®|c Democrat, HARVEY SICKLE*, Editor. TUNK.HANNOCK, PA Wednesday, May 16, 1866. FOR GOVERNOR, BOS. BEISTER CLYMEB. OF EERKB. THE DEMOCRATIC IL%TFORM, The Democracy of Pennsylvania in Convention net, recognizing a crisis in the affairs of the Re public, and esteeming the immediate restoration of the I'uiou paramount to ail o'.her issues, do re solve : 1. That the States, whereof the people were late ly in rebellion, are ontegral parts of the Union, and •re entitled to representation in Congress by men duly elected who bear true faith to the Constitution and Laws, and in o.der to vindicate the maxim that taxation without representation is tyranny, such representatives should be forthwith admitted. 2 That the faith of the Republic is pledged to the v a >"uient of the National debt, and Congress should pass all laws necessary tor that purpose. 3. That we owe obedience to the Constitution of the United States (including the nuiemlinent prohib iting slavery,) aod under its provisions will accord to those emancipated all their rights of person and property. 4. That eaeh State has the exclusive light to regulate the qualifier* ions of its own electors. 5. That the white race alons is entitled to the con trol of the (lovernment of the Republic, and we are unwilling to grant to negroes the right t vote g. That Ihc bold enunciation of the principles of the Constitution and the policy of re-toration con tained in the recent annual message and freedinen's bureau veto message of President Johnson entitle him to the confidence and support of all who respect the Constitution and love their country. 7' That the nation owes to the brave men of vur armies and navy a debt of lasting gratitude for their heroic service, in defence of the Const it u tion and the Union ; and that while we cherish with tender affection the memories of the fallen, we pledge to their widows and orphans the nation's esre and protection. 8. That we urge upon Congress the duty of equal izing the bounties ot our soldiers and sailors. fgr It is now confidently asserted that the President will veto the Colorado bill.— Tne Radical Rompers are of course ram paut. Stevens the Head Centre, so called, of the Fenian, and who escaped imprison ment a few months since lias arrived in New York; and is now reconciling the conflict ing parties in this country. General and Mrs. Grant were treat cd with marked distinction by the " recon structed rebels" of Richmond, upon their late visit. The Southern Methodist Conference at New Orleans has voted to change the name of the church from Methodist Epis copal Church to simply the Methodist Church. The Conservative Republicans,— a very strong faction in the western por tion of the State, —are distrustful of Geary, and denounce him as the tool of Stevens, Cesna, Forney, Cameron A Co., and arc about to hold a Convention in Pittsburg to bring out Gen. Coulter, as their Conserva tive Candidate for Governor. THE PROSPECT IN THE NORTH-WEST.— The editor of the Lacrosse (Wisconsin,) Democrat, writing from Detroit, Michigan, says: From present indications Michigan will go Democratic this Fall. She will elect Democrats to Congress from three of her six districts, at all events. Demo cratic gains are the spring styles every where this season." fgT A petition was presented to the Rump Senate on the 26th, by Sumner, from "thirty citizens of the United States," residing in New York State, praying the expulsion of Senator Davis, of Kentucky, for saying he would oppose the execution of the Negro "rights" bill. It turns out that all the said thirty "citizens of the United States" are negroes ! Things are coming to a pretty pass, ain't they ? GEN. FRANK BLAIR.— The reason why General Frank Blair was rejected by tliA Senate as Collector of Internal Revenue for the District of St. Louis, has not trans pired. Much surprise is expressed at the result, and among others by Lieutenant General Grant who says that to him the country i* indebted more than to any oth er man that Missouri was prevented from seceding. He spoke with earnestness of the important military Services of Gener al, then Colonel Biair at that time and has since rendered the conn ry. THE RADICAL POLlCY.— Forney, the Secretary of the Senate of the tinted States, in a recent letter to his paper, the Philadelphia Press , says : "Immediate universal suffrage is not possible, but that the Southern States will be left unrepresented until they formally bind thicaselves to the ultimate and com plete enfranchisement of their citizens, is certain." 