: . i I 4 r V CAMBHIA -FREEMAN. TiirucDAY. : : : ArrorsT 1.5, 18C7. DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET. . 0S jriXiK OK bhpreme contT : jiox. GEORK smnsnooD, Of Philadelphia. DEMOCRATIC COUNTY TICKET. Fi'R assrmbi.t : Ion. JOHN r. LINTON, Johnstown. for sheriff : JOHN A. 11LA11I, Ebcnsburg. FOR TREASURER : ' JOHN COX, Conemaugh. FOR COMMISSIONER : JOHN A. KENNED 1", Carrolltown. FOR Jl'KT COMillSSIONKR : JOHN BUCK, Carrolltown. FOR rooR HOUSE PI rector :" JOHN D. THOMAS, Ebensburg. FOR AUDITORS : EDW. D. EVANS, Croyle, 3 yenra. JOHN F. ALLEN, Yoder, 1 year. 'for coroner : J. A. HAKKOLD, Johnstown. IEMOCRATIC ADDRESS. We refer the readers of the Freeman to the address of the Democratic State Cen tral Committee to the ''People of Pennsyl vania," to be found in another column. It set3 forth, clearly and distinctly, the is sues of the day, and we trust will bo read by all, and Us facts and arguments deeply pondered. The power to govern themselves is al most imperceptibly but eurely gliding from the sovereign people, and unless the warn ing voice be heeded in time the people may reu'.izc too late the totul loss of their liberty. We urge upon all the reading of this admirable addrcps. Head it, and when you have carefully read and considered it, compare the situation of our country with that of any former period, in peace or war, nnd if that comparison invokes the perfor mance of any duty, let that duty be per formed at whatever hacrifice of former feelings or prejudices. Forget party and think of your country. Think what it was in former years and what it i3 now. .Examine the present condition of the country, and compare it with the history of its palmy day, and then form your own judgment us to where radical policy is tending. Do rnoro than thip. Hand this paper to your neighbor who ia too poor or too careless to take ona himself, Point out the addrccs to him, and if he can't read it, read it to him, and explain it to him. 3 'lace the situation of the country in its true light explain the conduct and the. i.eorieq of radicalism and the result will istify your labor, and your conscience approve the act. Democrats have vthing to appeal to but the sober, ma ' ired judgment of the white citizen, and hena fair opportunity for information is ,'given tliat judgment will not err. , Atrocious ConiIrnry lo remove I lie l'resitlcnt. In the history of the world it has fre quently occurred that nations have been aved from perils that menaced their very existence by some untoward act of perfidy ' and crime on the part of those high in place and in power, which, awakening the peo ple from their lethargy, created a reaction in their mind?, and led to a successful as sertion of those rights winch had been bo much imperilled. A crime of the most appalling character that ever defaced the pnges of history, by which wo were again to be deprived of a President by an act worse than assassination, has juet been exposed to the public vision of the Ameri can people. All will recollect with what horror the assassination of President Lincoln fell up on the American people. It was the first "taking off" by violenco of the chosen head of the American Republic, and the fearful end of the assassin gave hope that the crime would never b3 repeated. But here wo have an attempt, Provi dentially crushed in the bud, to remove his successor, which for the enormity of the crime and the character of the parties concerned in it, throws the Booth tragedy far into the shade-. It will ho borne in mind that in the conspiracy trial of Mrs. Surratt and oth ers, Judg Holt, who was at the head of what was jocularly called the "Bureau of Military Justice," had been most unscru pulous in the means he used to procure a conviction. He had used tho funds with which he was liberally supplied in paying the expenses of tho vilest criminals and outcasts as witnesses, and. it was even brought home that bribery and suborna tion of perjury had been resorted to to se cure a cormction. The means used secured the cud the alleged conspirators were convicted ond executed justly, perhaps, with the exception of