we could. It is now conceded on alt hands that wo are to •uffer another four ytars of the misrule pf Abraham Lincoln. BJore that time shall have expired, the adherents of the party that placed him in power will regret the deed of madness end folly which they have commit ted, more deeply than we now do. When v thoy shall he restored by the sharp lessons of experience, to reason, they will curse the man they have chosen to rule over them, with curses louder and deeper than the men who, from the first, saw the danger of his re election, and who s!rove to avert it. The treachery and deceit which have been prac. tieea upon them, will unfold itself to theii mind in all its hideous deformity. They will then feel al! the chagrin, disappointment and rage, which follows misplaced and abused confidence. The Democratic party will have the proud consciousness that they have contributed in T to manner to bring a trout this result Vv hile it will share in all its evil conse. quences, it will share nine of the disgrace, Congressional Vote. The following is the official vote on Con gress in this district including the Atmv vole. Mercur. V. E Pud let. Bradford, 5795 26 18. Columbia, 153G 5905. Montour, 912 1308. Sullivm, 312 022. Wyoming, 11G2 1270. 9~24 8723. MercurV Maj. 1001. Uriah Terry, ree'd. 70 and 11. W. Tracy, 8 in Bradford. The O! do Statesman ;id monsters the following vigorous citig*lkm to one of the most foul mouthed, abusive, acd unveracious newspapers iu the world. It is a paper in sp.rcd by tlu*;>int ot William O-.bbett an 1 4 Thomas Paine, weakened and degraded b. adulteration with the spirit of Marat and Robespierre-: "ll' race Greeley—the falsest, of prophets the most inconsistent of pi liticiams, the r*>bi dest of disuniomsts, and most mendacious of hypocrites—Horace Greeley a few weeks ago smarting under the exposure <>l the debauch-* cry or New York Abolition leaders at a mis cegenation ball in Twenty third street, came out iu a double-leaded editorial deprecating the use of foul epithots, abusive language and disgusting lies in a Presidential campaign From that day to this we have read the Trib uae regularly,and the mildest expressions wo have seen m it in describing Democrats and the Democratic party in general, are about as :o'!ows : Liars, scoundrels, dogs, dirt eaters, secessionists, traitors, thieves, slave-drivers, slave-breeders, advocates of human bondage, mercenaries, cowards, and Convicts. New York is a Democratic city, arid Horace Gree ley, luckily for himself, lives in it, and this accounts lor the phenomenon that he has not been horse whipped since he was a member of Congress. If he were a Democratic editor and lived in an Abolition city and using such language as his journal habitually uses to wards political opponents, there is little doubt he would have been mobbed and probably hung." VOTE OF WYOMING CO. FOR PRESI DENT ANI> VICE-PRESIDENT. The following is the result of the election in this County, on Tuesday last for Presi* dent and Y;cc President. McClellan, Lincoln. .Braintrim 2G SG. Clinton, 23 110. Eaton, 51 121. I Exeter, 21 18. Fails, 133 33. Forkston, 45 50 Lemon, 35 42. MeliiK panr, 55 136. j Meshuppen, 115 C 2. Monroe. G3 83. . j s'choifion, 185 89. Nor ibmo: eland 102 C 4 ' N. Branch 43 30 Ovetfiell 55 14 Touh. Boro. 7G 59 Tunk Tp. 157 52 Warhington 70 91 Windham 59 07 Total. 1322 1179 Mj. for Mac. 1-13 THR RESrrX The Piiilad'a Age says There is now no I k.: ig*.r any doubt that Abraham Lincoln and 1 Andrew Johnson hnv jf b.