tO'M EROY TKrjJliltilPII. T. A. PLANTS. EDITOR. I'IU!,V tilt i .' t-mber 8, lfcCO. APOLOOV. ?i Tho press of business during CburR ).!. jnnventel the editor givhig ''his uMinl atteutioti to the Teleyrnjih this week. . , , ''Sontnl the louij timbrel i ' r jjD'er KjiyptVdai'k sen! Jehovah bath triumphed Ills people arc free!' i L We . refer' oh renders to the tele- TV - - ' prajihic dc.-'patthes iu to-day's paper, for "trnf rcM!t oF the; election on Tuesday );ist, ad far as hoard from. We have no tinio to uiako cojHuicuts.C The Auierican t people hav vindicated their mauhood, nnd have (jiveu hucIi a rebuke to dema- " rogue, traitors, disunionists, scccssion- Hi-ts ynd lying fraud and corruption, in all forms, us was never before administered on a like'flecasioD. . - - 1 . . The depsrate political- gniibl era "will now either attempt to carry out their 'r.ntiug threats of : disrupting 'the Gov -11 merit, or subside into something like external decency. In -cither case the country will bo the gainer. - If they at tempt to overturn the Government by force as they have threatened, they .will be hung as traitors, and thus be disposed of.. ' nod if they back down front their fcheihesl of revolution, the country can have peace without the trouble of hang ing theni. . ' , . Never was there nti election in this country upon which so ikU depended ns that just passed. ; And never did the ) copleso intelligently and distinctly pass their, judgtueat' upon great issues as on Tucsiday last. . . , j. Let-all the people rejoice! We be lieve to-day that, taking the whole peo ple 'of the Umon,-at least five out of ev- ry six rejoice i 1 the clccti( n of Lin coln! In the rstphce the great ma . jority which - elected . hiui believe that they were-doing their country a service y so doing, and are gratified at the re ult.' The honest Douglas men, seeing that their favorite ceuljl;not ;be elected, rejoice in the utteT defeat of the disu- r.ionists by the triumphant election of Lincoln. The friends of John Bell are in the same condition. .And many of the Breckinridge men themselves, are . no doubt glad that they are saved fro-ra the consequences which must have followed from the success of their fiery leaders.. Ju short, all the people,. South as well 8 Eajit,!jd North, and West, Except a few. desperate1 agitators who hate : a 11 9 publican form of Government will bail the election of Lincoln as the promise f a .better crafin , the history of our eountry. -Let alltherefore, rejoice! Wc will heTb!c in ovir next to gie fall returns.' VOTE OF MEIGS COUSTY.- The following is the entire vote cf Jleigs punty on Tuesday last; . f c W - s c ,- " ? if 1(H 17t 203 W, 4 104 2 ' 01 "81 '11 60 50 . 63 '33S 185 . 37 13s. 115 7 81 111 SM. 10) 4 '229 119 ( 465 ?80s 4 211. 107 -'.It? 330 174 60 2i!8i; 1U9.) 21-3 a f n r. Towssmrp. Bedford t!hi.-r Columbia i.t-ltunon .......... Lctart.... ........ Middlrpoit...... liTC....M.V..'i.. Orange........... ;?T'tinii(i. Efclem.... iimieroy.: Scipio ....... ...... Sutton Total... Vote ot Unrtiord City, Va. 1 iucoln, - Breckiuridge,... ....... DcU,.M..v iJouglas,. ........ .........:. .' . ...46 ...43 ...37 ..14 ..140 Total, rf.... Rtllgtoua Kotlcc. Hcv d J.. Stua.rt, of the New Jeru Balctu Church, will preach at the Court IIoukc in Pomeroy, on Sunday next, at 11 o'cloek'Af M., and "at Middleport at S o'clock P. M., of the same day. ISfThcre are many matters we should like to call the. attention of our readers to this week, but for want of time must defer it. ' " .' Cm.rwmLS, Kov. 7, '00. The Neil House afColumbus, was de stroyed by fire last night. Tlic Boon Count)-, lud. Bank ACkliWK Sxtcnsive Frandlent OpperatfSms Indianapolis, Nov. 3. James Mc Lean, Cashier of the Boon County Bank, at Lebanon, Indiana-, Jj B. Hussey, Al bert H. Hagar, Sliles A, Bradley and J. D. Chipman. are all connected with the same institution, were arrested here to day charged wifh forgery nnd circmlating money fradulcntly, issued on th- Boon t ouiity Bank. They all waived exami nation, and were committed to jail iaie fault of S5.000 bail each. ' . It 16 supposed that these parties have t irculatcd from 300,000 to 8400,000 of eounterfVit bills' on -the above bank in Indiana, Illinois, Iowa and Missouri. 15.000 "bf genuine nOte.s were issued by the Auditor of State. -The spurious" and genuine' notes are from the same phite, the Auditor and Kegister's names being counterfeited on the former. A. Spooncr, President of the bank, tiiade liis escape fiom this city atone 'clock this morning. About 100,000 f the connlcrfeit mouey has' already been received by our bankers from their orrepondent6 in the West. Several hundred dollars of the spuri ous bills were redeemed at the bauk at Lebanon-yesterday, v A Mother Ransomed Last fpiiug a white icoman- ( Mrs. Pi(uct) appeared before tha congregation f the First Congregational Church' in. Oberlin, Ohio, and asked for money to siid in buying her mother from shivery. The citizens contributed liberally, as did the people nearly everywhere she went in Ohio and New York. Last week, we were gratified to see a card in a 'Cincin nati paper, signed by the heroic daugh ter, and warmly thanking those who have assisted her in purchasing her aged fiarent. -Mother and daughter arc now iviug comfortably in Cincinnati the mother having been purchased from her Texan master for the sum of 000. ELECTION NEWS. LATEST BY TELEGBAPH. LINCOLN ? ANbl HAMLIN We go to pres earlier than, we de-1 si'redy in order to accommodate-manv of i i our subscribers who would nob-receive the paper till it it is a week old. if we missed the mail to-day, (Thursday.) With the returns in at present, however,, it may be considered absolutely certain that the Kepublican ticket is trium phant. ATHENS, Xov 7, P. Illinois.from 20 to 25,000 majority for Lincoln. New York -10,000. for Lincoln. Pennsylvania 5Qr00ft for Lincoln. Ohio, Kepublican gain. Indiana, RepuBMcans victorisna. New Jersey also Republican.. All New England States. Republicans victorious. . . " Virginia, BclL Maryland, Bell. Kentucky, Bell. Tennessee, Bell. Missouri piobably for Douglas. All the States South of Tennessee have gone for Breckinridge. : Old Abe is to be our next President without fail. . Athens County gives Old Abe 1,000. . Wisconsin 10 to 15,000 for Lincoln. Connecticut, Republican gain: i ' Vermont 25 to 30,000 for Lincoln. Deleware 1,500.