Afirdfottl Cbi^etir. Fri|j%y Mwrnins, Aug-nsf 7. IHH. Democratic Nominations. NATIONAL. roll ru ESI DENT, HON, HORATIO SEYMOUR, OF NEW YORK, roll VICE PRESIDENT, GEN, FRANK P, BLAIR, OP MISSOURI. STATE. FOR AUDITOR GEN KRAI,, HON. CHARLES E. BOYLE. of Fayette. County. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAL, GEN. WELLINGTON H. ENT. of Columbia County. JUDICIAKY. ADDITIONAL LAW JUDGE, ,/. McBOH KLL SUA Bl'L-, of FrauUliu. FO'IJ. (Subject to decision of Dt strict Conference.) COtTNTY. CONGRESS, It. F. MEYBBS. of Bedford. (Subject to decision, of District Conference.) ASSEMBLE, ABRAHAM If ILSOX, of Somerset, t; CO ltd F. Met an FRY, of Fulton. lOMWISSIONER, HAS mi. /. BFIA.I.F. of St. Villir. poor director, 11 FX BY FOOI.F, of Xujricr. col NT Y SURVEYOR. ,S I MI. A FTTFBMAX, of Bid font. UORONOR, Br. I'. 11. I'ES'XSYTJ, of Bloody Bun. if. A. HI STF.V, of Ttrnml Top. IS Till: I \IX KKKTOUKD? It is now upwards of three years since the suppression of the rebellion. Dur ing all this time the Radical party have had complete control of the gov ernment. The President, it is true, opposed their revolutionary and uncon stitutional measures, fiuv they depri ved him of all practical power to iv~; st them,and his vetoes were overridden, in every instance, by a two thirds Radical vote in both houses of Congress. They have had the purse and the sword of the Republic during th*~tlu:i;edrt>a(l - we*~ j-rtirs, and what have they accomplished? Is the Union restored to-day? Are all the States hack in their old places as members of the Un ion ? No! Some of them, North Car olina, South Carolina, Florida, Geor gia, Louisiana, Arkansas and Alabama are represented in Congress by carpet bag members, and this representation is only at the will of the majority in Con gress. According to Edmunds' bill to regulate the electoral college, which passed the Senate, some time ago, that body decided that only such states as ( on gress might declare to be entitled to representation,shall in, l permitted to cast t heir votes for President and Vice Pres ident. Should any of the Southern States vote for Seymour and Blair,itwill lie an easy matter for Congress to < leclare them not entitled to representation, and th lis keep them out of the Union. Hence the states just named, are mere tenants at-will, under Congress, so far as mem bership of the Union is concerned. But where are Texas and Mississippi, and where is old Virginia, the "moth er of states and Statesmen ?" The Southern states, every one of them, so long ago as lsfiii, held conventions, re pealed their ordinances of Secession, ac cepted the abolition of slavery, elected members of Congress and U. S. Sena tors, and by every necessary exercise of State authority, returned to their phi' res in the I 'num. But the Radical < 'on gress stopper! in with thoarmyandna- vy, between them and the Union, re solved to keep them out until they could force Xfjro U/iuditj upon them at the point of the bayonet. Misissiji pi, by the votes of her own Negroes, rejected this outrageous scheme. As for Virginia and Texas, they have nev er yet been given an opportunity to vote for the Negro Constitutions which are the Radical ultimata. Aye, where are Mississippi, Virginia and Texas? Out of the Union 10-dut/, krpt out hii thefon'c of crutx, at an expense of million- upon millions to the tax payers of the North. And to this in famous procedure, Gen. Grant, by ac ceptingtho nomination of the Radicals, has made himself a party. Can any true Union man vote for him, and thus endorse the l>isunion of the Radical Parly? IT is all right with the Radicals when the brute Joe Brown, who as Governor of Georgia, founded and kept up the Andcrsonville prison pen, goes to their Chicago Convention and helps them nominate Grant, but when a brave man like Wade Hampton, who met our soldiers in the field, but didn't starve them to death in prison, attends a Democratic Convention, these saintly hypocrites hold up their hands and roll up their eyes in holy horror, at the bare thought of such a tiling. Any scalawag rebel is clasped to their bo soms, if lie will vote for Grant or sleep with a "nigger," but the purest and most honorable Southern