1 his is the Radical policy. The Disunion amendment requires the Southern peop'o to adopt it in order to secure representation in Congiess; yet, after it shall be adopted, nine-tenths of them cannot vote for representatives It ie expecting too much of human nature to supposethat nine tenths of the Southern peo ple will ailopt an " amendment" that shall inatantly deprive them of all share in their own government, and place them complete ly at the moicy of a hostile and alien mi nority Men don't willingl) chop their heads off. No wonder the negro Telegraph says the amendment must be .forced upon them with the bayonet, or ' all is h st" in power and plunder to the Disunion party. THE DECKING FAMILY MURDER. Full Confession of Probst. PHILADELPHIA, May 7. —frobst has made a full confession to his priest of all the murders of the Decring family, com mencing with Cornelius Carey, tlie hired boy. lie had no accomplice in his bloody work. After describing the murder ot the boy Carey, he says : '•The sh'ht of the blood of the boy pro duced in me a devlish and blood thirsty feeling, and I determined at once to mur der the whole family." He disposed of the body of the boy as described before, and then deliberately walked over to the house. Ileenterek and told '"Charlie," the little boy next in years to "Willie," who was absent, that be wanted him to help him do some work in the barn. The little fellow followed him, and as soon as he got him inside the barn door he dispatched him with a small axe he had secured, lie then went back to the house and told Mrs Deer ing there was some hng the matter with one of the cows, and he wanted her to •bine to the barn. She went, and he fol ! lowed, and as soon as she entered inside he | struck her in the head and killed her. He then went back to the house and brought the children out one at a time, and taking thrm inside the barn dispatched them one !by one with the same axe. In each in- I stance he cut their throats and placed their bodies in the corn crib himself just in the position they were found, lie ed the bodies up and proceeded to wipe out J all evidence of bis guilt, lie then went back to the house and awaited the arrival |of Mr Deering, not expecting that Miss Dolan would accompany him. As soon as Mr. Deering arrived in the carriage lie got ! out, and Probst told him something was wrong with one of the cows, and asked him ito go over to the barn with him. Mr. Deering went along with him, and Miss Dolan went into the house and took oft her bonnet and furs, Mr. Deering did not even take effhis gloves before going into the barn, but proceeded there at once, follow ed by Probst who had an axe concealed ready for use. As soon as Mr. Deering entered the door, Probst slates that he hit him in the head and fell him to the earth, and ; then chopped at his neck with the edge of j the axe Miss Dolan was the next and the last victim. She proceeded to the barn af ter com ng down stairs and not finding any [of the family in the l ouse, and Probst who was in waiting for her treated her as he had done the rest of the family. After carrving out the bodies and covering them up with hay, the murderer went into the ; house and commenced searching for valua i hies, lie states he got no money, but ex i pected to secure a considerable amount. — j He states that Miss Dolai.'s pocket book 1 had vny little in it. He saw nothing whatever of the two SSO compound inter est nobs and S2O bill of the same charac ter, that are missing. Iletemained about the bouse for some time, picked up the ar tides found in the black valise, ai d left about dark. Ilis further movements were pretty* much as brought out on the trial, j ar.d whicl) are patent to the minds of the | whole community Probst states that he would have confessed to all the murders j before, but be feared if he did so lie would I be torn to pieces by the inob. SECOND DISPATCH. The confession of Probst is phonograph - ically reported by the Inquirer. The facts agree mainly with the report already sent, lie said he had no thought of committing the murder at the time of hiring with Derr ing, but calculated on robbing him of the monev which lie had seen him counting. He had never said anything about it to aiv one. He came to this couutry in 1863, in the ship Columbus, from Bremen, and nev er did anything wrong in Germany. His father and mother are still living at Baden. He is 24 years old. Ho enlisted twice and deserted, first in the Forty-first New- York, and then in the Fifth Cavalry. He planned every way to get I feel ing's money, but never had a chance. lie says : "My first plan was to k 11 him, and get the mon ey ; I could not get the money in any oth er way ; I thought of killing them at the house as they came down in the morning; 1 got the axe sometimes ready for them when they came down evenings; I got some good chances, but my heart f riled me." After describing the manner