Mrs. Surratt. But the perjury of one of these witness es, Sanford Conover, as he was then call ed, (his real name being Charles A. Dun ham,) became so apparent that he was afterward put on trial and convicted, on tho clearest testimony, of perjury, and duly sentenced. Since that conviction he has been an inmate of the prison at Wash ington city. During his incarceration, J. SI, Ashley, a Radical member of Congress from Ohio, paid frequent visits to the cell of Dunham, which were the subject of comment at the time. The almost incredible fact is now apparent that this wretch, Ashley, along with another member of Congress, Ben jamin V. Butler, (the Beast,) made an ar rangement that Dunham was to be par- doned, niton condition that he would furnish Hum witnesses who could be bribed to swear . i, 4 i i , . that Vrebulntt Johnson was a jxtrt to the J assastmation or Lincoln. early aa April last, when Ashley promised to secure this pardon. IIo then gave the convict a full programme of what was to be procured in the way of testimony to accomplish their hellish purposes. This was: 1st. To procure witnesses to prove that Booth was in the habit of visiting MT t e l rri . i P .1 1 ilinsnn V.I I In i-vrrocrrvnl.-nro I passed between mem, (iooth and Mr. Johneon.) od. Ihat the placing of Atze- rott with weapons at the Kirkwood House, where Mr. Johnson boarded, was only a sham. And all this was to be proved by witnesses wlio were m tue conspiracy, tor Butler, one of theso Congressional mur- dercrs, who understood the wdiole plan, had get an act of Congress passed promis ing pardon to all parties concerned in the Assassination who would come forward and testify. This would excuse the new wit nesses from not having testified on the former trial. . c . .... ... uau j in iui.uiv.i, v. i ... . I contract with Ashley and Butler, the wit- nesscs were brought before these worthi es to recite their parts, which they did to . . . , , . , nr entire satisfaction. Ashley promised that when the thing was over "they the mem inai wnen me ming was over -mey should be splendidly rewarded," and also i promised to do great things for them when Mr. Johnson's successor bhould be chosen. But we dwell too lonsr on details. The whole of "this lalse and suborned testimo ny was to be introduced to the Impeach ment Committee, and afterwards on the ncau wcre arawn ainly iiom the con trial of the President before the Senate, to JI busin,Cf!S of rer class- 5 es, through the customs and internal reve- secure his removal from office, and his nue. In 1 SCO, each individual owed two trial and conviction fjr the assassination dollars and six cents of the public debt; of Lincoln. m 1SG7, each owes seventy-nine dollars Not the least revolting part of this dia- anJ My cents thereof. In 18G0, the ex- . ,. , . . . ..i . ii penses of the government were sixty-two bohcal conspiracy ia the fact that Ashley . - -Thr- ti n . 1 J J millions ; m lbbi, the treasury estimates prepared a petition to the President for them at two hundred and twenty-five mil- t!ic pardon of Dunham, which was en- lionf--, imbyK-ndcnt cf interest on the debt, doised by.Ilolt and others, thus seeking j l':ih l:l!J jwodi ojiutce. Pennsylvania's the clemency of the President as the means of securing an instrument to accomplish his own ruin. If it should be argued, in defence of Ashley, that Dunham is unworthy of be lief, the answer is ready that Ashley and Butler have endorsed his character for truth, and they cannot now assail it. But it is unnecessary, even, to believe Dunham, as Ashley's own letters furnish convincing proof of the conspiracy. Tak ing tho whole matter into consideration we may eafely say that the darkest day of the most unhappy country furnishes nothing to exceed the enormity of this attempt. The Surratt Trial. After consum ing fifty-two days in the trial of John II. Surratt for complicity in the murder of President Lincoln, and after every effort on part of the government and the parti san Judge (Fisher), before whom he was arraigned, to secure his conviction, the prisoner has been virtually acquitted by the failure to agree and discharge of