-n elected Pre - ! dent and Vice Pr raid-nt of the United Sta:** J -d it Ha the iuty of every good cuizen to . submil to the pi-pillar will as "expressed at the- ballot box. It has been decided i. the nation is to enjoy four years more of Mr. , I Lincoln's rule, and an amulideation of ail the I "benefits and blessings" which an Abolition Administration has shown itself 10 well q ual I ifh-d and disposed to shower upon a happy . | and grateful people. | A leading Abolition organ of .this city j claimed, yesterday, that the result of the 1 election was an endorsement of the entire policy and measures of the Administration, j Tins claim is just. Emancipation, Confisca tion, Subjugation, Extermination ham been endorsed j and, we do out feel at liberty to exclude a social and political equality to the negro from the ample range of the endorse ment. Democrats and conservatives—not ap- ; j proving either the principles or policy of Mr. , Lincoln —of course, as American citizens, j | deplore the ills which they see looming dark. vin the future, as the result of Tuesday' 6 j work. They, as citizens, must share in the 1 calamities in store for our common country 1 ca'amitics which their judgment teaches them to bo inevitable, if the present Abolition pol. ! icv be persisted in. But, while they, as a 1 portion of the American pe >ple. expect, and 1 are prepared to endure their share of the 1 general adversity which they believe must i follow the rejection ol their principles at the polls, they, as individual citizens, will have the proud consolation of feeling that they i have not contributed to procuce the evils that are to cotne upon us ; while, at a p\rly, they have escaped a fearful responsibility, which, for the sake or the Country, they were will, ing to assume. The Meanest Men lu Creation. Judge Abbot, of B >ton, n Democrat, who we believe has lost two sons in the war, in a recent speech expresses his opiuiou thus plainly of Republicans : Let me ask fur a raounii! who those men are who denounce tho-ll- • ; stantly urging 11s to battie and who his not j curage, ability, ot capability to ask a hair 10l his own head. Th-uk of that, and when I you have found such a man, ji-u have font; ' ' one of t;.e 111 t miserable wretches who craw's. Tins is one class. Tncre is another they who are constantly letuu ici ia us it we say a wor 1 for peace and uni in. If you ask these men to turn their p >c.wer and sp ills | Of course these patent patriots don't want to end the war. These are the men who find fau't with us because we w„ut to restore the union. MR. LINCOLN'S CHOICE READINGS. —An 1 cient phi!ophers need to say, that the best 1 indication* of a man's inward feelings was to be fouui in the choice of his readings and in the communion of the soul which the writers of the age. Ido not believe that this re fiec lion hrs lost anything of its accuracy for be ing old. Mr. Lincoln, who trios to regulate his life upon the model of the great statesmen of Rome and Greece, and, who to that effect ha 6 livi d m close intimacy with Montaigne i for the last three months, adds by bis exam : pie a new weight to the authority of the j j old sages. lie reals the old Eronch writer with deli Jit, and says he is the greatest i thinker, France, and perhaps the world, has I produced. His readings are not, untortu ! j notclv tar us, confined to that book. Oth j ersot a more dangerous character occupy, al- j j so, his leisures. He has recently added to ! his private library the '• History of Groin- | well's Protectorate," the " Return ol Nap.de i an the Etrst from the " Coup d'Etat j of Napolean the third." These three b >oks which might bo called "Treatise on the /rt >f Usurpation," are now his subject for med itation. He reads them by day and by nigbt and puts them under his pillow ca*e when h,, goes to bed, so as to have the deleterious ex , atopics and practise contained in these b'Kiks ' 1 m close proximity with the seat of his th o'ts W athinglon Letter. £3. Some elderly gentleman will please inform the public whether the pain is gn-a'cr j when a man cuts his teeth, or when bis teeth cuts him ? And whether it is me re disagreeable to have no appetite for one's ! dinner or no dinner for one's appetite ? i £37'' Didn't von warrant that this horr e ' ' would not 6hy before the lire 0' an enemy ?" ' "No more he wont. 'Tisn't till after the fire that he shies." j I C3T Anothar draft, it seems, is coming j ' right along. The 500,000 call was a failure j and pvoduccd few men comparatively. Sir. S.!i:c !n !s Ro-FJected—What : W3m 111311 %. Thai. Lancaster very perti yrr.tly.vk. the queM i4+njs euppWse I.:i;a|js re-elecudlp*iijit tl en ? IlaTe y.'U tlu-i:-•' t .e' matter ? 'Have you us mnrH & ; i;,..