gentleman is discarded by them, if he chooses to vote with the Democrats. Out upon such Pharisees! Their knavery is too contemptible to bear discussion. WHAT ARE YOUR PRINCIPLES? Are you in favor of Negro Suffrage? If so, vote for U. S. Grant. He stands upon a platform which pledges the con tinuance of Negro Suffrage in eleven States of this Union, by the interfer ence of the Federal Government. Are you in favor of one rule of suf frage for twenty-six States, and anoth er for the remaining eleven? If so, j vote for U. S. Grant. Ile is pledged to this unequal doctrine by the Chicago platform. Are you in favor of the impeach ment and removal of the President for political reasons? If so, vote for U. S. Grant. The Chicago platform en dorses the impeachment conspiracy. Are you in favor of Negro legisla- I tures, Negro governors, and a Negro ! balance of power ? If so, vote for U. i S. Grant. The platform which he has I accepted sustains the Reconstruction ! acts by which these things have been forced upon an unwilling people. Are you in favor of a large standing army and navy, maintained at an ex | pense of one hundred and fifty millions | per annum? I f so, vote for U. S.Grant. | He stands upon a platform which pro : poses to govern the Southern people by the military despotism of the llecon | struction acts. Are you in favor of the continuance | of the Freedmen's Bureau? If so, vote I for U. S. Grant. He is the candidate of the party which established and which continues in existence that ex ! pensive institution. Are you in favor of exempting the j wealthy bondholders from taxation ? If so, vote for IT. S. Grant. lie in the candidate of the Money-King, A. T. Stewart, and stands upon a platform which is silent upon this subject. Are you in favor of a double-faced financial policy? If so, vote for U. S. Grant. He is the candidate of a party whose platform is construed by Greeley and Forney to mean the payment of the public debt in gold, and by Ste- Wv und Butler to mean the payment of the satin. ,greenbacks. Are you in favor 01 .., n(]i( | ate who declares he will have "no por.<. v jf elected? If so, vote for U. S. Grant. He assures you, in his letter of accept ance, that he will not trouble the coun try with a policy. On the other hand, are you opposed to Negro Suffrage ? Are you in favor ofoneruleof suffrage for the whole country, and that rule the regulation of that question by the people of each State for themselves ? Are you in fa vor of rebuking the impeachers ? Are you opposed to negro Legislatures, ne gro Governors, and a negro balance of power? Are you opposed to a large standing army, and the continuance of the Freedmen's Bureau ? Are you in favor of taxing the bonds, and of the payment of the public debt, as speedily as practicable, iu the lawful currency of the country, when not otherwise provided by law ? Are you in favor of a candidate who will hare a poliey, the policy laid down by the Democratic platform ? If so, vote for Horatio Sey mour, the statesman, the scholar and the Christian gentleman. ANOTHER COVDIIOI.IUKS DEVICE. A "funding hill" was passed by Con gress, a few days liefore the adjourn ment, which authorizes the holders of the five-twenty bonds to fund their securities by receiving therefor other bonds at 4 per cent, interest, the princi pal and interest to he payable in gold. This was done in order to head off the po[mlar movement to pay off these bonds in greenbacks. The bond-hold ers want to continue to suck the iife blood out of the labor and Cue industry of the country, by drawing their inter est in yold , and after a while they will demand, under this "funding bill," the payment of the principal in gohl. Rut the people have something to say to this. The next Congress will be Democratic, and then discriminations in favor of the bond-holder will cease. The industrial interests of the country cannot afford to ]iermit the election of another such Congress as the present. oa K xteiixf.F.s RUN THE I.EUISI.A TIKK. We rai-e to-day the names of Abra ham Wilson, of Somerset county, and (Jeo. MeGovern of Fulton, as the nominees of the Democratic party for members of the House of Representa tives for this