- majority for Breck inridge, . New Hampshire, Lincoln's plurality supposed to be 10,000. "', .Iowa comes in slowly, but indicatas the success of the Republicans. Ohio has probably gone 30,000 for Lincoln. - - Michigan, 25,000 for Lincoln. Indiana, Lincoln's majority . from 25 to 30,00Q: Massachusetts Lincoln's majwity 70, 000. . Rhode Island, Lincoln's majority 5V000., . : " - Ij ATRIt. -i: Maine Lincoln's majority 25.000. New Hampshire Plurality for Lin coln; 10,000.. Massachusetts Vote of the State, with the exception of nine towns, foot up: Lincoln, 104,467.; Douglas, 3-1,007; Bcil, ' 22,017 ; Breckinridge, 6,072. Senate, 18 Republicans, 2 Democrats. House, 273 Republicans, 17 Opposition. The vote for Andrew, for Governor, falls 2.C2G behind Lincoln. Congress 9th District, Baily, Dem., 1,601 majority ; 5th District, Appleton, (Union) over Burlingame, 159 majority. In the other Districts the other Repub lican candidates are elected by large majorities. Deleware Goes for Breckinridge. Fisher, Republican, elected to Con gress 100 majority. - New Jesrseys Gone Fusion. Connecticut Republican - plurality about 26,000. New Jersey. 5th District, Mr. Perry, Democratic is elected over Pen nington. New York As far as heard from, Lincoln's majority upwards of 33,000. South Carolina Legislature voted for Breckinridge and Lane. Minnesota Lincoln's majority about 5,000-. " Wisconsin Lincoln's majority about 10,0dQ, all Republican Congressmen elected. Singular Case of PdUoniitg by a Boy. A remarkable case of attempted mur der by poison, has occurred lately, as we we learn from the Burlington Free Press, at Montpclier, Vermont. A little child of Hon. C. W. WUlard, while drinking milk, was seized with violent vomiting. The milk was examined and found to contain corrosive sublimate enough to Kill a dozen men. .. The poison had evidently been put in the milk after it had been poured into the child's cup, and the sudden violent reaction of. the child's stomach was all that saved its life. Finally suspicion fell upon Roskes, an Irish boy, who confessed that he put poison in the child's cup, from hatred to the servant girl, with whom he had some trivial qua'rrel, and ou whom he hoped the suspicion of committing the crime would fall. lie was immediately arraigned before the court in session at the time, plead guilty, and was sentenced to eight years' imprisonment. . The Adams Express Robbry Arrest of Four Persons. It will be recollected thaton the night of the 16th of April last, Adams & Co.'s safe was thrust from the cars and robbed of ?lt,000 in cash. The act was done near West port, Conn., when the cars were under full headway, but it was not discovered, till the train reached New York, wlic.n the safe was missed. Three days later it was found under the trestlcwork of a bridge near Westport, the bottom knocked ou; and the 16,-000-in cash which it combined abstracted-. On October 20th ibur persons were arrested at Bridgeport, one of them was Mr. Stebbins, the through baggage master between New York and Boston. The New Haven Palladium says that Stsbbins has confessed the crime and implicated others in the busi ness. It is-said' that he was detected by being seen to havs in his possession one of the 5500 bills stolen from the safe. Boiler Explosion at Jfew Haven. New Haven, Cons., Nov. 2. A terrible accident has just occurred here. The boilers, in the factory of Daw & Bros., makers of the wood-work of car riages, exploded, tearing away a portion of the building, "a.nd badly injuring several pel-sons; one, a boy named: John Kane, will die from a fracture of the skull. G. G. Baldwin, Geo. Dewolf. and a man- named Johnson were badly injured. A" boy named Rice is supposed to be under the ruins. The canal and railroad are covered with the ruins. The cause of the explosion is unknown. Election Day a-t lOU$s rile. Louisville, Nov. 5. Many promi nent manufacturers and mechanics will publish a card to-morrow, in which they give their reasons for not complying with the Mayor's proclamation requesting that all business houses le closed during voting hours. TO KEEP GRAPHS FRESH IX WIS TEH. As many persons fail iu keeping: grapes through the Winter, ' we will briefly state the conditions of success in the experiment. Grapes must be kept cool. Heat, and . especially alternations of heat and cold, i will promote decay. Let the grapes be i kept- in as cold a place- as possible with-1 ut. freezing; and indead a decree or two.i of frost will not hurt them, if they thaw i out very, slowly. j I hey should be kept dry. Heat and moisture are the two great a-gents in pro dacing deeompositiou. There are very few cellars which are dry enough for grapes. A chamber or retired closet is a better place. Yet, if the house is warmed by a furnace,-or even by coal stoves, the air will probably be made so very dry in the chambers, that tlte gra.pes will shrivel up and nearly spoiL Let this be guarded against. In gathering grapes, wait uatil they are fully ripe; theu make sure of a fine, dry day, and pick the clusters during the middle of the day say between nine o'clock and four. Carry them in bas kets to a cool, airy chamber, and spread them on the floor. Pick them over care fully, culling out all bruised, unripe or defective berries, and let them staud in baskets holding about half a bushel, for a week or ten days. In this time, they will have gone through "the sweat ing process," and may theu be packed down for Winter. In packing, various methods are em ployed, and there does not seem to be much choice between them. A very good way is this: Take boxes holding a peck or half a bushel, place a layer of cotton batting at the bottom, then a layer of grapes, then layers of cotton and and. grapes alternately, until the box is filled. To prevent the clusters pressing too heavily on each other, go'iic prrtetice putting a wad of cotton between them. When the box is full, put on the cover an-d set it away iu a cold place. . Some persons use champagne baskets for packing in, arguing that the circula tion of air through the meshes of the basket favors the preservation of the fruit. Others again paste paper on the inside of their boxes, and when the boxes are filled, nail on the cover and paste" paper over the whole, to kcp out .all air! We will not undertake to pro nounce upon either of these methods for we know that grapes keep well in both, provided they are kept where they are neither too hot or cold, neither too moist or too dry. . A friend of ours keeps his grapes in a garret, where the mercury often fulls to 20 above zero. But when a very cold snap approaches, he throws a heavy coverlet or two over his boxes, and they get no harm. At any day, from Novem ber to April, he canutertain his guests with the plumpest and freshest of grapes. With him, the Isabella is the best keeper; the Diana next best.: American Agri culturist . Have the Courage. Have the courage to keep out of debt as long a? possible absolutely, it you can. Debt is a species of