of murder ing Cornelius Carey and Mrs. Peering and her children, he gives the following expla nation of the killing of the infants ; " Then i went over to the house and took Annie I and told her that her mother w anted to see her in the stable. She did not say a word. I took little baby I took it on my arm The little girl walked along side of me. I left little baby on the first corner as you go into the stable, playing on the hay. Then I went to the same place that I killed the others; she looked around like for her mother, who was in the hay ; she did not say anything ; I knocked her down at the first blow, and cut her throat same as the others ; then I went back and got little I baby, and struck it on the head in the ! same place there ; I hauled them into the same place. After describirg the killing of Peering and Miss Polan, ihe tiend says he took out Mr. Peering's pocket hook, but only got ! seventeen dollars, including a counterfeit three dollar note, lie saw nothing in M iss Dolan's pockotbook but postage stamps. lie was not lying now. He thought they had much money. After ! securing other articles, revolver, &c., (aft j erwards found in his possession,) he wash jed and dressed himself, putting Deering's 1 clothes on, and then eat some bread and ! butter. The scoundrel frequently laughed , while detailing his confession of these , horrible crimes. s4}" An attempt was made to assassinate the Czar of Russia, on the lGtli ult. A shot was fired at him as he was entering his car riage, but the ball missed its mark. The late treatment of Poland probably renders a lit tle tempering of the Russian Government in that way. —•*- i "I thi.ik our church will last a good ma ny years yet,'' said a waggish deacon to his minister : "I see the sleepers are very sound." . A Word or Two with the Toilers or th# North Workingmen, it is decidedly "hard sled ding" now-a-days—the wages of a day, of a week, seem to melt away like the dew be fore a mid-summer sun. You break a greenback ten, it is dissipated, vanishes. — Dollars are transformed to cents, and your money seems to go but such a very little way. In some places, combinations are being formed, and increased pay demanded for labor, for men say, and say truly, that they must live, and rnechauics and all who sell the labor of their hands, fight a continual battle with capital. And new movements and experiments constantly arise and ate tested. From the Mississippi to th* Atlantic shore, thousands have proclaimed that eight hours must be considered a fair day's work, but at the same time they protest against a reduction of wages, which have doubled and trebled, in some instances, within the past five years. Yet there-is more complaint than ever. Families once comfortably supported on a dollar and a half a day, now struggle to keep "the wolf from the door" with throe of Mr. Chase's pretexts for dollars. There is suffering everywhere in the great cities, and yet as a people,we arcen joying an apparent prosperity. "We have had no great financial crisis to press still harder ir on the laboring classes, as in 1857. Our western towns are overrun with young men seeking work, anxious and wil ling to turn their hands and apply their brains to almost any honorable avocation, and vet failing to find the desired employ ment. They arc white men, however, of that race w hose fathers fought and strug gled for seven long years to give their sons a government and country of their own. Taxation burdens the people of the eoun trv and presses hard upon the industrial classes. I'usiness men are taxed on every thing they do, or whatever they transact ; stamps stir k and adhere to all papers,check and hills. The numbea and diversity of the taxes are legion, /"here is hardly a thing that escapes taxation, and on many articles they are levied two, three, a half dozen times, under as many forms and pretexts. You cannot scratch a match but it will say "tax" to you, or eat a meal without paying a tax for the privilege, or wear a coat until it has been doubled iu cost through the taxgatlierer's ait. It is anything but amusing, is it not ? You realize in all the relations of life, at home, abroad, in your places of business, everywhere, that it is a fixed fact from which you cannot escape this year, the next, or even during your life. It is about time you seriously consider ed why this is the case —why you are to " groan and sweat under a weary load,'' you and your children after you. It is the juice you are payiny to make the neyro your equal —to bring you down to the level of a servile and interior race—and the men of the " Rump" Congress, are hourly riveting your chains tighter and firmer. They found the negro a useful animal, adding to the