the jury on Saturday last. From tho first balloting to the last, throughout the seventy-two hours the jury were deliberating, the vote stood four for conviction and eight for acquittal. This decision will meet the approbation of a vast majority of those who have read the testimony as hon est, fair-minded men, not as political par tisans. Judge Fisher based his charge to the jury upon the doctrine enunciated in the Williamsport platform, that their decision should be in "harmony with the political opinions of a majority of the people," but some of the jury did not so understand their oaths, and hence the re sult. After the discharge of the jury Judge Fisher suspended Joseph II. Bradley, Esq., one of the counsel for the prisoner, from further practice in that Court, for alleged contempt. This announcement created quite a sensation. Mr. Bradley pronounced the statemenUhat he had been guilty of contempt utterly false in every particular, and denied the right of the Judge to dismiss him. Subsequently Mr. Bradley challenged Judge Fisher to mor tal combat, and thus the matter stands at latest accounts. Fisher's conduct is gen erally denounced by the members of the bar. Secretary Stanton Ousted. The Secretary of War having refused to com ply with the President's request to resign, Mr. Johnson notified him on Monday that his further services would bo dispensed with, and requested him to transfer all re cords, books, etc., to General Grant, who has been authorized to act as Secretary ad interim. Gen. Grant informed Mr. Stan ton of his acceptance of tho position, and the late Secretary replied that lie" would submit under protest to superior force. "A good riddance to bad rubbish." Atltlress of the SJemocralic Stale JJoiii:iiilIee. Democratic State Committee Rooms, Clearfield, Pa., Aug. 7, 1867 To the People of Pennsylvania : The Democratic organization, devoted to the maintenance of its immortal prin ciples ; conscious of its duty to them and to the Jiepuuhc ; proud of its years, its triumphs and its heroism in disaster, and remembering that in the face of persecu- uon OI omciai nowns, ot corrupt appli- ances and of successive defeats, its num- , . . ... . , ' 7 "u- hers nave steadily increassd : n".nn nrn- SPIlts io vm. :t , rfl,-j:j;1fr. f, ,ir j J v- i k p-ii3. The Repuplican party has controlled the government for six years, and vc accuse it betore you, because : In the sacred name of Union, it has perpetuated disunion ; In the room of the blessings of peace, it has given us hate, discord and misery : it uas vioiaieu me plainest principles of T..I 1 1 . m- - T tree government, broken the written Con- oniunuu, uuu uui viciuuu OUCUlCUCc IO lie ' . J J lKJ Cfltufw.n nril . .11.1.... 1 1 ! . ., uenesis oi party ; The people are denied the attribute of sovereignty ; the military subverts the ci- v" power; generals remove governors electee by the people, aim a despotism ?- ' . , , I vyuiigicsa .iscumca me rignc io say mat negroes shall vote in Pennsylvania and denies to us the right to regulate our own rule of suffrage ; The negro is, by law, made the enual of ine wnue man in an public places, and authorized to hold office and sit on juries in me apnai ; The destinies often States, and of ten millions of white people therein, are, by congress ana ine military laws, placed under the control ot lour millions of blacks 1 heir reckless cxpeuditure of the public money n lucir conduct oi the overntnent - - c ' in the support and organization of huu Ji'tds of thousands of idle negroes, in the employment of hordes of unnecessary spies and ollicials, and in maintaining military pQwcr oyer lhe 6ubniissive SoJ cndJ Crs and delays the payment of the public gers and delays the payment of the public debt of twenty-seven hundred millions dol- lars to which the public faith is nledrrcd : Their gross mismanagement causes tax ation to bear heavily upon the people. In 18G0, one dollar and sixty cents per head were paid by the people through the customs; in 18GG, fourteen dollars per s'i-iv'. ilfMir rnVl:.o t ...., 1 1 i and tcventy-iive millions, her own debt thirty-five and a half millions, and