slavery. The creditor owns the debtor to the extent of his claim, for whatdoes the word "claim" mean, if not this? In taking our advice, you will be but obeying the scriptural exhortation to :7ow6 lid iiiah anjtin;." Have the courage to wear your old coat or gown uutil you arc able to buy another upon the good old fashioned '.'pay as you go"' principle ay, and do not be afraid to have it known why you prefer this course. Your neighbors will think none the worse of you for your honest frankness. On the contrary, they will think all the better of you, if they are people whose good or bad opinion is worth consideration. Have the courage to live on two meals a day ayreven. on one, if two of the three you customarily took in better times would now have to be procured with ''false pretences," is purchased with promises to payr which you know in your inmost heart there is no prospect of your meeting. Have the courage to own that you are poor! No one whose opinion is valuable will think any the less of you for your frankness but will rather esteem you the more highly. Finally, have the courage to be truth ful, honest and just just to your own sense of right as well as to the sense of others. And so you will maintain your self-respect, as Well as the respect of your neighbors, and these will constitute no small capital to start afresh with, when "better times" shall have reap peared, as ere long they will to all who have the courage to be just in their deal ings and prudent in their expenditures. J6S5We publish in another column the Card of S. Straight, of the firm of Straight & Deming, highly respectable and well known merchants of this city, in resrard to the treatment he received from the Disuniou Democrats of Ala bama, while on a tour of business in that section. Mr. S. would probably have paid with his life the penalty of endeavoring to enlighten the Alabamians, not on the Slavery question, but as to the superior quality and cheapness of the goods he was prepared to offer them, had it not been for the manly interfer ence of some of the more conservative and right minded citizens of the place. Cincinnati Gazette. Political Xins. Portsmouth, Ya., Nov: 5. The greatest crowd that was ever witnessed in this city, gathered on Saturday, to listen t o Hon. Henry A. Wise. He spoke for four hours, and was frequently inter rupted with applause. He declared be fore God that he would never submit to the election of Abraham Lincoln. Perky Davis' Pain Killkr. This medicine lias be come an article of .commerce no other medicine has ever attained lhisbefore.it is as much an item in every bill of goods sent lo country merchants as tea, cofle.3 or sujriir. This speaks volumes in its fa vor. Gierai Falls Messenger. Sold by A. SEEBOHM, and V. REED. 44 2w. Dr. S. O. Kichardson's Sherry Wine Bittiks- The Wine Bitters are Ionic, and buildup; they are Hpperient, but their effect is different from other purgatives, inasmuch . us they do not duliberate; they are alternative, and diffuse their influence throughout the entire system, correcting all unheal thy action or disorganization; purifying the Blood, and regulating the secretions. Every family should have Dr. Kichardson's Sherry Wine Bitters. 3old.byD.KKEU. - 44 2 nr. jrjV1re lavm never seen as strong testimony iu favor of any tuudu-iiies. as we have for Dr. to. A. Weaver's Canker iiud Sj.lt lvheum Syrup, together with the Cerate, 'i'hey inui-t be good medicines, for such men as Kev. JabeZ S. Swan, and others of that class would never hav-8 given their names to put! forward worthless arliules. 1 hey say that these j medicines are a posili -e cure for all Humors, ami we have no doubt but they are. If we were atliicted ', in that way we should Live iUcui a trial, and should adviso our 1riend. so to do. 41-2-. j Jfjy.All, especially young men, should read the advertisement uf the new -Xational-i)ispcns:try" at Clnvinn-.ti, in another oluuj. PEOXISM IX MEXICO. A correspondent of the Toronto : Lradr.r. wiitinff from Mexico, cives an i iuterestinff account of the system of j 'peonis!" or slavery .in force iu that couutrv. He says: '; It isVnerally believed out of Mex- ico that when Mexico achieved her in. dependence she became a free country, and that slavery was abolished. This i I that was made beinc, that no one couij l,n fnroihlv taken as a slave unless he i owed a sura which- he could not or would not pay. In such cases the debtor could be taken by the creditor, and made to labor for hiin for an allow ance of food scarcely sufficient to main tain existence, and for a certain amount of wages, less actually than was required to pay church dues. The poor crea ture was not given any clothes nor al lowed any pittance to buy tobacco or other (considered) necessities. So he (or she) soon had to borrow more, till at last the party had so irretrievably sold himself that he remained a slave for life. If he should be taken sick, the doctor's bill, with extortionate interest, is added to his blood money the medical man, if he be a Mexican, often readily sign ing a receipt for several times the amoxmt he received. A free man re quiring a temporary advance, and having no other property, is obliged to pawn cither himself or some of his chil dren, to raise the required amount.- The poor child thus pawned is necessi tated to add to his liabilities in order to furnish himself with clothes, and seldom does one thus disposed of by his parents, become a free aprent asrain. . Instances occur every day where men wishing to marry, but not having the $25 to pay the poor clergy, have to seek a party willing to take them in pawn for that amount, which soon swells to a greater, and cases are by no means rare where children have to be. pawned, and so made eternal slavs, to pay the Church for performing the general rites over a dead parent! Ab gambling is lawful here, should a party lose more than he can pay at the gambling table, or at a cock fight, he is taken before the Alcade and pawned to whoever will advance the funds. A wife can pawn herself, and thus leave her home and become the property of another. Such is the liberty in free, independennt and Christian Mexico. The peon is sold by the law, his pa rent, or by himself; should he not like his employer, he can change him if he can find any party to stake the required amount on his head. But sometimes this is a difficult matter, as owners of peons do not like thus to encourage in subordination among each others slave?. The children may be pawned to aa many different parties are children. The Church has set a high price upon every rite 2 for christening a peon's child, $25 for marrying it, and 7 for burying it. - A Young l.ady Murdered by