wealth of the country, while benefitting himself and otheis, they have converted him into a useless, unproductive pauper. Thcv found the countrv at peace—they gave us war; without debt or taxation— they gave us hot!) ; pushing on in a career of boundless prosperity and unlimited gran deur.thev stopped its progress, and sullied its glory with blood and havoc. They found a Union of States, they are fast transforming-it into a despotism. Tliev want more war; tliey pant for battles and slaughter ; they are eager to look again upon the desperate conflicts of armed men. While you, laboring men, are ground down by taxation; struggling for life and bread for yourselves and •vivos and little ones, at the same time you are supporting a pampered and favored class in idleness and you lave yot to do it —your masters have willed it and yon cannot avoid or dodge the responsibility. In the State of Georgia there are to-day for y-three thousand negroes fed at the ex pense of the Government. They have been so fed for weeks and months. In the whole South the number exceeds four hundred and thirty-four thousand! The co>t amounts to millions iff dollars everv month, hundreds of millions yearly and you;mcchanics and toilers of the North and West pay the bills. Oh, you are'a patient, long-suffei ing, dull and willing people, and your ina-ters at Washington, as they heap the burden> upon yon, laugh at your folly and enjoy your humbleness. Then the bureau agents and government employees, tax collectors and internal rev enue commissioners, squeeze from you oth er millions, living in luxury and ease while you are crushed to ihe vrry earth. Day by day as you grub and toil about vour various occupations, unable to spare a day, hardly an hour from your labor, the galleries of Congress swarm with negroes, listening, with open mouth, and in lazy attitudes, to the pioceedings, the debates, and business ot their friends ofthe 'Rump.' Negroes saunter about the streets, they 101 lin the sun. tliev eat bread wrung by your L ard toil, and are nightly sheltered by your bounty. And the same is the case all over the Southern country. Yon are pleased that it is so, are you not? You must be, for you encourage it by your votes, and continually elect to of fice those who are determined on degrad ing white laboring men to t'ie negro race, and making you the slaves of an aristocra cy of bond—holders. A single incident illustrative of the pres ent condition of atlairs at the South will suffice. A g utlcman called on Gen. How ard, of the Freed men's Bureau, a few days since desirous ot engaging 200 hands to goto Arkansas, whom he would pay at the rate of s2operjmonth to men, and $lO to women, together with food and houses,and cost of transportation. The General was willing that the contract should be made, but the negroes must be free to do as they pleased. The result was - and it is by no means strange that it should be so—that not a man,* woman, or child, would leave their present happy condition for one of ;_V,~ llow do you like it—liow long do you intend to continue to support these idlers —maintain in comfortable laziness these hundreds of thousands of paupers? War is over, peace is declared, there is work enough for the whole of them —there is not a pretext'to be offered, or a reason ad vanced, in faror of a longer continuance of this system. — La Crosse Democrat A Pair of Patriots. I will not stultify myself by supposing that we have any warrant in the Constitu lion for this proceeding. This talk of re storing the Union as it was, and under the Constitution as it is, is one of the ab surdities that I liave heard repeated until I have become sick of it. There are ma ny things which make sueh an event im possible. Tte Union never shall, with my consent, be restored under the Constitu tion as it is.— Thaddeus Stevens. Let me say that the Constitution of the United States, as I understand it, exacts noipassive obedience, and no man who is not wholly lost to self-respect, and ready to abandon the manhood which is shown in the heaven-directed countenance, will voluntaiily aid in enforcing a "judgment which, in his conscience, lie solemnly be lieves to be against the fundamental law. The whole dogma of passive obedience must be rejected —in whatever guise it may assume, and under whatever alias it may skulk—whether in the tyrannical usurpation of king, parliament, or judicial tribunal.