district. They are good men and true, honest and capable, and ought to be elected by a handsome majority. Air. Wilson served during the war, in the 51th Pa. vols., and is beloved and respected, not only by his late comrades in arms, but by all who enjoy his acquaintance. Esq. MeGov ern is a well-known citizen of Fulton county, was atone time commissioner of that county, and has always taken a prominent part in the public affairs of little Fulton. We defy the Radical- to match this ticket. THE Radicals have started the lie that there was a Negro delegate in the Democratic National Convention at New York. We will make any one a present of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS if he gives the Negro's name, or proves that any black man was a member of that body. Wbt jUctJforTi ©t>rttr, 23tHforti> LETTER OF GEN. HANCOCK. He Conirs Out Strong for Seymour and Blair. We ask the attention of our readers, and especially of every citizen who served in the Union army during the late war, to the letter of Gen. W. S. Hancock, which will be found on the first page of this issue. It will be seen that the gallant General most cordially and emphatically endorses the nomi nation ofSeymour and Blair, and ex presses, in the most unequivocal man ner, his desire for the triumph of De mocratic principles. Ja-t every soldier citizen write down the following from this noble letter and hear it about him i against the insidious tricks of the Rad ical Disunionists and as a political guide during the present campaign: "Believing, as I really do, that the preservation of constitutional government I depends on the success of the Democrat ic party, in the coming election, were 1 to hesitate in its candid support, I feel I should not only falsify my own record, hut commit a crime against my country.'''' When the brave, the noble Hancock, the hero of Gettysburg and the Wil j derness, the central figure of a liun j dred battles for the Union, the pride and glory of the Pennsylvaniasoldiery, declares that he would " commit a crime against his country,'''' if he did not sup port the Democratic nominees, in the present crisis, who can hesitate to en ' list under our banner ? Where Is the man who is not willing to follow where the patriot Hancock leads? A FEW ip iATIONS. Will Mr. Thomas Marshall answer these questions in the speech which we understand he is to make here next Saturday? Is the Radical, or Republican, party i u favor of Negro Su If rage ? If not, is it opposed to Negro Suffrage? Is it in favor of taxing government bonds ? Is it in favor of paying the live twenty bonds, principal and interest, in gold or in greenbacks ? And will he deny that the Radical Congress have admitted Sawyer, a iot>el blockade-runner, to a seat in that body,nt joe Brown,the founder of the Andersonvitio prison, was a member of the Convention ti m t nominated U. S. Grant, and that nineteen negroes were also members of that conven tion ? THE INQUIRER gets furious because a telegram to the Harrisburg Patriot stated that the Radical meeting on Saturday week was a failure, that Gov. Curtin did not speak nml that Mr. Marshall, of Pittsburg, said he could run the blackest negro in the Union against Seymour and beat him in Alle gheny county. That telegram stated nothing but the truth. Considering the efforts that were made by the Rad icals to get up a crowd, the meeting was a miserable, flat, contemptible failure. If it had not been for the la dies, boys and Democrats who attend ed that meeting, thccourt room would not have been half filled. As it was, there was a beggarly account of empty benches in one part of the room. As for the rest, every body here knows that Curtin did not -peak and that Marshall made the declaration attribu ted to him. Let the Inquirer deny it if it dares, and we will produce the proof. Come now, "the proof of the pudding is the chewing of the string." Toe the mark, Lutz! We ask the lied ford Inquirer , Was not Joe Brown, of Georgia, the ex rebel Governor of that State, the found er of Amlersonville prison, the same man who remanded into slavery negro soldiers who were taken prisoners by the rebels, a member of the Chicago Convention which nominated