a Slave Wonian-The Itlurdcreas Caught and if anged. llcliable intelligence- from Fulton, Calloway county, Missouri, apprises us that a shocking tragedy occurred within eight miles of that place on Saturday last. In the house of Mr. Barnes was a female Slave, hired by tho family, of irascible and dangerous temper, who had frequently ieefl enraged at Mr. Barnes' daughter Susana j., a yoiif.j lady some eighteen years of ".ge. Sat urday morning, the slave, Teney, was sent to work in a cornfield, and the fam ily set off to attend a meeting of some kind, leaving Miss Barnes alone at home. On returning from the meeting they were horrified to find her shock ingly beaten to death, and the floor and walls of the dwelling bespattered with blood. The dinner table had been set, evidently by Miss Barnes, and her knit ting work lay on the kitchen floor. The kitchen showed blood and -signs of a struggle. Blood marks were visible along the walls to the east room, on the floor and walls of which was much more blood, and the room exhibited plain traces of a violent strife. Next, the blood was traced to the west room, where the murder had been committed, and where the corpse was found lying in gore. The slave women was called, and found to have changed her dress since morning. On search, the dress was found in the field hidden, and bloody. A shovel was found, bloody and bat tered. When confronted with, her bloody dress, the woman confessed that she had killed Miss Barnes. . She was placed in custody of deputy constable Henry Willing, who rode off in haste for the jail at Fulton. When within three miles of Fulton, he was overtaken by a party on horse, who took the prisoner from him, led her to a tree not far off, and there hanged her till she was dead. St. Louis Democrat. Another Mystery at Detroit. Detroit seems to be overrun with mys teries. The frequency with which De troit river gives up the lifeless bodies of the victims ot mysterious muraers, sui cides, &c., is getting to be a serious mat ter. On Tuesday the body of a young and beautiful girl was discovered on the Canadian shore of the river, about a mile below Wind.sor, revealing a crime at which humanity sickens. She was evi dently about seventeen years of age, well dressed, fair- complexion, rich, wavy, au burn hair, and bore every indication of respectability. A ghastly wound upon her head betrayed the 'manner of her death, while no less meaning marks upon her throat told of a fearful struggle and attempts to silence outcry. Who the young lady is, and by whose hands her death was consummated, have not yet been-developed. EcBcecher says of Blondin: It is a very small thing for that fool to walk across a cable with the roar of Niagara under him, carrying some booby-like himself on his back, though ten thou sand other fools go to gape and stare at him. But for a man to walk across the thread of daily life, carrying, not another fool, but a soul with immortality in ev ery faculty, potent, wonderful in scope, and power, and susceptibility, so as to keep it in ballancc, is not a small thing. It requires him to be wide awake that is, to watch. tSgGov. Magoffin, in his zeal for the cause of the Disunionists, left the duties of his office to conduct the traitor Yan cey about the State. At Louisville he filled the position of usher. How hu miliating to Kentuekiaus that they have an Executive so lost to all sense of the d'isnitv that should distinguish his eon- duct as chief Magistrate of Kentuckv, as to serve as the ueatleman usher to a : leading traitor, who is boldly plotting treason anaiusf, and actively ensaored in laboring to overthrow the Constitution i and Government he (Gov. Magoffin) is ; sworn to support and obeyl ,S7t. I (ify) Acira. ' C'AIin PKOH fi. STRAl(;i!TTIIK avy iiIEKCl..Ti TUAYKi.IXU OX BI SS .MiS AUK TBKATKI) BY OlSl SIOA Ulljunui 15 THJS SOCTIi.. j n tf'"r,KKAT, Sov-s ma- I J'-PS. Oazette: An article in your j P! ot V"3 ni,m.,d"S 1 e to ! ofler -vou lhe osscntiaHacts in regard to j i'VY recent cxpeneuce m the South. . To sVacf and. petition, I refer yenr j adera ? card 1U thls morning's! Commercial, tor a statement of the mix- dence I used, and one of the causes of 'J "Jrrupuoii It has been verbally stated here that I met with trouble in Atlanta, which is entirely destitute of truth. There and at Macon I was treated most courteously. At Columbus no one offered'me any in sult that I am -aware of, though, as I afterwards learned, those Home (Ga. Courier missiles had been copied there before my arrival. At Nashville, Clarks ville, McMinnville, Chattanooga, Knox villc, .Morristown and other "places in Tennessee, I was treated with all the respect aud kindness that any Demo cratic business man could even desire. I arrived at Kome, Ga.y Saturday evening; attended church and Sabbath school the clay following ; called on the merchants on Monday, and left, when ready, on the evening train. At this place much of bitter disunion spirit was constantly revealing itself; and here, in the Courier, originated the article which proved a leading instrumentality in bringing on the trouble in which I be came involved in Montgomery. At Ma rie.tta, Griffin. West Tointand La Grange, Ga., all on whom I called acted the part of gentlemen. I arrived at Montgomery, Alabama, on Friday noon, 2Gth ult., and put up at the Exchange Hotel, one of the largest and most deservedly popular public houses in the country. At nijjrht I went to hear a speech from Senator Toombs, which was full of treason, and admirably calculated to arouse the most violent feelings of all who heard him, toward the people ot the iree States, and pre pare them for the part some of them acted during the afternoon of the follow ing day. lean give the substance of this speech from my notes, if desired. This Breckinridge rally called to Montgomery an unusual number of the followers of Messrs. Yancey, Toombs & Co., who had no better business on hand than retailing the senseless falsehoods in regard to Republican complicity in the destruction of life and property in Texas, (which -Gen. Sam Houston says in his Austin (Texas) speech never oc cured by any agency,) indulging freely in strong drinks, and working them selves up into an earnest desire to take the lives of some members of the party they believed about to wrest from them the power so long held and so basely abused. Under these peculiar circum stances one of the leading merchants on whom I called very imprudently ques tioned me in regard to my political views, &c., not thinking that h.e was kindling an excitement anioug those who listened that it might soon be im passible to centrol or subdue. Passing over incidents which, though of much