— Charles Sumner. These are the worthies who assert that the Southern people have no right to be represented in Congress because they are not loyal. • JEST Dr, Cheever, one of the leading radical disunionists, lately delivered a dis course before the Anti Slavery Society in New York in which lie announced the Republican programme in a bold and out spoken inar.ner. He takes the ground thai the right of suffrage is the right of all christians, irrespective of birth, race, color, or bearing. He says: "The test of true Republicanism now is to HOLD THE NEGRO Ul> AND DISTINGUISH NO DIFFERENCE BETWEEN lIIM AND THE WHITE MAN. If Republicans cannot do that, a monarchy is preferable. The ne gro is our plumb-line of reconstruction. — Our national coin is base spelter if it is not virgin gold for the negro. The Christianity that can't stand this had better go down." There you have it in a nutshell. A Republican, radical, disunion leader openly prefers a monarchy unless the negro is tal lowed ail civil privileges, the principal of which is, the right of suffrage. It is not often those radical leaders so openly pro claim their love of monarchy, but in the case of Cheever, we mnst give him the credit for having fraukly proclaimed the designs of the leading men of the Repub lican party. ! REVENUE STAMP.— The Supreme Couit of Massachusetts has recently passed ' judgment upon the validity of a deed hav ing no revenue stamp affixed to it. The Court considered that the absence of the 1 stamp did not invalidate the deed, and " questioned whether Congress intended so to frame the Revenue laws The Court ' was of opinion that a I nited States statute undertaking to invalidate an instrument which is valid by the laws of the State 1 would be unconstitutional. The Govern ment could impose a penalty for not affix ing the stamp, but could not make tbe in ' strument worthless because the,stamp was ' not affixed. ' - ' EXEMPT FROM TAXATION —The follow ; ing act passed both branches of the Lcgis ' j lature, and has been signed by Governor I < hirti.i: tk That all persons who have been mus | tered into the military service of the Uni : | ted States, and have served therein for a i period of not less than nine months in the ' war to suppress the rebellion, and their property, and those persons who have ' been discharged from said service, and their ! property and the widows and orphans of 1 ! such persons and their property, shall be 1 i exempt from the payment of all bounty '! and per capita tax levied for paying houn— ' ties in the several counties of this common -1 wealth, and such persons shall also be ex empt from the payment of mili ia fines." REBELLION IN THE CAMP. —The Phila delphia Rulletin, (a Republican disunion t paper) circulates a report to tbe effect, . that Gen. J. K. Moorhead, has been in , j Washington, conferring with President Johnson, as to the best means of defeating ' Geary for Governor This will be a dam aging movement for Geary, when we con > sidcr that Gen M. was the most promi , nent candidate before the late Republican , vention, and was only prevented fioin se | curing the nomination for Governor by a , coalition of all the other factions against him. llence, he may desire to have re , vengc. ' -♦*. B3T Presidvut Johnson, it is said, has recently got off a pretty tair joke. A Con -1 neeticut office-seeker closed a recent appli crtion for office with an inquiry whether I the breach between the President and Con gress could not be repaired. The Presi dent wrote in reply, that he is not so much in the line of " repairing breeches" as be | formerly was. GENERAL CASS. —This veteran states man now at Lis residence in detroit, is grad ually sinking, and his friends think he can not live much longer He is in the 83d year of his age, Ilis disease is softening of the brain from years of labor in his coun try's service. He passes most of his time . in sleep, and is hut seldom able to converse j rationally with his family. The Issue bewteen the Executive and Congress. EXETER, May 12, 1866. The issue between Congress and the Executive, briefly and precisely stated is simply this : Congress enacts unconstitu tional and revolutionary acts which strip States of local independence, a light le served in the Constitution, destroy the very escence of our nationality and tend to coerce a social miscegenation, a cause more deplorable than war, famine or pes tilence. In view of this disregard of the Consti tutional limitations for legislative power, and its consequent evils, the President re minds Congress of the superior benefi cence of constitutional rule which has made this country the home of the op pressed, the glorious land of civil and re ligious liberty, and implores it with the pathos of a patriot not to substitute for its wise provisions, the feelings and wis dom of a partisan faction, actuated by feelings of envy and hate. It cannot be that any citizen who has a just idea of his rights under the Constitu tion of his country — who desires to pre serve civil liberty for his children —can hesitate as to his duty, nor fail to be tired with a just and unappeasable indignation ! Democratic principles based upon the Constitution, and cations f the United States to wade through seas of blood and witness , those scenes that attended the French | Revolution. Whether this be the case or ; not it is certain that harmony and security as a nation, and onr happiness, prosperity and liberty as individui'ls is secured only by a strict adherence to the principles ot the Constitution and all laws enacted in pursuance thereof. S. H. S. l.etter from Mr, C'lymer. The following letter was ad !ie>sed by j Mr. Clymer to a committee of citizens appointed by a meeting held in Sharo", I Mercer county : Reading, April 12, 1866. Gentlmf.ex : I have just received your j letter of the 9th inst., asking the question •'whether lam or not in favor of making a general railroad by the Legislature of this Commonwealth, somewhat similar to • that existing in the neighboring State of i Ohio." If, after repeated and persistant made by me during a Long service in the Senate, to secuie the passage of a general railroad law, my position on that question is not understood, 1 fear that nothing I may now sav will more fully demonstrate it. | I have been, ain now, and will continue ! to be in favor of a general, free railroad system for this State, similar to that of the States of Ohio and New ork ; believ ing that capital should ever be permitted, under proper restraints for the protection j of private property and the rights of indi viduals, to develop any and every section of : this State without let or hindrance. Until the people of this Commonwealth establish this system, many of the lichest ! and fairest portions thereof, will, for half a century to come, be deprived of those means of dev< lopement and intercommu nication to which at all times they are en titled, and without which their stores of j iron, of coal, of Lumber, and of oil, will be | useless and unprofitable not alone to their owners, but as well also to the whole peo ple who are unquestionably most deeply interested in their prompt developement and production, j Very respectfully and truly yours, Heistek Cltmer. . _ &W The Old Capitol Prison was offered ' for sale at auction last week. The only bid offered was 16,00, and the trustees put in their i eserved bid of $24,000 andkeotit. Why don't the trustees make Stanton a pres ent of it for a country residence ? • The Cincinnati Commercial and New York Ttmes —both able and influential Re publican journals—arc strenuously opposed to the amendment of the "Reconstruction j Committee" of Fifteen. Local an ! ar, at ,()r, -"' l ho on the tinted add rem ! label attached to this paper, shows the dme to which as appears on our books, tb. paper has been pei t for Every subswiher should take an occasional look at it. A Dry Spell is upon us, which has been of such long duration, as to begin to be called a drouth an unusual occurrence at this season of the jear. Hoes, without eyes or rivets, anl other farming tools of the best manufacture at Bunnell A Bana ; tyne's store. j . Notice.—The pews in the Methodist Church will be sold on Monday, ike 2Ut day of May, 1866 at ne o'clock P M. All persons wishing to pur chase are resjectfully invited ta attend. Ice Cream of the richest and most delicious quality can now be had at Mrs. Lease's toy and fan cy store. We've tried it, an! know whereof wn speak. Jack Frost visited this part of the vineyard on Monday nigh', but so far as we 1 am, did but little I injury to fruits or vegetables. We notice the weeds —its only occupants—in our garden look as freeh ! and luxuriant te-lar, as beloro. The early worm, gets snapped up by the bird, A Gale of wind occurred at this place on Sun day last, Dot so violent however as in some other parts e f our county. We bear of the unroofing of several barns and of fences being blown down *in various localities. No damage was done here ex cept the tearing off a small portion of the roof of whifwas.no ft.,, bridge— which, considering its pre-er, ondu. - not a very great calamity to I the public The Side which our Borough authori ties ordained to be laid, by the Ist day of Jurw, arc hardly yet begun. Many seem to suppose that the idea of goo 1 walks in this town is a mammoth '"goak and that the ordinance w.s all for fun.