General Grant ? Again, is not Sawyer, thereb el bhx kude-runner, a Radical U. 8. Sena tor from South Carolina? And yet again, is not Roderick Butler, a Radi cal member of Congress from Tennes see, and was he not an oliicer of the rebel army ? And still once again, did not Mullins, another Radical Con gressman from Tennessee, denounce, on the floor of Congress, one of the Radical "Congressmen from South Caro lina, as having been a Major in the rebel army, and as being a murderer to boot? Now, answer these questions, or hold your tongue about Gen. Han cock, Gen. Franklin and other Demo cratic general; shaking hands with Wade Hampton and N. R. Forrest. Talk up, or shut up. SEYMOL'K, the experienced states man, the upright, moral citizen, the plain farmer of Deertield, against U. S. Grant, inexperienced in civil affairs, unable to utter three consecutive sen tences in good English, accused of drunkenness by Wendell Phillips, Theodore Tilton and other leaders of his own party, proved a falsifier by five members of the cabinet, with nothing to recommend him save the fact that he took Richmond by sacri ficing more men than Lee had in his whole army. Who would not prefer the former ? "LET US have peace," says Grant, with his bayonets at the throats of the people of ten States and his hand in thepurse.of the Northern taxpayers. THUNDER!!! "Get out of the tear/, you're till unlucky, ire it re the hoys from Ohi Kentucky The State of Clay and Critten den Speaks! 75.000 DEMOCRATIC MAJORITY IN KENTUCKY! The election for Governor and other state officers in Kentucky, came off on Monday last, and resulted in the elec tion of Stevenson, Democrat, over Ba ker, Radical, by 7-~>,ooo majority!— Louisville gave over 7,00u Democratic majority. This state elected the Re publican candidate for Governor in j 1863, by 20,000 majority, but he and his j friends, Geo. D. Prentice among the number, have since joined the Demo crats, and hence this glorious result. Of course the Bedford Inquirer will call thisa"rebel" victory, but it will hard ly claim it as a triumph for such "reb- j els" as Joe Brown, Sawyer and Roder i,-L- li.ith.r SI>KKi II uv >I U. <;KM:KAI, EWISO. We call the attention of our readers to the able speech of Gen. Ewing, in advocacy of the election of Seymour and Blair, printed on our outside. Gen. Ewing is one of the most gallant and distinguished soldiers of the late war, is a son of Thomas Ewing, of Ohio, a well known Whig,and was un til lately a "Republican." THE Radicals the other day nomina ted Chas. Gibbons, Esq., as their can didate for District Attorney of Phila delphia. The police had to be called in to preserve order in the Convention. The most disgraceful scenes transpired, and no nomination could have been made on account of the disorder, if the police had not taken the Constitution in hand. Gibbons will be beaten by a large majority. THE decision of the Supreme court declaring the Registry law unconstitu tional, has saved the tax-payers of tin's count v- more than a thousand his place, from injur ies received tithe hands of Thomas 11. Fagen, also plasterer and a resident of this placeaecured in this borough on Satuidayfternoon, July 2a. The maiivcts in the case, as elicited before the (toner's inquest, are brief ly these: Le and Fagen met in the bar room ((he United States Hotel about 4 o'(Ck, and, both being under the intluetf of liquor, got into an al tercation out a lime or mortar box. During t altercation Lane drew a pocket kfe and threatened to cut Fagen, afdid cut his arm, when Fa gen l n(>ed him down, aud whilst down kied and beat him with a chair abt the head and face with such vid'oe as to cause his death in a few mPents. Au ii*est was held upon the body by Jusf Leet, and after hearing the evident-he jury returned a verdict that tl deceased came to his death from J*-3 and blows indicted by Fa gen. Fad was arrested immediately af ter tideeurrenee, taken before Esquire Lee/>d committed to prison. jjb was about 55 years of age, and lea J 11 wife and several grown up soi . :, "d daughters. His remains y V -j interred in the Lutheran cemetery afternoon, with military hotrs, he having served in the Union arf during the rebellion as a member of*.