interest, as showing the progress of mobs, the management of vigilance com mittees, &c, &c, would occupy too much space, we arrive at lhe searching of my trunk by members of the vigilance com mittee, the declarations of outsiders, in termingled with the most horrid oaths, that they would gladly shoot me down on the street as though a mad dog, cut me up with knives, and aiuuse them selves iu various ways at the expense of my life, and pass on to the time when the members of this Committee, num bering thirty-five, and including some of the wealthiest and most popular citizens of Montgomery, who had me in charge,' and the proprietors of the Ex change hotel became seriously alarmed for my safety. . During all this time the apparent danger which threatened my life seemed like a dream to ire, though I saw evi dence in the very looks and all the ac tions of those who sought to protect me that it must be real to them. My ex traordinary composure, even when threatened with being sent to a planta tion a few miles out, ornamented with ball and chain, to work in place of a slave that had escaped to Ohio, till our people would return hiin, seemed to en rage my persecutors. The scene of ex citement my slavery would cause, which rose before my mental vision, was so ludicrous as to render it difficult to con ceal my mirth. It was almost as amus ing as the Montgomery Advertiser's description of my nose and whiskers. But 1 must leave incidents, and hasten to a close. After hiding me away for some time, in an unfrequented part of the hotel, away from light,, or anything to reveal my locality, and assuring the crowd of my innocence of "incendiary documents," with promises "that the Vigilance Committee would give me my deserts, the mob reluctantly and slowly dispersed. Your well meaning corres- podent "(J. is greatly in error in bis reference- to my fears, -siy ''hasty re treat." the desire of the citizens of Montgomery to protect me, and their censure of the Vigilance Committee. The truth is, so far as humaa agencies were concerned, under the guidance of a merciful Providence, my life was pre served by some of the members of that Vicilance Committee, auu the proprie tors of the Exchange Hotel. If "the professions of those "conservative" citi zens were sincere, why did they not, like brave, generous men, hazard their lives, if necessary, iu protecting an in nocent stranger? This is the first I have heard of this stuff, and it comes too late. The truth is, those who are so clever now, were afraid of the mob and the Vigilance Committee then. Mr. Hargrove and others, who were most active in" securing my protection, advised me by all means to leave on the night train for some other place (allow ing me to go where I pleased afterward) assuring me my life would probably be the forfeiture if I had the imprudence to stay longer. To this I, of course, consented, aad they took me from a private rear door into a carriage pro- ceeoeu uy a circuitous route to uie depot, waited there more than an hour, left the carraige and walked (two by one route and two by another, to avoid notice,) to the depot, seated me where least likely to attract attention. One checked my trunk, and another pur chased my ticket, which one of them brought to me; waited till the train was about to move, bade me good night and departed. Were not this article already too long, I could give the history of an outrage upou a New York merchant that was, if possible, less excusable than the one I have described. llespectfully, &c, S. Stiiaigiit. Exprosion or the sicmntr mil Thirty Persona Killed. New Orleans, Nov. 1 . The steamer IT. T. W. II ill, bound from Memphis to New Orleans, exploded her boilers on Wednesday last. Thirty persons were killed, and from forty to fifty- scalded. From tile N. V. Eveninor I'-tst. IVIlESf A 1 I) "U IlKllK THE mssoM-. T10. tOVSPlRAt V WAS l!.OTTISU. It is now ascertained beyond a ques tion that the conspiracy to dissolve this (Government in c-iie of Lincoln's election has its root in the Cabinet ot' Mr. Bu chanan; but it is not as generally known that the eggs of the conspiracy now hatching were laid four years ago, at the Cincinnati Convention. At that Con vention Mr. Buchanan is supposed to have entered into a convention with the delegates from the Atlantic and Gulf States, who were generally opposed to his nomination, binding him to take precisely the course which Mr. Cobb has recently been marking out for him.. The facts upon which this impression is based were reported in the -Evening Post of that date, and subsequently were made the subject of editorial comment. The following extract from a letter da ted Cincinnati, June Gth, was written by one of the editors at the time, who heard the speech referred to: "No little sensation w.-ts produced in the Convention by Black of Pennsylva nia, who closed a speech of thanks to the Convention with a quotation from the Bible, which, in its application, im ported that in case of dissolution of the Union,. Mr. Buchanan and Pennsylvania would go with the South, of course taking with them-the army and navy and public treasure of the country. This is the most liberal bid the South has ever yet received from any .Northern states man. It completely takes down Doug las and his Ceutral American slave em pire. It is precisely what the nullifiers have for years been trying to get. What part, if any, this pledge from Mr. Black played in procuring the strange and hid den transition to Buchanan's ranks in the convention this morning yet remains to be disclosed. You ma' be assured that no further question will be made-at the South about Buchanan's soundness on the Kansas issue. The nullifiers are now ready for disunion, as they were for the admission of Texas, at the earliest practicable period. The verses which embody the new declaration of fealty to the South, and which were quoted by Mr. Black, are in the ICth and 17th verses of the first chapter of lluth, read ing as follows: "LAnd Kuth said, Entreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee: for whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge; thy. people shall be my people, and thy God my God. "'Where thou diest, will I die, and there will I be buried; the Lord do so to me, and more also, if aught but death part thee and me.' " From the Lionon Journal. Atrfol Calamity at Sea. A Gloucester (Mass.) correspondent informs us that intelligence has been re ceived at that port of the loss of one of the mackerel catchers which left the Bay of St. Lawrence last month with a full fare. When j ust outside ot Cape Canso, during the night, in a thick fog, she was run down by a steamer, carrying away her bowsprit and forecast, and