} yor, ! tli • rnre result of the elegirton ? Yon, sir, we mean—you who thoughtlessly hurrah Vr liitn ; you who vo ted f r hitn. Have y u trit unfrc* . quently temporarily interrupted. With less than a powerful army, one sufficient to resist a large force, he cu!d not possibly maintain his position. Sheridan has defeated Early ; i our troops fight gloriously ; they pcur out ' their blood without stint, and afflict, compen sating!}-. severe losses upon the enemy ; but the end is not yet. The barbarous proced ure of sweeping destruction, which has made a desert of the bentifn! valley of Virginia, shows that this war is not near its end, and plhinlr indicates that our generals do not re card it. Gfant still beleaguers Richmond . i and there", and. as on auxiliary thereto, in the valley of Virginia, active operations ate going on. Elsewhere the war seems to be at a s and still. Richmond may fall, though the present campaign is already too far advanced to expect it. before, at hast, another cam paign -hall be er.ti red upon. BtU suppose Lincoln to be r--e!eclel. will the war then be any nearer at an end ? Will the people of the South fight any the less des perately ) Ate not all the leading papers of the South earnestly hoping to tec lntii elected? Thfry bohliy say so, and thero is goud reason why they should prefer his triumph to that of XlcCelllan. They know that his fanatical folly has united ihe white Southern people as one ; and they fear more the Greeks hear ing gifts than arms. If the people of the North should d chre in lavoi or the old Un ion under the Constitution, tTc leaders of the rebellion know very weil that the Union feeling, quite smothered n'w by the mad policy >t Abolitionism, would burst forth into i a fl one. and destroy all prosp-cts of their eif ! ectiitg teir cjo n-hed f hjeeb the estnblLli ; mrut n I),i vin down, who doe* not hope to see fanatfc is u triumph in the p. rson of Lincoln. They could" then still keep their people thor oughly united, while tf'oy would have less to fear from one whose Administration his par tisans denounce as " po'itica'ly, financially, a failure." than from a new man, distinguish ed for ability, who would be surrounded bv the most eminent leaders of both the parties who formerly controlled the destinies i of this nation. McCltdh.n's Cabinet would j he made up, not from the I euiocratic party | alone, but would have in it reprcsentativ j men of the old Whig party, many of the best ; and wisest of whom, disgusted villi the fid lies and sick of the crimes of the fanatics now in power, supp rt him from motives of pure ' patriotism. Lincoln W'.uld c ntinue the : Course of policy which he has suffered fo be I imposed upon bun by (lie m st violent and j corrupt men of his own party, and would re- j fuse to listen to the wiser c -Uriels of the i many men who really know best what is fir ! the 'nterest of the people- -what would beat j subserve the honor of the nation. Tell U9 i reader, can you see any hope for the country j if Lincoln sre elected ? Answer this ques- ; tion honestly to your f irn conscience. If Lincoln is reelected—what then ? GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN It may be in teres ting to those who are; now idolizing Mr. Train to real a few ex tracts frotn his speech at Rahway, Now Jer j Bey, on the Bth of October. IL re they are: ' Mr. Lincoln is a bummer. Mr. Lincoln's policy is fatal to success. People will repudiate because they have no ' confidence in Mr. Lincoln's palicy ending the war. There is more danger to-day of the West seceding in a body if Mr. Lincoln is eleot- j ed, then there was of the Son.h seceding he- , fore the fall of Sumter. When a shot is fired i into Cincinnati, or • Oleavelaad, or Chicago, the country will wane up to find that it has been sleeping in a bed of bombshells. The debt, now two thousand millions, or with gold at two hundred, four thousand millions, will hang like a nightmare over the East. A dr-bt exempt from taxation is soon wiped off. The Confederate bonds, the j French assignats, and our Continental mon- [, ey are instances of litis wiping out