her city and county indebtedness will swell the total to four hundred millions. Twenty-five millions annually come fiom your earnings to pay the interest thereon. In lbCO, your State government co-t you four hundred and two thousand dollars, whilst in 18GG, it cost ycu six hundred and sixty-nine thousand dollars ; The pressure of these exhausiing bur thens and the suicidal policy of Congress, have caused uncertainty and depression to pervade all branches of trade and manu factures ; Our commcrco is suffering, the enter prise our people is repressed and busi ness interests languish ; The revenues of the government are less than its interest and expenses, and the financial officer foreshadows an increase of the public debt ; They plot the destruction of our form of government, by destroying the inde pendence of the Executive, attempting to subordinate the judiciary and by concen trating all power in the legislative branch ; Bobbing the people of sovereign power, they have united it with the government in Congress, and dealt a fatal blow at our liberties, for tyranny may be as absolute in a number of persons as in an individual. Unblushing corruption stalks through every department of the government unu"er their control. ' For these and kindred wrongs we arraign them, and as the representative of antag onism toe:ich of them, we present to you our candidate for the Supreme Bench : Gkokok Sharswoou a Pennsylva nian, a man of puro morals, a profound thinker, a sound laywer and a jurist of national reputation. It has been the rule of his official conduct to yield obedience to written law, and neither party necessi ty nor corrupting influence can sway him from his duty to fearlessly proclaim it. His opponent, Henry W. Williams, is a native of New England and is compara tively unknown to our people. Prior to his nomination he was said to bo a wor thy gentleman and an able lawyer. He has accepted a nomination upon a platform by which he is pledged "to tlace the Supreme Court in harmony with the rOUTICAI. opinions of the majority ok the people." This destroys his inde pendence and "hold tho Judge accounta ble to a political party for his construction "of the law, and inevitably tempts him to "sacrifice his integrity; to become the "meanest of all creatures a sworn min ister of justice obedient to the dictates of "politicians," The independent and fearless judge pro tects your life, your liborty and your prop erty. With which of these men will you trust them ? Democrats of Pennsylvania : We call upon you to organize in every section of the State. Act for yourselves promptly and vigorously. Wait for no man. Tho government you love is in danger, its great cardinal doctrines are daily attacked, and "treason in peace may prove more deadly than treason in war." Individual exertion is the duty of every man. Canvass your school districts. Form clubs. Circulate your local papers. Teach the people. Counsel with the aged! Encourage the timid. Arouse the t?ug gish. Stop talking and go to work. The enemy are vulnerable at every point ; at tack them for their misdeeds. Your i'iuxcifles aue eternal axp must rrsEVAiL. By order of the Democratic State Com mittee. WILLIAM A. WALLACE, Chairman. KEW3 OF THE WEEK. A Boston boot-black has a bank ac count of 10,000. A well-dressed female was seen a few days ago walking along the principal street ot a est em village, rigged out in the latest O 3 DO fashions, but barefoot. Horace" Strickland, charged with committing a murderous assault upon his aged father, was admitted to bail in Cleve land last week, his father going as his bond. There is a rumor from the South (we do not vouch for its truth) that Gen. Sheridan contemplates the removal of Pre sident Johnson, on the ground that he is "an impediment" to reconstruction ! Jerry O'Brien, who, about eighteen months ago, murdered his mistress, Kate Smith, was executed in the Tooms, New York, on Friday last. He fully realized his position, and was deeply repentant. An Indiana paper tells of a case lately tried in one of the courts there, where, it was found, after proceedings had been begun, that the defendant