stavingin her bows. The steamer passed on without offering any aid. to the schooner. After drifting about for two days the schooner headed, for the Wes tern Islands, but had proceeded but twenty-four hours when she became water-logged and unmanageable. S'e-ve&cf' the crew were washed overboard by the sea, and the remaining nine took to the boat. Thov were in the boat two davs ! when it capsized, and before they could get her righted two men were devoured by sharks. By this misfortuncrthey lost all their provisions, water and cars. - In this condition they floated about four days, during which time two men died from exhaustion. One of the bodies was thrown ovarboard and the other was kept to satisfy the hunger which was consu ming them; but just about as they were about to partake of this horrid meal a sail hove in sight, which rapidly neared and rescued them move dead than alive. Loco Foco Sincerity. When (Jov. Seward was defeated in the Chicago Convention, the head of every Deinocratic editor in the land be came a fountain of tears. The express ions of their sympathy and grief over the treatment he had received at the hands of his own party, were profuse, and the people might reasonably have supposed that, like one of old, they would,-uuder every circumstance, refuse to be comforted. We then more than half suspected that their tears were those of the crocodile, and as time has passed on, our suspicions have- been confirmed. W7hen Mr. Seward took the field as the champion of Kepublican principles, and raised his trenchant arm in behalf of the election of Lincoln, their grief at once turned to hate, and now there is no measure to the bitterness of their denunciation. This is about as much sincerity as they ever had for any man or any principle.--iJicifo Herald. Five millions and a Half In Silver The Tasmania steamer receutiy car ried from the West India Islands to Southampton $5, 062,000 in specie, and as nearly the whole of it consisted of sil ver, being dollars from Mexico, its total weight exceeded 15G tons. The treasure was contained in no less than 2,108 pack ages, and the whole of it was landed in seven hours. It was then deposited in thirty-six railway wagons, which formed a special traiu, drawn by two en gines. At the London station ihe treas ure was transferred from the railway wagons to thirty-six street wagons and vans, which latter, being drawn by up wards of one hundred horses, reached the bank of England about ten A. M., aud the entire cargo was safely deposited in the vaults of that establishment by 5 P. 51. the same day. Good Pluclt. We hear of a little fellow, some half dozen years old, in this vicinity, who is a young, live, and up-and-coming Wide Awake, who goes for Lincoln his whole length, longer or shorter. A few days since he climbed up on a building where some men were at work, and one of them, to try his pluck, took him by the collar and held him from the staging, telling him to "hurrah for Douglas," or he would drop him. Young Wide-Awake looked down to the ground, a distance of some twenty feet, for a moment, and then with an unfaltering voice, loudly exclaimed, ''Hurra for Old Abe, if you drop me in a second!" Of course the boy was not dropped, and a hearty laugh was occa sioned among the workmen at Young America's pluck. That lad has got the true llepublican stuiF iu him; there is no mistake aboutthat. Full Rictr News. Severe Storm at Xe-w Haven. New IIavex, Nov. 5. A severe gnle from the East visited this city last even in". comiiieiicinr about five o'clock, and ending at about eleven o'clock. Many j trees were prostrated, and the steeple of j the Worcester rlace becond Uaptist Church was thrown upon the square. Its height was 240 feet. Jlciu Slilrrriisrmfnts. Special Notice to Teachers, j There will be a special examination of j Teaclic-vs heM nt Tupper's Plains on the 17th' ilay of November, lfiO. Examination to com- j meuce at 0J o'clock, A. 5. ! l!v order of the Board, ! II C. WATERMAN, Clerk. ! BLANK REPORTS can be procured by ap plying to the Board, or at the "Telegraph" of ficio. BRADLEY STOVE LIVE OAK. (WIDOW OF THE I.ATE PETER HOOT.) J TTAtUI.D respectfully inform the olil cnso.-ncrs j V V kinl frien.ls of hur late deceased husband, that I she will continue carrvinff on th& TIN AND STOVE BUSINESS by Uio ai.l of E. B. STAUCHER, who will act ns my A-ent and Clrk. and who will ulwuys be found rei-dj and willing to accommodate tnv customers. I will si-H for Cash or Produce, ail kinds or Sioves, Tin Ware, Coppor c ZinU, and, in fact, everything: usually kept in such cstuh- I lishmrnts, cheaper tllan you cau buy anywhere else ! iu the County. 1 also lake Copper, Bras, Old Metal, Pewtir, Old Silver, Kaps. &i-.,ud give iu exchange auy kind of Ware you may waul. Water Spouting, ECoofing nudJob- of all kinds done on short notice. Persons wishing anything in lhe way of Stoves, Tin. Copper or Sheei Iron Ware, would save money by t-al'.in on me, at the Brick Shop, First Sired, between Coul and Alain Streets, Aliduleporl, O. HANNAH HOOT. 5ov. 0, 'CO. 4-Uf Tupper's Plains Seminary. The Second Term of this InstiluUou will begin on AlOXUAY, SoveiubcrSS, IttM). Great pains have been taken to make this Insti tution one wUii-h m-ay supply ttio wants jof the com tnuiiity in n hieh it is located, und all those- who may attend it from abroad. So trouble has been spared in furnishing the rooms, and in fcdoptiur the most apppro-ved. Text Hooka. - ; ' ; Tho chief design of the- Institution is to prepare young men. for College, and Teachers for more ex tensive usefulness. l.ej-sons will be given (if desired) in Music, Draw and Painting. - ' The Principal flatters himself that, with his. ex perience and the abundant success that has hereto fore crowned his efforts as Teacher, anc Hie aid or experienced Assistants, he shall be able to give eu tire satisfaction to all who may patronize him. The Seiniuary is located iu a beautiful portion of the County, and parents wish-to send their child ren to ScLool cau certainly find no place more free from vice in all its forms. TTJITIOKT. Principal's Department, - - - - 83.75 Primary ,- - - - - 3.00. Miiftic and Painting, - - - - - Extra. Boarding can bu had lit from $1.10 to $1.75 per week. EDWIX Kb YES, Principal. '1 upper's Plains, Meigs Co., O. 44-21 . . . i tfryr A A PER MONTH AND ALL EX IlrJ.Ul7 l'ENSES PAID ' I wish to em ploy us above a trustworthy and efficient Agent in every State in the Union to sell a new Invention, patented July 3d, 18C0. To young men who desire permanent employment in a light uud respectable business, I can give a better Agency than any liouse in the United States. I will give full information in regard to the business, salary, &., to any one who de sires such a situation. For full particulars, address, (with stumps lor the pre-payment of the return postage), HOSEA B. CARTER, Inventors' Exchange, Hanover St , Boston Mats. Nov. 9, 13ii'.). 