process. Elect Lincoln and ) our palaces are hovels— \ your rich men are paupers. For the banks and corporations of the nation are only jun— ior partners of a concern Iba', if willing to sacrifice the life of a nation for a new lease of i power, would as wdlingly become insolvent i in order to have the picklings arising front winding up the estate. [Laughter ] 1 ask again what has occurred to change ' public sentiment in fav .r of Mr. Lincoln ? Is he the same man that Pomeroy denounced? that Chaso said was unfit for power ; that Ben Wade attacked ? that Winter Davis jeered at ? Is it the same Lincoln that Fre rnont pictured as a Tyrant and Usurper?— that Dr. Cheever called Knave, and Wendell Phillips, Villain ? It cannot be. What has happened to this man, who is so eloduent in Philadelphia, the same that vili- ' fied the President at Cleveland ? Oh, my country ! what crime hast thou committed that thou shouldst be so shamefully betray ed ? I IMPEACHMENT OF THE PRESIDENT. When, in the course of human events, it becomes necessary to impeach the Presi- j dent of the United States, a decent respect for the opinions of the politicians render it I necessray for WE, the people, to show cause by solemnly addressing ''Whom it may con : cern." ! H. G., of Oregon, elected A. L., of Ilfi -1 nois. Platform. Not in words but in fact. First. Tear down the flaunting rag. (11. G) Second. Let the Union 9h !e. (N. P. B.) Union League with Hell, Covenant with ! Death. (W. L. G,) I Liberty to the Slaves or death to the Un ion. (W. P ) Abolish Slavery, if five millions of White men are destroyed. (J. Q A., 1843.) We can and will do it. (W. 11. S„ at j Cleveland.) j We must have an Anti-Slavery Constiiu- . i tion, an Anti Slavery Bible, and an Anti | Slavery God. (\. li.) I pray that the torch of the incendiary I tnay light up the towns and cities of the | South. (J R. G ) Better discord re'gn in National Councils —better Congress break up in wild dis uder better the Capitol blaze by incendiary j torch and bury all beneath the ruin 9, than ! not ab.li*h Slavery. (11 CJ.) Union not worth preserving. (J. I. p.) Let it come to blood, I am ready. (.J. P. i 11 Slavery will not live a year after our party power. (S. P. C.) If Ballots fads, drive back Slaveocrats with ; fire and sword. (J. W. W.) We must have some Blood-letting. (Sen ! afor C.) On this platform the Tyrant was chosen at Chicago, and at once tfiosl of the foregoiug were appointed Ministers. Two were placed | in the Cabinet—Pledged therefore to de ' sfroy the Union—Tear down the flaunting i rag. (11. G.) —and destroy the sacral chat ter of our lib'-rtics, wo iho people commence the imp achment. To VVJP'M IT MAY CONCERN. The Constitution as it is and as it is - :'t. We, the people, to secure the blessings of j liberty, do ordain and establish this Cmsti ' tut on : First. All legislative powers vested in j Congress. (Art. 1, sec. 1.) (Oath of A. L ) I do s ilemnly swear that I will faithfully ex cue tho office of Presi dent of the United Siates ; and will to the best of my ability, preserve, protect and de j fend the Constitution of the United States ! (Art. 2. see. 2 ) j The President shail be removed from o ( fice if Impefichment for and conviction o I Treason, Bribery, and other high crimes and ! misdemeanors. (Art, 2, sec. 4 ) Dtath of Chief Justice Taney, [From the Age, Oct 14.] Roger B. Taney, Chief .Just ice of the Unit ed S'ates, died at hie residence in Washing- j ton, on the ]2Hi inst., in the 83d year of his ' i age, and thirtieth of the tenure of h'.s high i office. Well may the nation mourn at the ! ! bereavement. A great and good man lias I gone from us, and gone, too, when we most I needed the influenoe of such men ; and we : repeat, in every State of the ancient Union— -1 in th council chambers, and camps of the North of the South, there wi II be genuine sor , row and strong expression of respect for his i ' memory,. Twenty-nine years ago Mr. Taney was ele vated io the Chief Justicesnip, as the succes sor of John Marshall, who had held ttie office for on re than thirty years. Chief Jus- ! t'ce Taney who has