had been sworn as a juror, and was actually sitting in his own case. Colonel II. A. Gil more. Postmaster of Chicago, went out on the lake in a small boat on Friday evening, and has not been seen since. It is supposed he is drowned, as his boat was last night found on the beach below the city. A Frenchman named Moreau was buried by mistake in Brooklyn last week. He was kept in a vault three days before the fact was discovered, when he was res cued by his brother, in such a feeble state that it is believed he cannot recover. Henry Gerhe, of Cincinnati, put his head out of a car window for a breath of fresh air near that city, Sunday even ing, when the train was passing over a bridge, the timbers of which struck his head, severing it instantly from his body. The nickel mines from which the Government obtains the material for small metallic currency, are located near Lan caster, Pa. The furnace yields about44, 000 lbs. of metal every twenty-four hours, and is the only orolitable one in the coun try. A Brooklynite tells a queer story about the lovely wife and daughter of a milkman, who took daily baths in the lacteal fluid to improve their complexions. The miik was then watered and sold for fifteen cents a quart. It didn't need any doctoring to to give it "body' after that. Salmon P. Chae, once Secretary of Treasury, and now Chief Justice, has a fortune of $700,000. Boger B. Taney, once Secretary of the Treasury, and then Chief Justice, died so poor that his daugh tcr and widow are obliged to work for their living. Chase came from New England 1 The Ilarrisburg Paliiot and Union says: "Judge Woodward has nut declined a nomination to Congress." We are pleased to hear it and hope for his nomi nation, which is equivalent to an election. The Democracy of his district would hon or themselves and the State by sending such a representative. . St nator Sherman said, in the Senate, that "no man with any sense cf honor would hold a position as Cabinet officer after his chief desired his removal, and therefore tho slightest intimation cn the part of the President would always secure the resignation of a Cabinet officer." Sherman forgot there wa3 a Stanton wdicn he uttered the above. J udge Williams, of Connecticut, nom inated by the Badicals for the Supreme Bench of Pennsylvania, endorses the Wil liamsport platform, which demands that the Supreme Court shall be placed "in harmony with the majority of the people." How can any one who desires to have a fearless and independaut judiciary vote for such a candidate? A young ludy, one of the employees of the Currency Bureau of the Treasury Department, was, says the Washington Star, on Saturday morning attacked with spasms or fits, and continued in a state of delirium throughout the entire day. The spasms were induced, it is stated, by tight, lacing, which has reduced the dimensions of her naturally small waist to the size of an hour-glass. The Democrats have swept Kentucky by G0,000 majority. The "Radicals," so-called, and the "Sore Head" Democrats are no w here. The Governor elect, Hon. John L. Helm, is a high-minded and popular gentleman, who will confer honor on the old Commonwealth. Kentucky is governed by white men, Tennessee by nig gers, and mark, the difference. A terrible railroad casualt' occurred at Bray Head, Wicklow county, Ireland, on the 9th inst., The express train from Dublin for Wicklow, when at the above named locality, ran olF the track and eight passenger coaches were precipitated into the sea. The railroad at that point runs along the summit of a high bluff. Thirty persons were killed outright. Only one person in the w hole train, a man named Morris, escaped alive. Col. Miguel Lopez, the traitor, who betrayed the Emperor Maximilian, recent ly went to Pucbla to visit his wife. His reception was decidedly cold. His wife advanced to meet him; leading their little son by the hand, and addressed him thus : "Sir, here is your son ; we cannot cut him in two, take him. You are a base coward and traitor. You have betrayed your country and your benefactor, From this hour we arc strangers, for I shall this day retire to my