11-lw. . POCKET-BOOK LOST! On Friday evening, the 2d of - November, the undersigned lost a Portinonaie, containing from $18.00 to- 20.00. Supposed to be lost between the Foundry ami Court-House. ' There were two fine-dollar bills on the Charleston Bank of Va., one three dollar bill, the remain ing were one dollar -bills principally on the I.e Bank. A liheral reward wilL be paid for the recovery of the same,, by leaving it at the Telegraph Printing Office or with the undersigned. HAllIii WLLSOJw Nov. 9, lSoO. 44-3 w. PEACH GROVE WUBSERY THOSE who- want Peach Trees come soon, na we have a- few thousand not. yet sold, of the finest pjrowth, nnd the largest assortment in this vicinity over 100' varieties, and about 30,000 in all,. rating according tccrtitilityj.from seven to fifteen dollars per 100;. Apple,. 10 per 100.. Pear, Cheery and Plum-at the usual prices. M. W. RUTHERFORD & CO., 4 miles west, of Rutland, Meigs Co., O. Nov. 2, :li0. 43-4m Enjoyment for the Winter. T7 W. STEVEN'S having fitted up a room I ' . in his large building on Mul berry Street, for social parties. &c, it. will be opened on WRDNESDAY EVENING next. 31st October, with a Dancing School, tinder the manage-asSsi mcnt of a competent Teacher. The School will be conducted with decorum and order. Good music has been engaged. It. is desirous that those wishing to attend will be at the room ns early as 7 o'clock P. M. Oct. 25, '00. 42-3t lOOO bushels Corn, lOOO bushels Oats, 20.000 lbs Baled Ilay, At the Feed Store, corner of Linn and 2d" Sr.sr Cow Feed, Corn and Oats for sale. A Covered Bugey for sale cheap. Oct. 23, I860. 42-3t TVM. IL REMINGTON. PIANOS!PIANOS! ; I WILL furnish Plnos orAIelodeons as low as per' sons van buy them- In tho cities. I will put up,, tune, and keep in order nil Pianos or Melodeons 90I1I by mo, an. I puaramwo them- (or two' years. Time siven on pond aecirrUj-. 1 deal in the following make of Fiann: J. & C. FISHER, New York? " . H.A l.r.KTT & DA VIS. Rston; HUKTSM AN S KINK. Buff.v -ROJHD.M.tN AtiKAY, Alb.: CI1ICKKK!:G, Boston; And GKO. A. PKI.NCK'S Melodeons. Give me a call, or write lo-m hefore yon bnv. A 11 lettersnddresaed to P. BBCTKEH, Pomeroy, O., wilt meet with pi.m pi attention. X)ct. 19, rSiifl. Il ly. C. A. MATTHEWS, DEALER IN. A. BRADLEY'S & T O "V 353 SI, And Manufacturer of Copper, Tin & Sheet Iron Ware, OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, -A.t rtxxiojp's Old Stand JYIIDDLUPOUT, O. 1H AVE Just received a larse assortment of Stoves wliii-b 1 will sell lower tliau ever, consisting iu part, of Arbiter, Live Oak, Victor, With au assortment of Coal and Wood PARL0B STOVES, OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. GRATES, FIRE FRONTS, ODD PLATES. &J. WATER SPOUTING, Hoofing and Johbing OI A 1.1. UOIIM on Sliori nuiicc. Persons in want of anything in tho way of Moves :.. ..1 l.n.. IV.im. Would KUVtt iit, pointer iir em--..- nwu .. - money by calling on me. TTFOld Conner. Brass and Pewter taken iu ex change. may ., 160. iu- ty wm. il & jTgrant nAVIXG formed a partnership under the above name, I having purchased the "Crystal Mill," iu Midilleport. design running 't regularly from this time. We will pay the Highest Market Price for Wheat, ami other Grains, and hope bv strict attention to business to m Tit and recciw a good patronage. April 10, lt:.-tf V .M. H. fe J. G K A XT. S5 SPECIAL NOTICES. Home Testimony. Bi.i k Crkkx- Ailains Co.. O.. Au. l.i. Tip.. Knn n-i-llrar Kir: I li:ire rot the timn to write too of thi bum-fit ronf-rr.-.l l.y your S.-:m.li 11:1 via 11 iiloo.l 1'itls ami KIo.mI i'urili -r. I look Ihvui for a liease ot'llie lliront. :iml tliey not only Iv-nnlltte.l it lint niv general health, also. I am now-.a-Inall l-t-ter than for uljrlit i-.-irs. TIk-t enrol .Miss Kllctu Wt-ite. of thin iilan. of Livrr Complaint ami weak--n.-ssof- the Spin. Airs. KliZMln-tii Cross was ciircif of torrihlrt ahoutinz pnim in the utoinacli ami siilpT whu-li l..-ul balllM the efforts of several ooil Physi cians. The v.iliia of your ineilirines coitM beestali--lishc.l l.y any atnsiint'of -vuleiu-", if nee.i , in thij vicinitv." " Yours I.Vspet tfullr. ttM. SHAW. JfKRvnrs IliciDiCUK. Kev. V.G. Howard, Pastor' or the First Baptist Church, at Chicago, Illinois, who has been a ret sufferer from nervous headache,, but who has experienced entire relief from it by the use of WILSON'S PILLS, in a letter, dated Jun 18th r says. "During the last twenty years, 1 have made use of a great variety of medicines, prescribed by Allopathic and Homoeopathic physicians, but all have failed; and I bad relinquished all hope of re lief, until I was induced to resort to WILSON'S PILLS. These have eflectualiy relieved mc, in re peated instances of late, and I can cheerfully and conscivntiousty tecommeiid them to others who ars similarly affected." This sovereign remedy is sold by R. L. Fahnestock & Co. corner of Wood and Fourth Streets, Pittsburgh, to whom orders for sup plies should oe addressed, and by D. REED, Pome roy, Ohio. L-lm. TCP THE GKE.tT ENGLISH REMEDY. SIR JAMES CLARKE'S CELEBRATED FEMALE PILLS Prepared from a prescription of Sir James Clarke, M. D., Physician Extraordinary to the Queen. This well known medicine is no imposition, but a sure and safe remedy for Female Difficulties and Obstructions, from any cause whntever? and altho' a powerful remedy, it contains nothing hurtful to th constitution. To married Ladies it is peculiarly suited. It will, in a short time, l-riug ou the monthly perrbd with regularity. In all cases or Xervous and Spinal A ffec ionsr pains in the Back and I.imbs, lleavtncss, Fattgneo.it slight exertion. Palpitation of the Heart, I ownes of Spirits, Hysterics, Sick Headache, Whites, and! all the painful diseases occasioned by a disordered system, these Pills will effect a cure when all other ine.-ns have failed. These Pills have never been known to fail, whttro the directions on the secoud page of pamphlet aro wcll observed. For full particulars, get a pamphlet, free, of tho Agent. N. B. One Dollar and 6 postage stamps enclosed; to any authorized agent, wftl insure a bottle, con taining over "0 pills, by return mail. Fult directions accompanying each package. Sole Agent forthe Unitei. States amf Canada, JOB. MONKS. (Late I. C. Baldwin Ar Co.,) Rochester. N. Y. For sale by J. D. PABK.SU1RE. KCKSTEIX 6c Co., Cil.t iunalX, O., ). KKEI), Pomeroy, O. 1 1-y. yp"We refer our renders to the advertisement of Messrs. CHURCH & DUPONT,Xo.4D9 Broadway, Xew York. The 'Blood Food' is ono of the greatest medicines oftheuge.and is mpidly driving out of the market all the quack nostrumsof modern times. Its efficacy is so great, ami its superiority so Justy acknowledge!, that it found difficult to-supply the immense ami increasing demand for Ihe article. lir. Eaton's celebrated Infantile Cordiul.rtea med icine prepared by a regular physician of eininenc e in his profession, aud one who has devote d his lifeta the peculiar phases of Infantile diseases. 