survived every member of the Supreme Court, Except Judge Wayne, who was on the bench at ihe time of appoint- j tnent—Siorv, Thompson, McLean, Baldwin and Birhoiir. He a liaiuistere ! the rmh ~f office to seven Presidents. IL> has been a long career of usefulness and honor; and now in this agony of our federal S3'Bi*tu one feels, in rccoidmg his death, that another link is i broken, and as it were, one more rivet torn ' out of the great m lehine of Government, and | that, too, when it most needed the close Cohe j sion which such influence gave. There was | so long as this great constitutional jurist liv- i ed, a confidence, a sort of repose, a faiih that there was still some anchotage, which sus- , tained tha most despondent. It is all gone i now. While the horrors of violent deaths are around us, and m the very crisi of the j fiercest civil strife the modern world has j ever seen, auiid the clangor of arms and the hideous shout of triumph, the quiet, peace ful j death of 'his old man, close to the edge of battle, is and will be felt to be most impress ive. Chief Justice Taney, died, as he lived, a brave, undaunted, truly -Loyal" man ; for it was the Law he wa faithful to- And theu, too. Tot i'?ery lover of hi? ho*:ntrr remember ' with gratitude, in litis moment of national ! sorrow, what may be described us Chief Jus- < tica Taney's last prominent public act —his j a-sertion in tlx* case of the M uylau.l liabeax corpus, of the right of the Juuic ary to give a hearing to B prisoner held by military author j ity. it was a protest—for the defiance of law by the Executive HttOWed it to be notli- i intr else —of the real Chief Magistrate of the 1 Nation, against the worst, because imti- j' ate violation of the Constitution. Let us honor him for his whole career. L-t us es pecially honor him fur the closing act of it.— Sincerely anxious to mingle no wor 1 of un kindnes, with these wolds of praise, it is still * impossible for us to be silent as to the future. Although the function of Federal Chief Jus- j tice, under existing circumstances and, with the necessary decadence of judicial indepen- ; dunce which war ami its mischievous iutiu. j ence involve, will be far less important and dignified than it has been. 8 till, as a mere mutter of picturesque interest, we may La excused for some soucitude as to the success- j ' or of Jay. and Rutledge, and Ellsworth, and Marshall and Taney. Who will be appointed , by Mr. Lincoln, is a question on the lips of ! every thoughtful man. It is beyond the | ' scope of our except in this, that j be it who it may, pure judicial independence will hardly be rt quired as a qualification. The Administration has too many unadjneated political questions to permit it to he indepen dent itself ; and we look forward to one more I dismal spectacle in our day of ugly visions of the Federal Jodie.ary tottlring to the grave, which threatens to swallow up all that once was dear to us. • | Donaho's Temptation. The following letter was sent us for publi cation by a subscribir in Windham. The j | writer, the wife of a leading abolitionist an 1 Loyal Leaguer of that town, seetns to ; be a very enthusiastic admirer of u gu j old Father Abrehaui." Having been a 's ;h >ol j marm," in In r younger days, we have nit | ventured to any corrections offer orthogra- > : phy or punctuation but give the cou.) ivg : epistle j ist as t* is written, T!ie?o lennle ! polit e:ans are dangerous creatures, but ru m>r says Donatio voted f r " Little Mac.' ll >w anv man—particularly one? of the warm . * j blooded impulsive sms of the " Green Isle" | could have resisted the b'andishmen's of the ! charming Louisa, we cannot imagine. We * ran only account for this stubl><-rnneSS on the part of Dunehoe by presuraing tbat Mr-. , Donebo is a very sensibte woman; and kept : Doneho from calling to hear the "rest." As the "good obt Father Abraham" is probably j elected—Louisa's fears about a "-esatiun of j hostile" will now bo allayed D meho should j call and have her explain how tie are to ' j "have no more wa*." We advise Mis. Don eho to be preseut at the interview. Here is \ j