family. Go." On Friday morning, about seven o'clock, says the Wheeling lieyister, Mr. William Lose, aged fifty-one years, died very suddenly. He attended work on Wednesday morning in usually good health. A short time since Mr Lose was examining a barrel of potatoes, and in stirring them up he was bitten by a large rat. His arm soon swelled up, and he experienced pain throughout his whole body. On Friday morning he died, and hi3 death can be attributed to no other cause than that of the lite cf tLa rat. The Anderson villi-: Hov.roks. It now turns out, through Republican sour ces, that all of the Andersonville horrors were the result of mature deliberation of Holt and the War Department. Thirty thousand of our fathers, sons and brothers left to die horrible death?, because the authorities at Washington p;iid they were too feeble to be of service in our ranks, and it would cost money to maintain them in hospital, and to have them exchanged man for man with rebels would aid the Southern cause. For one whole year, Re publican papers published cuts descriptive of the prison- pen, hung Wirz for his cruel treatment and denounced the South for its uruiaury, wnen it now turns out by the showing of the highest authority, that the South was anxious to get rid of them and exchange every man. If Stanton and Holt and Butler can live through all this they have charmed lives. Puts. Pat. J udge Fisher, w ho materially assisted the prosecution in the recent trial of John II. Surratt, in his speech to the jury, gave vent to the following Pharisaical excla mation : "In a cau3e involving the life of the prisoner upon the one hand, and the vin dication of the outraged justice of a nation in mourning upon the other, deemed it my duty to cast not an atom in the one scale or the otlicr which might ly ar.y possibility tend to jn'fjudice either side of the isne." Any one who watched tho trial, and saw the extraordinary manner in which Judge Fisher ruled against the prisoner, will be 6orcIy tempted to place the Judge in the same category with the witnesses whose character for truth and veracity was so severely questioned by their neigh bors' testimony. Aye. Terrible Strug cle "with a Sxakf.. A few days since tho wife of Mr. William lucliardson, of Waldo Township, Ohio, missing her little boy, went cut in the gar den and found the little fellow (eighteen months old) literally enveloped in the folds of a monster snake. Her cries did not reach the father, w ho was at work in a neighboring field, and seeing her boy black with strangulation, she heroically seized the snake in her hands and tore it loose. No sooner was it loose, however, than it made for the mother ferociously, and coiled itsolf about her person, attempting to strangle her, as it did the boy. She again sk-zed it and disengaged herself from it and killed it with an" axe. The little child swelled up for several days, but he fully recovered. The snake was what is called the "blue racer," which does not bite, but strangles, and measured ten feoC A CAKD fc'UOM TJIK AMERICAN WATCH COMPANY OF TYALTIZ.kJI, 31 ASS. Tli'.s Company beg leave to inform the public that they commenced operations in 18D0, and their factory now covers four acres of ground, and has cott more than a million dollars, and employs over 700 eperativcs. They produce over 75,00O Watches a j ear, and make and sell not le.-,s than one hail the Watches sold in the United States. The di.TerencG- between their manufacture and the European is briefly thid : European Watches are made almost entirely by hand, and the result is of necssoity a lack of that uniformity which is indispensable to correct time keeping. Both the eye and the hand of the meat skillful operative must vary. But it is a fact that, except Watches of the higher grades. European Watches are the product of the cheapest labor of Switzerland, and tho result is the worthless Ancres, Le pincs and so cidled Patent Levers, which soon cost more in attempted repairs than their original price. Common workmen, boys and women, buy the rough separate parts of these Watches from various factories, polish and put them together, and