* gallant old 84th P. V. tgen is also a married man and the fubr of several children, lie form fa resided at Broad Top, hut has |ii living in this place for the past sr.— J toLlidaysburg Standard. ATTKMPT AT BURGLARY. —About idnight, July 22d, 1868, Mr. Quincy "alter, clerk in the store of Schell A "alter, at Gebhartsburg, in this conn- , was awakened from sleep by a ight noise at the outside door of the •re. Quietly getting up and looking it of the window from the second try, he discovered a burglar at his work, trying to force open the trans om window above the door. .Mr. Walter at once reached for his pistol, and fired, when the burglar decamped. The next morning a chip hat was found on the steps showing that a ball had passed along the crown and through the brim of the hat. Traces of blood were also found on the hat, showing that the burglar had at least got scraped. Mr. Walterevidently had presence of mind enough to do the right thing. Powder and ball are the only proper antidotes for gentlemen who would thus attempt a crime so dastardly. There are strong suspicions as to who the burglar is, but they are prudently kept quiet for the present.— Somerset. Democrat. 31its. S. A. Ai.i.KN'S IM I'ltovr.n (new style) HATR RESTORER OR DRESSING, (in one bottle.) —Two weeks' trial, and you have the guarantee that you will not have a gray hair in your head.— The natural color and beauty are re stored, and a new and luxuriant growth is the result. We have this spoken by those who have used it, and we predict hosts of friends for the inproved prep aration, and we are happy to state the price is only One Dollar per bottle. Every Druggist sells it. jul3lw4 Campaign Gazette! REPUBLICAN GOVERNMENT, Civil Liberty and Constitu tional Rights! "Light, more light !" is the start | ling cry of the honest people groping in thedarkne-s of Radicalism. "Light, more light!" shouts the groaning tax ! payer, bonding under the load which I a Radical Ctaigress has heaped upon him. "Light, more light!" is the i pleading cry that comes to its from i those who earnestly seek a remedy for the disease that is tugging at the vi j tals ot the nation. Look tmd ye shall see! Read and y e shall know! The ; BEDFORD GA/ETTE, for the Presi | dential Campaign, will be a complete | compendium of political news, speeches, j documents and every thing that per ; tains to a political canvass in the col ; uinns of a weekly newspaper. It will I lie published from the 7th of August ! until the seventh of November, next, at the following low terms, cash in ad vance : One copy, * .50 Ten copies, v.iw Twenty copies, 9.00 Fifty copies, 20.00 Not only should every Democrat aave his county newspaper, during the coming campaign, but he should like wise make it a point to furnish his Re publican neighbor a copy. This is the plan upon which our opponents have acted for years, and it is about time that Democrats do something of the same sort. NOW, GO TO WORK and put your Democratic newspaper into the hand!s of every Republican who will read. If you will do this you will accomplish more good in six months than you will by any other means in six years. Democratic politicians, j throughout the county, are enabled, by the above low terms, to circulate Dem ocratic newspapers at a very small cost. We appeal to them to see to get- j ting up clubs, and to see to it in time. Now is the time to sow the seed. Af ter a little while the heat of passion and prejudice will beam upon the pub- ; lie mind in all its intense fierceness, and then seed-time will have passed. Friends, let us hear from you ! I HE Germans of Philadelphia are de serting the Radical catnp. SPEC 'IA L NO TICKS. DR. TO::I AS' Celebrated Venetian Liniment whose wonderful cures, sure and instan taneous action in cases of Chronic Rheumatism, Headache, Toothache. Cuts, Burns, Colic, Cramps, Dysentery, etc., have astonished the civilized world. It is no new catch-penny, but an article that has stood the test of twenty years. The enor mous sale and rapidly increasing demand is at once the surest evidence of its usefulness and pop ularity. Try it and be convinced. No family should be without a bottie in the house—hundreds