the _ LETTER. Dear Friend I feel it my duty to do all T can f r ; God and my C-iiir.t y and 1 r that reason 1 write you this line receive it kindly Mr j F r iend much i? depending upon this election ! for our future happiness prosperity if Mc is | elected that m tin nt we r.re ruened then tf ere ;ili boa fi'-s ition of hostile a reeogni ! lion of l lie south) rn 'Joi.fedr racv Elect our | good old Father Abraham and we hive no , i more war be inftiencod by one who is your Friend to throw your vote on the Side of righ and hnmmitr and snv • your reputiton your l vote will count as much as the m >narck . Time fails or I would write more hut call if | you can before election ai d I will tell you the rest from your friend Louisa Graves j Mr Doneho The Transmission of .Money by Mall The postal money order system, was put in j operation on the first instant. This system ! ! is intended to promote public convenience ; by affording a cheap, immediate, and safe I agency forthe transmission through the mails j of email sums of money for which bank drafts ! cannot readily be procured. The m >ie by i winch safety is secured consists in leaviig j | out of the order the name of the payee or j par'y for whom the money is intended. In ! this respect a money order differ? fn.m an or ! dinar> bank draft bank or check. When a | money order is applied for, the postmaster will furnish the applicant with a printed form j of application, in which the latter will enter I all the particulars of amount, name, Ac., re- I quired to be stated tn the m uy order and 1 advice. F rum the items contained in such application the postmaster will fill up the money order and also the corresponding form j of advice. Rates of commission charged for money or ders : On orders not exceeding $lO 10 cent s Over $lO and not exceeding $20.. . .15 cents". Over s2O and up t<> s.'lo 20 cents. No money will be received for orders ex cept coin, United States notes, or notes of the | National lank?, and unlets cannot be paid in any other currency. A money order is ren , dered invalid unless it is presented to the , I pi>s'nia-ter on whom it is drawn within nine ty days from its dale ; but the Postmaster General can issue a new order on the nppliea tion of the pavee np< n the payment of a sec j ond fee. The same course is to be pursued in case the order is lost. In this) case, lie 1 payee is to furnish n statement, under oath, 1 1 that the order has been lost or deatr >yed, ac ' companied by the certificate of the postmas ter that it has not been paid, and will not be j | paid if thereafter presented. The payee may transfer his or ler to another person by eti | dorsingit upon the back. JT£- Sambo, whero is your master." •'Gone out." j "Has he 'eft off drinking yet ?" "Oh, ye", sure Ihe leave off two, th r ee , times this morning." I O I Now and Then) SOMETHING FOR LABORING MEN TO CONSIDER! BILL OF GOQDS PDRUHASDD IN 1810 bd 1804. In the good old IKun c; rt c D iys, not more than four years ago, the following till of goods was pure ..ase lin the town of Scran *ldn: ' ■ - - I * fiC yjF XX a. jls. I 80. 5 lbs But ter . \ c 0 Q0 1 " Oolong Tia ' ' 5 " R-'o Coilee, 14" Porto It c Sugrr, jOO 12 Yds. Bust Brown Sheeting, 100 10 " Merrimac Calico, $5.55 18GI. But the people wanted a change. Titey got it, and such a change i Ilaru it the same bill purchased now under the reign of II- neet (?) Abe. 5 lbs Butter $2 75 1 •' Oolong Tea, 1,75 5 * Rio Coffee $,50 14 " Porto Rico Sugar, 3,50 12 Yds Brown Sheeting, 9.00 10 " Merriuiac Calico, 4.00 $23~50 The above are all necessaries that go int the famdj of every poor man. At the time the first bill was purchased a mechanic rp reived $1.50 p-r day— hence it took him about 3 and a halt days to pay for it. Now he rece-vefi $2 50 per day ; conse quent iy it would take Inn abvut 9 and a half days to earn the same bill, or ncarlv three time? -■ '"iig. And ilos is the effect of the big wages that the Shodi* ites talk übnit. KB A DEB. ponder and r.Jlect, anj be no | longer deceived ty the sjh c.ous promises of ; the Blood Suckers tha' are gnawing at your ; viala. i H-re is a practical illustration that comes j h<.me to every man. It is true that you i— ! ceive nine per day, but it lakes y< u three , titties ss long to earn the same amount to : bring home lor the wife and httle ones. And this, too, is saying n jlilp" ab,,ut the army u'. tax collectors tha: yon a&Av.