16 is- no humbug, but a medicine which commends itself to those only who cau appreciate it." Apilactiicola, Ffor. Times. JCySee Advertisement. . f'LAKK'S L1VEK PILLS. THE BEST PCROATIVE AND- PURIFIER BEFORE THE FEO PLK ACCKI-TED'AHD RECOMMENDED BY EMINENT PHV BICIANS. ... . , DR. CLARKE, the inventor of these pills, is justly distinguished for his eminent abilities ami sci entific research. For 3(iyears, in his extensive prac- tice, he experimented in bringing 'lie great desid eratum of (a remedinl agent to- act as a direct puri fier upon the human system. In this he has been, eminently successlul, as the numerous certificates, from celebrated physicians show. They are ex tremely mild in their operation, at the tame time powerful aud effective in removing disease. They never give pain, as do most purgatives, but allay iL In all cases; they are more speedy iu their relief than any pill now offered. The proprietor is-plcascd to-announce that he haft perfected his arrangements forsupplj ing the trade to. the fullest demand. A fresh supply just received and for sale by D. REED, Pomeroy, WELDOS. & BESTOW, Chester,. BHAXCH & PAYSE, Rutland, und 1). JOHNSON, Tcpper's Plains, and N.D.WALKER, Prop'r, Pittsburg, to whom aH orders must be ad dressed. Sept. 21, I860. 37-3mj BENJAMIN F. WILLIAMS" COMI'OUXl EXTRACT OF SARS.VPAR1LLA AND IODR OF POTASSIUM.- In presenting to tlte notice arid acceptance if the .Medical profession, ami of tho public generally, the above preparation, the sub scriber dos not seek the bent-til of a patent right to enhance the value of Ins article; nor oo.-s ho wish to conceal from any the knoniedge of its ingredients,, iu order to gain public ooi.fl.k-uce ami favor. lL. separates itself from, ami stio.tld not be class d with tho innumerable patent medicines of the present day, for the reason that there is no effort made tiv-coui-eal. ils ingredients. On the contrary, the un dersigned iu ites the strictest scrutiny "from tlm Mcdiial profession, and w.ll, on application beinc made to him, take pleasure in coiuitiunicatiiig In ail regular prin t. sing phsiciaus, every particular in. regard to the processor ln.-.u'ufacturing it, &c. lio would sin. ply state. tli;'t asnn Apothecary, he has been for ears in ti.e habit of preparing, under the direction of gentlemen of t-miiici.ce in tne medical profession, both in Kentucky and Tennessee, the above couipoui d. Familiar with Ihe best lii.-tlio'ls of displacement, and the advantages of a large anil powerful apparatus, ho has sought to combine to gether lhe tried and known virtues of various arti cles (H Uie Materia Meilica, in such proportion, and iu siu-h cheap and durable form, as lo furnish a rem edy of certain and. wonderful erbVacy, attested by long expenieiive, not for every disease that flesh is heir toy-but for a turg: claas, a numerous progeny that owe their origin ami parentage to a l ruinous Diathesis or Scrofulous mint iu tbe Constitution and iu the blood, such as White Swelling, Chronic Ul cers of long standing. Obstinate Tetter, fling Worm, Sore Eyes, Scald Head, fcypbiluc disorders, and other diseases of the skin and blood that resist the usual treatment. He can substantiate by the very best of evidence: iu onrcity its efficacy in Nervous and General debilitg: Indigestion o D-, Bpepsia. In flammation of the' Judaeys, Kheumatism, &c, &c. It is confidently recommended in diseases peculiar to Females, such us Leucorrhea or Whites, 'Sup pressed Muli3truntionr Chlorosis or Green Sickness. Withouteniime rating further, he is content to slate, and from the result already before hiin, he makca tho declantfiioti with emphasis and in truth, that he believes he is ottering to the world a KEL1ABLE AM) CERTAIN KEMcDV for that formidable h v i 1 of Kings and King of Evils, THE SCROFULA, in all its protean shapes, whether confined alone uud manifested- in the separate tissues of lhe body, or whether it invades the entire sjstum. BEN. F. WILLIAMS. . Sold by D. REED. Pomerov, WE' DON & BES TOW, Chester, BRANCH & PAYNE, K inland, D JOHNSON, Tapper's Plains. Sept 21, '60. 37-Sra. THIS C.U12AT REMEDY. THE CELEBRATED OENESSEE LINIMENT, WELL known and accepted as the most efficacious and certain remedy ever discoveredor all comuluiiits. where an external application is neces sary. Endorsed and prescribed by distinguished physicians. Equally good for man or beast. FOR RHEUMATISM - . Use Gexksskk LieimehtC for burns use Gbmessee Liniment! for sore throat Use GENESSEE LlNIXEHrt for bruises Use GENESSEE LlNlMEN V for spinal affections Use Genessee Liniment! FOR CRAMPS, AXI ALL -ACHES AND SORES Use Genessee Liniment, A fresh supply just received, and for sale by D. REED, Pomeroy, WELDON & BESTOW, Chestar! BRANCH 4 PA1XE, Rutland, I). JOHXSOX Tupper's Plains, nni Storekeepers throughout Hie country. N.U.WALKER, Proprietor, Pittsburg, Pa., To whom all orders must be addresssd. 4 Sept. SI, lWiO. 37-3m F li E IS U BALTIMORE Oysters, FOR SALE BY THE CAN, At Sam. Silverman's, Front St., Wcsi of Com t, rOMEROY, O. 41-tf FARM FOR SALE. THE undersigned offers for Bale a Farm of either ono or two hundred acres, (to suit purchasers,) with abeut 70 or 80 acres of it cleared and under good fence, and containing plenty of good water.. Inere is also a new frame House and a large frame Barn on it.- The place is situated about two miles from Roberts & Tidd's Landing, Lower Long Bot tom, Olive Tp., Meigs Co., Ohio. For further particulars inquire of H. COCKS. Terms easy and reasonable. Oct. 40-3m IIE.Mll COCKS. Sheriff's Snle. Warren L. Bisicll vs. Adaiiijuh Smith. BY virtue of an execution to me directed from tlte Court of Common Pleas of Mciga County, I will oiler for sale, at. the door of th Court-house in l'omcroy, at 10 o'clock a. m., On the 30fi dity of November, 1SC0, the following described lands and tenements, to wit: the west end of the south half of tli liorth-cast quarter of section No. 18, town No. 2, range No. 13, in Salisbury township, being SJ2 acres, more or less. To be sold as the prop erty of Adaiftjah Smith, at the suit of Warren L. ISissell. .Appraicd at $2S8. Term of sale, cash. J. J. WHlTf. g. L C. Oct. 15, lWO.-IWt .J0