of dollars, and many hours of suffering may be saved by its timely use. Colic, Cramp, and Dys entery yield at once to its pain-curative proper ties. It is perfectly innocent, and /cng, be given to the oldest person or youngest child. No mat tcr, it you have no confidence in Patent Medi cines—try this, and you will be sure to buy again and recommend to your friends. Hundreds ot Physicians recommend it in their practice. None genuine unless signed, "S. I. Tobias." Price 60 cents ber bottle, fold by all the Druggists. De pot, 66 Cortlandt Street, New York. jul2lw4 FIFTY THOUSAND HEADS now clothed with masses of rich black and brown bair would, if they wore unfortunately Cut Off from a supply of CRISTADORO'S DYE, begin bo Turn White., red, sandy, and gray. Manhood and beauty, with the one defect in their personal appearance remedied by CRISTADORO'S IIAIK DYE, rejoice in their good fortune, and recommend tt to all who require a perfect dye. Manufactured by J. CRIS'I ADORO, 6s Maiden Lane. New York. Sold by all Druggists. Applied by all Hair Dress ers. ju!24w4 A NEW REMEDY IN CONSUMPTION.— A Physician who had Consumption for several years, with frequent bleedings of the lungs, cured himself with a medicine unknown to the profes sion, when his case appeared hopeless. He is the only physician who has used it in his own person, or who has any knowledge of its virtues ; and he can ascribe the degree of health he now enjoys to nothing but the use of his medicine ; and nothing but utter despair and entire extinction of all hope ol recovery, together with a want of confidence in all others induced him to hazard the experiment To thoso suffering with any disease of the Lungs he proffers a treatment he confidently believes will erndicate the disease. Medicine sent by ex press. Send for a circular or call on 1)R. E. BOYLSTGN JACKSON, No. 250 North Tenth Street, Phil'a mayß'6Byl. IT< ' 11! I TC J R!! ITCH !!! —Scratch ! Scratch!! Sc. ch ' ! ! —ln from 10 48 hours WHPLOOT'S OINTMENT cures THE ITCH. WHF.ATON'S OINTMENT cures SALT RHEUM. WHEATON'S OINTMENT cures TETTER. WH BATON'S OINTMENT cures limbers' Itch. WHEATON'S OINTMENT cures Old Sores. WHEATON'S OINTMENT cures Every it rid of Humor hie Magic. Price. 50 cents a box ; by mail, 60 cents. Ad dress WEEKS Si POTTER, No. 170 Washington Street, Boston, Mass. For sale by all Druggists. sep2o,'67yl DEAFNESS, BLINDNESS, and CA TARRH treated with the utmost success by J. ISAACS, M D., and professor of Diseases of the Eye arul Ear in the Medical College of Venn sylvania- 12 years experience, (formerly of Leyden, Holland), No. 805 Arch Street Phila. Testimonials can bo seen at his office. The medi cal faculty are invited to accompany their pa tients, as he has no secrets in his practice. Arti ficial eyes inserted without pain. No charge for examination. july3,'6Byl CANCER, SCROFULA, AC., CUBED.— Ear"* Persons afflicted with Cancer, Scrofula, Tu mors, Eruptions, Ac., are CURED by the use of Dr. GREENE'S ELECTRO-MEDICATED BATHS and Indian Vegetable remedies which oleanso the blood off all Humors, Mercury, Lead, Ac., and restore health to invalids afflicted with every variety of disease. A book describing Cancer, Scrofula, Hu mors and other diseases, with their proper me*ns of cure, may ue obtained free at the Medics-Insti tute, or by mail. Address Dr. R. URiSENE, 16 Temple place, Boston, Mass. To CONSUMPTIVES.— TLLC Rev. ED WARD A. WILSON will send (free of charge) to all who desire it, the pre->* Option with the directions for making and u'ng the simple remedy by which he was cure! •'!' a lung affection and that dread disease Consumption. His only object is to bene fit the afiiieted and he hopes every sufferor will try this prescription, as it will cost them nothing, apd may prove a blessing. Please address Rev. EDWARD A WILSON, No. 165 South Second Street, Williamsburgh, New York. seplJinS INFORMATlON.