take them to the nearest watch merchant, who stamps and engraves them with any name or brand that may be ordered. IIU'vV AXIEKICAX WATCHES ARE MADE. The American Waltham Watch is mnde by no such uncertain process, and by no such incompetent workmen. All the Company's operations, from the reception of the raw materials to the completion of the Watch, are carried on under one roof and under one skillful and competent direction. But the great distinguishing feature of their Watches is the fact that their several parts are made by the finest, the most perfect and delicate machinery ever brought to the aid of human industry. Every one of the more than a hundred parts of every watch is made by a machine that infallibly reproduces every suc ceeding part with the most unvarying accu racy. It was only necessary to make one perfect watch of any particular style, and then to adjust the hundred machines neces sary to reproduce every part of that watch, and it follows that every succeeding watch must be like it. The Company respectfully submit their watches on tltcir merite only. They claim to Make a BetUr Article far tHe Money by their improved mechanical processes than can be made under the old-fashioned handi craft system. They manufacture watches of every grade, from a good, low priced and ses, to the finest chronometer; and also dies' watches, in plain gold or the fin "luuiu fuiiu stiver :juntiD'T ca- la- est enameled an.I leweleri cases; but tho indis pensable requisite of all their watches is that they shall "be GOOD TIMEKEEPERS. It should be remembered that, except their single lowest grade named Home Watch Company, Boston," ALL WATCHES made by them. ARE FULLY WARRANTED by a special certificate, and this warrantee is good at all times against the Company or its agents. BOBBINS & A1TLETON, jull8.1m. 1S2 Broadway, Keio York. TO COXSIOII-TIVES. The advertiser, having been restored to health in a few weeks by a very simnlo remedy, after having suffered for several years with a severe lung affection, and that dread disease Consumption U anxious to make known to his fellow-sufferers the means of cure. To all who desire it, he will send a copy of the prescription used (free of charge) with tho directions for preparing and usfn" fhe same, which they will iiud a sure cure the Consumbtion, Asthma, Bronchitis, Coughs, Colds, an.I all Throat and Lun Affections. The object of the advertiser in sending the Prescription is to benefit the afilcted, and spread information which ho conceives to be invaluable, and he hopes UfC,Si! trhi8 rerae. it will wo, uuimug, anu may prove a bless ing. Parf,r.s wiping the prescription, free Sw wmi?' Sit plnse KEVl UT BB-1 I is VARIETY ! STYLE ! BEAUTY ! IVSORE NEW SUMMER GOODS AT Lowest Prices ! A NEW AND EXTENSIVE n h n stocil or Goods MESS GOODS, CLOTHING, IT0TIGNS," &c., I DEFY Competition! EITIIEK IN GOODS OR PRICES and Invite the iTTMTIOX OF PURCHASER S TO MY SUPERB STOCK OF Cheap oods V, S, BMKER, CAMBRIA CO.. PENNA. t.ce :s herely given that tU r,., pecounts iiare be:-n passed fiV0'-:.' Register's Office at ELeusbur irm.i day of September wit : The account of Sarah V utrix of Abraham Myrrij.'i V -T?' - WD, Ctc'd. .Of Jcl cc tow The second accoun t of F. and (Jeciua u Ht late of Clearfield t'.vp.. deo'J. l'u vV- The account of C. 15. Kl i," iv. , ' of Adam Cover, late of J.,lir'.. 7 b , auurrs i f 1 The first and fiml account , e Empfitld, Adm'r t f C.'er"e Y;W of r.lack'ick twp. dec'd. '""'"'Vi:, The account of John GrifVn Edward Grifnn, late of A!h -ghfry tw'JV." The s-ixth and final ao-' -ut ,-f t i'u.'r: i i - . 1 vl ';!. e v. . of Blacklick twp. dee'd. - The tenth and final account r,f j ; . bcrt, adm'r of John D.lert bwr i-' ton,dec'd. ' cl The second accourt of Sij r,. adinr'x ot James Duiicau, late of jj- C??" twp., decrd. " The account of Mrs. Annie IIL.- C . of Casper Iloerle, late cf Jol.r.stewr' "f" The third and final a count ' Lenhart and Daniel W. (I.;ii.tr-,n, '. ''f-;' of Benjamin Lcnkart, late "tf J, i-lT ' The first and final account of PV. phy, guardian of Jane Murphy a"j Murphy, minor children of jlla It,'- late of Kichland twp.. 