— We as-ure our readers that tho Town Council are entirely earnest in the matfer, and that the walks directed to Le built, can be built by property own ers at less expense 11 them than by the street Com missioner. "A word to the wise Ac." The C ircus at this place on Monlay last called | together a good!y number of peiplc, though not near so many as that ot a yeat ago The stock and fixtures of the concern are good and exhibit a de ! cided improvement since their last visit here. The | performances, many of them by the same persons, ; were, to our taste ,better than before. The trained dogs and monkeys advertised, were j no where to be seen unless they were shown in a j siic tent containing one monkey, something that re— ! scmbled a scalded whiffet, a nigger wench and two stupiJ albino nigger girls Any of our readers afflicted with SCROFULA or j Scrofulous complaints will do well to read the re i marks in our advertising columns respecting it,— I But little ot the nature of this disorder has keen known by the people, and the clear exposition of it ; there given, will prove acceptable and useful. We | have long admired the searching and able manner ! in which Dr. Ayer treats every subjec t he touches ; I whatever has his attention at all, has a great deal I of it; he masters what he undertakes, and no one who has a particle < f feeling for his afflicted fel j low man, tin look with indifference upon his labors I for the sick. Read what he says of Scrofula, and see in how lew words and how clearly he tells us | mora than we all have known of this insidious and fatal malady.—[Sun, Philadelphia. Pa. exi'-r ±e dL. IIOLLEXEACII—LOT T—On the 15th inst, by the Ber. C. It Lane, Mr. Daniel V. ilollenbach and Mrs. Pauline Lott, both of Tunkhannock Special Notice?. ADMINISTRATOR'S X OTIC E. Notice is hereby given that letters of AJministra j ion on the estate of Joseph S. Vaow, late of Fork j tston Township dee'd., hiving been granted to the ' undersigned ; all per- ns indebted to "said estate, 1 are A quested to mike immediate payment, and | those having claims ac a inst the same will present them duly authenticated for settlement without de , lay. JOHN" G. SPAULDING. Adrn'r. Forkston, Pa., May 16, 1866. Orphans' Court Sale. Notice is hereby given that, in pursuance of an order of the Orphans' Court of Wyoming County,all the right, title and interest of Jacob Fluram-rfelt in I bis lit? time, late f Meshopjien township dee'd, in j an 1 to all that certain tann or lot of land situate in j Mesh. ippen township aforesaid, bounded North by ; lan iof George Felkir and Jacob Arnts, East | lan lof Junes Jennings ; South by land of Andrew j Busfi an I J tcob Decker' and West by land of Rober Clayton .and George Arnts ; containing about on i hunlre i and seven a'res. more or loss, will be sol to the highest bid ler at public vendue. xt the prem ises above described, on the 9th day of June, 13fi6 . at 1 o'clock, P M. JOHN FLUMMERFELT. Adm'r. NOTICE IS hereby given that I have teeently purchased the farm iqion which Miles A. Sickler resides, "; in Overfield Tp*, which witlftil the personal proper | ty- horses, wagons, eowr, bogs, bees, farming utea 'si Is, household '""-n'ture Ac. on said larin, lately ; pure!- i-e lat Sheriff's sale, I have left in the poJ scsstou of the s .id Miles A Siekler to be kept by 1 him during my pleasure* All persons are forbid molesting, purchasing or in any way interfering with said property, as they will do so at thetr peril. FI LLER SICKLER j Falls, April 16, 1866. vsn3g4t. EXECUTRIX' NOTICE, Letters testamentary on the estate of William Fitch, late of Northmoreland Township Wyoming, j County, aee'd., having been granted he undersign ed ; all persons having claims against said estate , are requested to present the same, duly authentica ted for paytneut, and all persons indebted to said estate will please make payment without delay te , Northmoreland Pa., ) SARAH D, FITCH, April 10th 13gg. j Executrix. von3s6w. STRANGE, BUT TRUE. Every young lady and gentleman in the United , i States can hear something very much to their adran | tngo by return moil (free of charge), by addressing i the uadersigned. Those having feais of being hum bugged will oblige by not noticing this card. All, ' others will please address their obedient servant, THOS. F. CHAPMAN, 831 Broadway, New Terk rsn2l-lyear S. M. P. A Co. ERRORS OF YOUTH. A gentleman who suffered lor years from Nenrons Dobility, Premature Decay, and all the effects cf youthful indiscretion, will for the sake of suffering humanity, send free to ail who need it, the recipe j and directions for making the simple remedy by . which he was cured Sufferers wishing to profit by i tho advertiser's experience, can do so by addressing JOHN B. OGDEN, No. 13 Chambers St., New Fork. vsn2l-lyear. — S M. P. A Co. NORTH BRANCH HOTEL, MESHOPPEN, WYOMING COUNTY, PA WM. H. CORTRIGHT, Prop'r HAVING resumed the of the above Hotel, the undersigned will spare no effort to . i render the house an agreeable place ol sojourn for f .11 who may favor it with their custom. " Wm. II CORTRIGHT. June, 3rd, 1863