— lnformation guar anteed to produce a luxuriant growth of hair up on a bald head or beardless face, also a recipe for the removal of Pimples Blotches, Eruptions, etc., on the skin, leaving the same soft, clear, and beau tiful. can be obtained without charge by address ing THOS. F CHAPMAN, Chemist, S2J Broadg way, New York. sepUliuS sCrpl Notices. I,VX ECU T<) R' >S NOT I C V._ j Notice is hereby given that letters testmei_ t tary to the estate of Jno. iloueatinelate of St. C'iair township, ilec'd, have been granted to the uodcr | sigro d, by the Register of Bedford ecuply All persons having claims against said estate | are requested to present them, properly authtnti j eated. for settlement, and those indebted to the estate to make immediate payment BAM I EL HONEBTINK, HENRY HONESTINE, j jun26wfi Executors. &C. N r O 1 ICE TO TR ESl' A SSE ItS. Notice is hereby given to all persons not to j trespass on the property of John Sproat, resided i upon by the undersigned, by fishing, hunting, berrying, or in any other way, as all sueh as do i will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law, jul2lw.''i DANIEL A BARTBGBB. lOOlv OUT.—The books of Irvine A J Statler are still in my hands tor collection— , all accounts remaining unsettled on their hooks from and after the 10th day LSO ?20 acres in Reynolds Co., Missouri 480 do do Shannon do do 270 ido do Bollinger do do 80 do do Franklin do lowa 0. E. SHANNON, jun2l,'67yl Bedford, Pa. "Y7"ALU ABLE LAND FOR SALE T —The undersigned offers for sale the follow ing valuable bodies ot land : TIMEE CHOICE TRACTS OF LAND, containing 160 acres each, situated on the Illinois Central Railroad, in Champaign county, State of Illinois, 8 miles from the city of Urbaila. and ono mile from Rentual Station on said Railroad. Two of the tracts adjoin, and one of them Las a never failing pond of wateruponit The citv of L'rhana contains about 4,00(1 inhabitants. Champaign the greatest wheat growing county in Illinois. ALSO— One-fourth of a tract of land, situated in Broad Top township. Bedford county, contain ing about 45 acres, with all the coal veins of Broad Top running through it. ALSO — 'Three Lots in the town of CoaJmont, Huntingdon county. Jan 26, '66-tf F. C. REAMER. BOOK AGENTS WANTED TO.-soli cit order# for Dr WILLIAM SMITH'S DIC TIONARY OF THE BIBLE. The Only Edition Published In America, Condensed By Dr. Smith's Own Hand. In one large Octavo volume, illus trated with over 125 steel and wood engravings Agents and subscribers see that you get the Genuine Edition By Dr. Smith. The Sjirtugfield Republican says, this edition published by Messrs Burr A Co. is th® geuuine thing. The Congregatiuuatist gays. whoever wishes to get in the cheapest form, the best Dictionary of the Bibl° should bur THIS. Agents are meeting with unparalleled success. We employ no General Agents, and offer extra inducements to Canvassers. Agents will see the advantage of dealing direetly with the PUBLISH ERS. For descriptive circulars with full particu lars and terms, address the Publishers, J B. BURR A CO., Hartford, Conn. may29m6 BEDF( >RD CLASSICAL SCHOOL. Founded by Rev'd John Lvon, 1859. FREDERICK WOODS, PRINCIPAL. A first-class school for the instruction of youth ol both sexes in a classical and English educa tion, including Latin, Greek, French, German, Mathematics and the ordinary English branches. Terms moderate. Students from a distance cun obtain board in town at reasonable rates REFERENCES. Hon. A. King, Jacob Reed, Hon. John G. Hartley, John P. Reed, W m. Hartley, 11. Nicodeuius, 0. E. Shannon, R. B. Latvia, Pres't Broad Top R. K, WH. Watson, M. D. CN. Iliekok, B. F. Harry, M. D. Geo. Blymyer, Sam'l L. Russell, G. D. Shuck, B. F. Meyers, O. Colfelt, John Lutz, Ross Anderson, M. D jaulit'fiSyl Win. Lyon. TJAILEY, FARRELL. & CO., LEAD PIPE. SHEET AND BAB LEAD MAM FACT; UKHS, AT SO Pig Lead. Iron Pipe, Rubber-tiose, Steam Gauges Whistles and Valves, Ir"" and Copper Sinks and Bath Tubs. Steam Pumps, Farm Pumps and Force l'unips. And evcr. description of goods for WATER, GAS & STEAM. NO. 167 SMITHFIELD STREET, Send for A Price List. PITTSBURG, PA. apr24'6By i 4 LLEGHANY MALE AND FE /\ MA LE SEMINARY.—Tho Spring Quarter will open Monday April 6th Students prepared to teach, to enter college, or to engage in business avocations. TERMS moderate. The Principal is prepared to accommodate eight Boarders. For further information, address J IV. HUGHES fcb7m2 Rainsburg, Bedford Co., Pa. mif ERCII A NTS and M ECU A\l