-ry Burner, nnd ride in sideod r at ! your expcn c e ; nur uf the 'detesVitile Ih\jt ! r b again call the attenlbn of :tn wishing to pnrehaae a good F.utn, te tho ad- I vertiMm r.t of the Execators of 1 er.-ifer I. rn.th, - The sale w ill be made on Tues lay, of Court w .wk. Millenary,— E.-p- i.! .ttentiou is -called to ;ho new nilvtrti-eir.ent of Mrs. Car ltrefi. Sbs'hias re j ceiverj a new and spkndiif supply of Millinei . and | iatK-y goods at her rooms opposite tho lVsi-tUiee. : Those cC our Lady friends, who have not secured ' their wi#tcr Bucnc-ta ,£btija prui>.!y pal on Mr-. P>, and e>a mice lie." stock, „, , . t *•oaey <• Lady s Rook f->r T)oce-iiV r, has ':■? n received by vs. Ii is one ef ihe hest nu aber- •: that Le.-t of Magazines Xo\t is the iia- fr ing up clubs for 186 S. 11.0.0.-, 1 One copy, one year, fD.fiO Two copies •' " Three '• " 11 7if 4 , Four ■' " ' 10,00 ' IIT further particulars, see adrerfiactucnt which | will L* pu'dished in our Ad dross L, A, GO DEV. X. E f Corner b;k .oi l Chastuut, dtreots, W l'hi iaii'a Tile Illoomer t'odume, whi hsimeone (Mrs. j Bloomer, we suppose) steiupte.l to iutro.lu te -ours j years since, ;*o learn from tha very hig'i-st I 1 :.i - tie auihority, is n.w about to be revived unler more favorable auspit-es. Die reason it H is -o g n rally tib icej, is priha bly owing to the fact that it wu< so roujily ad-pt i ed by "tho stronger mneied worn on. and weak min!- led tuen aud to the fact that ns an nut loor, walk I ing habit, it is not :ta elegant and gra<;eful as tb bnia-1, flowing skirts. Ladies who eugago in hns work, and euiinarT employments, after several years xperience, have discovered that hoops ure not convenient in the kitchen. The Bloomer is therefore receiving a m re favorable Consideration thau heretofore Frmn certain hints, we sheuld not be surprised to find the short skirts and turk'i-h trowsors on the wo men that 'tends our babies, and boils our potatoes, fl this curtailing of skirts will alsi curtail our bills with the calico dealers, we shall be more easily rec onciled to the innovation. NOTE.— Our friends who wear boots, and chew to bacco who may be nervous on the subject of domes tic usurpation of the distinguishing garment, ure ad vised to prepare for sc-veie trials, Cuffs and Collars.—X thing is m,re necessary | to complete a toilette than tiue and becoming cuffs : a.id collars. Ever)' lady know? that, but all do not j kn ov just where to suit themselves with new styles | and so stick to the old-fashi uu I shapes worn for years I'ropping in the other day at our fiiepd's, Messrs. IST,,TT A BALDW i>, 505 Broadway, wo found that they had been busv in supplying the public with these articles in every new and elegant designs Amongst thenr w noticed parti- ul irly three kinds, of cuff?. One very broad and. plain, the Empress by name,fastened with three golden buttons; anoth er trimmed with Valenciennc3 laecu delicately flut ' , ed ; an ! still a third, called the Christina cuff, fast ened with two buttons, and with an embroidered la pel, the variety of the emhroi lerv pattterrs being surprising. In addition to the3e,the "Louisa sleeve so arranged that the hand cau be slipped through i without u rbuttonir.g The -Empress and Alc-xanl ria sleeve.is triiume-1 elegant'y, an 1 somO very f-c* ' coming double cuffs- Ladies who dasiio to be ne.it ' and elegant c-an do no better than to call at. this es tablishment nnd SUJH ly themselves. Collars a ls made to match all styles of cuffs anil sleeve?. '-d are so elegantly "dene uj." that they look •-- cast in a mopld. — " -— ** Married. Kiu.T-STEPHENS- At the W-e -f the ' fa'her. in Nicholson, I'n. Oct. 1 '' I>. Worrell, Mr Hiram X. Kelly, to M'ss l'> 111 j I, Stephens, both of Nicholson. t 1010-cl. ) SICKI.KR On Monday November 7th mth ' J pia-e. Andrew Sivkler, aged < - rear*