'ec!. The firht and final account cf n.vV' Sloan. Adni'x of William T. SLan ' EbensLurg, dee'd. ' ' ' The 5: st account cf William T I guardian of the minor children ( f J,",' v hollen, late of White twp , nV-t'.i. The lirj-t and final am nu: ,f i' r- Tones, executor of David J. Evan?."' V: Camtr;a twp., dcct. ' : The first account f Chriv.inr. P V - executor of Isaac Iivixer, h- Twp., c.eu'tj. The fir.-t and final nor I, r.dra'r t;j; '-ur. -t.'o a lhe?, hitcof Blacklick tv,r.f The second end final r;cef:u: KittcdI. adm'r "f J. In E -:, lick twp.. dee'd, of the pw- .:. The partial account of Wi. . tee for the sale of certain r .t -f which Daniel Dimorsd, late of !I died teized. The first account of Emma I'.i of John TVngie, late of Wi'.rJ 2.;. cec'd. The secoud account r f Ge rt- Y,. 7,. adiu'r of llobtrt Davi, late tf dee'd. " The finil account of Wm. II.Tr:..." Levi II. lloraberfr. adm'rs o; J..:. . !ier, late of Johnstowu, dee'd. JAMKS fiRIFFL". n Itefdsters Ofiice, Ebeusbnr;:. A.-.', j.' CHANCE FOR A r.ATlG.: FAP.M SALE. T owned and occupied the : a led in Manner unvn:d;:r. C.tr'r:i four miles si w'h ess-t of EU-!.. Vrr fourth in:h ftvm Samv.e! O'.'hir.-.V: tailing 121 ACEESssd all.uvau-i, for s:le on reasonable terc; find c. merits. Eighty acres vf th a-Nv" cleared, un ier good fence, slid i:i farming condition. Tie )':.!. an sist of a two-story l'LANK 1101: larve tiiAJiL. iJAKN, botn in ;v !! vanon, as wen as all otner neee- buildings. An extensive :ard unit trees and never-htiiir.g sprn .? ' i - lent water are on the l.retr.ivs. V r: icrmation can be ol tamed Iv r:: cation to ' DAXihL (TilAIJ Minister Tp., May SO, 1SC7.-1 VALUABLE FARM FOR SI " The subscriber offers for Bait b situated in Carroll township, Cdir.bn ty, about 2j miles irom CarrolhowTi ! on the road leading to II ine. ar.j Said Farm contains over S2 acr. n. it cleared and under cxh! fen w.'.h a fortabl twosstorv Plank Ilirj.-e Barn thereon cre-cted. There is a hv chard of excellent fruit and several of pure water on the premises nt latter close to the house as will .is a of waier running through t!-c n.id '. land.. This propeity will he and easy terms. For further i: a ' - apply to the undersigned at LiUyV or to ArcmoalJ Smith, on tne f.'.:r u.vS0.-Sm DAVID h- "PRIVATE SALi:. -me t.i -- ber offers at Private Sale two v tracts of TIMBER LAND, situate ir son township. Cambria conutv. arm as the "Lloyd Property." A!if'.': er valuable tracts of LAND,siu;a?e-'' 3 i i . .!.:. .-'Vr1"! "iia Mini o acjrv'Li UMiij " . the "Peusacola Property." FARMS adjoining the bcrong'i of Kif"; one containing about 100 acre?: about 150 acres. The biii!dir-:s gooel repair, with ncver-fai!ir. $tr: water near the houses. Persons wishing to purer. P5tlinr nn mo 1if.i 1 .11 -i n ? or f ff-' for sate. F. A. SHOF.MAKtJ- ap.ll.tf. Att'y at Law, LK-r J OOK OUT FOR rAKr' u Being desirous of retiri " -cess, I offer for sale the ' with all its appurtenances, in:.. ' -,' real and personal property th?rt- ing, the engine, patterns, f.r-.-k-. tnred. Ounsitino- .-f Threshis- ' i.ooKing btoves, Parlor 2iw- l't Castings cf various kinds, -j mined to sell, purchaser s'rr.av re yj. ting any qt all the above liai"," cheaper than they can be had 3:'I,;,:; in Pennsylvania. The public call and judge for themselves. July 4, 1867.-6m. A imiTmrs: vnTlCE. iornn.? Ainlit.ir. flPD-'inteJ . j phans' Court of Cambria eon the distribution of the funds ia.'. John II. Douglass and James i V': ministrators of tho estate c lats, dee'd, hereby gives notice i; -; attend to the duties of said -lTl-':Tt the office of Johnston & Scan; ; burg, on Monday the ?Cth "(v. 1SG7, at 1 o'clock p. persons interested may attciu-- Aug. 8, lS67.-3t. xji xecutoh'S xopci " ters Testauicntiiry l.avn r by the Register of Girr.bna f' ,J.;- undersigned, ou the estate e Buck, late of Carroll tcwn'T: . persons having claims again will please present them rT: catcd for settlement, and t.... . the same will make payment JOHN" FLICK. J Es JOHNTXCX. Cunolitowu, July L 15JT.--- presented to the Orphans' Cuult r 1 connty, for confirmation and H Monday the 2i day of SetJ ?v..Wan. tt ii