The Cambria freeman. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1867-1938, November 14, 1867, Image 2

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D&NSDUG. PA.,
Tbtrscav : : : Nov. 14, 1807.
Conversations vrlito Great Men.
A custom has bcn gaining gronnd for
ome years which, it seems to u, would
bo "more honored in the breach than the
observance." A correspondent of a city
dally, with an ubundanee of leisure on hit
hands, nets himself down before Home
leading ixjlitician, and having obtained
leave to interrogate him on the moat im
portant ipgocs of the day, ventilates his
opinions in the organ for which he is a
contributor.
This process of ascertaining and pub
Hiking conversations of distinguished men
acquired its growth during the rule of
1 'resident Lincoln, and scarcely a week
passed without some of these persistent
publishers reaching the sanctum Kinctorum
of the President, and obtaining the views
of the great joker for general circulation.
Since his demise the same thing has
been indulged in with regard to President
Johnson, and kept up with wonderful per
tinacity to the present time. More re
cently these itinerant enlighteners of the
public mind are Hitting all over the coun
try, and collecting the opinions of every
Jtadical who has any opinions for the pub
lic eye.
Not long einea Thaddeus Stevens was
called upon, and the At ate of health of the
Father of the Radicals was such that his
sayings had almost the force of death-bed
coaftsMons. The result of tho visit to
the great Amalgamator was the publica
tion of a column of trash that nobody be-
Jicved, interspersed with an occasional fact
. thatIiev--wJioIe world knew as well as
Thad. His rhapscJ jibout negro equali
ty and confiscation, and all that, found no
response in the public mind, iVbUe his as
6rtion that Iladical corruption was ruln
' ing the country and that Governor Geary
was a great failure, was just as well un
derstood without the addition of Lis testi
mony. In like manner Wendell Phillips, Ben.
Butler, and . tuer secondary Radical lights,
have contributed to the general political
gossip of the day. Thus far, however,
while much that was silly and purile got
before the public, there was nothing real
ly offensive to morality and decency.
Hut one of this travelling fraternity
nut ticeda call upon old Hon.' Wade, who
is a .profane old curse, and at a very in
. oppertune time, too on the heels of tht
great - i -O W An J . we
lav old lien. Wade's conversation, with
every oath recorded with due emphasis,
paraded In the papers of th day. The
conversation, without the expletives, would
fill an ordinary newspaper column, but
the oaths make ifnearly one half longer.
Old Hon. reiterates his love for the ne
yo, and swears most lustily that we must
stand by the negro as ho has stood by us,
while he acknowledges that weak-kneed
f oliiicians will go back on the rads. since
the ieac:l n in public sentiment.
He is terribly down on the non-committal
course of, General Grant ; says that he
even he called upon Grant for the very
furpoae of drawing him out,- but that
when he talked politics Grant talked horse,
and therefore he considered U, S. a better
horseman than politician. He winds up
n lorg rigmartie by .attacking, without
gloves, Mrs. Lincoln, 'alleging that she par
Joined largely Tram "tho White House, and
lhat, from the multitude of boxes which
he removed clandestinely from the Pres
idential mansion, he gloried in the belief
that the was going to open a tavern in the
West.
Taking the whole conversation, it is
but charitable to the gentleman from Ohio
to suppose that it was an after dinner
conversation, and that the distinguished
fientloman was (to use a Hibernicism,)
oUr his accustomed post prandial pota
lions.
Hut we did not intend, in the outset, so
much to retail these "sayings" as to pro
test against the practice, and to hope that
if we must have tkem, we shall hereafter
get them clear of profanity and obscenity.
Our Enormous) Taxes.
It has been demonstrated beyond a
t doubt, by the most accurate statistics,
that no peopJa upon the face of the earth
are burdened to tie same extent by taxa
lien as are the people pf the United States
at the present time, notwithstanding the
fact that our country enjoys the blessings
of peace throughout its entire borders.
The taxes levied and collected by the
general government alone, during the year
1866, reached the enormous sum of five
hundred and sixty million dollars. Add
to this amount the State, county, asd
other taxes to which we are subject, and
it is fair to estimate tLat not less than one
thousand million dollars are annually taken
from tho pockets of the tax-payers to
maintain the miserable boon of a bad gov
ei ninontvith-which tho nation is unfor
tunately cursed in our day andencratlon
C Everything : we eat, drink and wear:
wjererytbin required hj tWjaily wants of
national government, while the State and
municipal governments have to be main
tained at a sacrifice of treasure never be
fore known, perhaps, in the history of so
ciety. Was this immense outlay necessa
ry to the legitimate purposes of a popular
system of government, it would not be felt
to the same extent as an incubus upon the
energies and incomes of a submissive peo
ple, but when we pre a great portion of
the revenue squandered for no other pur
pose than to maintain the ascendancy of a
party which has outraged every principle
of free government, and still seeks to crush
out the last vestige of liberty and rear in
its stead negro supremacy and Congres
sional despotism, it is little wonder indeed
that the people cry out against the oner
ous burdeni that have been foreed upon
them.
Hut the sum totals given above do not
present the worst aspect of the case. As
the New York Jlerald justly remarks, the
figures show only what was paid in, only
what found its way to the government
coffers, and that may have been the small
er part of what was taken from the people.
Tax-gatherers with us are corrupt beyond
all possible precedent Popular opinion
hardly makes the distinction between a
revenue officer and a thief. Stealing in
place is so common, so general, it is so
much a recngnized fact that this class of
functionary seeks position only to acquire
a sudden fortune, that no one of them any
longer feels called upon to deny it through
any suppesed necessity to seem honest.
From remote times the tax-gatherer was
a scoundrel, publicans were robbers and
the friends of robbers, and the Christian
text classes "the publican and the tax
gatherer" as one in repute and perform
ance ; and those old fellows stole a mcxs
ure of cummin, may be, or a skin of wine,
Perhaps some fellow 'of unusual boldness
here and there may have taken a talent
of silver. What pigmies of plunder!
Hundreds -of thousands of dollars make
the small dust in the balance of our reve
nue collectors, and a place is hardly worth
the intrigues by which it is gained if it
docs not promise a round million above all
contingencies for a term.
REL.IQUES.
We have on our table before us a batch
of ancient papers which has been handed
us by a friend. They show how tilings
were done "forty years ago," and possess
interest to the politician and the literaleur.
First in' order is the "United States
Telegraph," with its motto "Power is al
ways stealing from the many to the few,"
by Duff Green, dated Washington ity,
Dec 2G. 1827. Ic was a daily paper,
full of political matter and "nothing else,"
bristling up for the campaign of 1828, and
ventilating very freely tho alleged "bargain
and sale" between John Quincy Adams
and Henry Clay. Another number of the
same paper contains an article of more
than a page, abusive of Daniel Webster.
Then we have the "Washington Ga
zette," of Feb. 27, 1824, a Federal organ,
and bitterly hostile to the claims of Gen.
Jackson to tho Presidency. It .argues
strongly against the danger of entrusting
the civil administration of our government
to a "military chieftain."
Next is John Hians "Democratic Prcs,"
published in Philadelphia, bearing date
January 4th, 1828. It is anti-Jackson
and very spicy in its editorials, evincing
tLfi biting sarcasm characteristic of its
editor.
And lastly, :be "Bedford Gazette" of
the same date, aad about half the size
it has since attained uade? PUf friend My
ers. It was published by Charles Mc
DowelLT Its contents are mora furcat
ing locally than any of the others. 2
gives our Legislative proceedings John
Mathews representing Cambria county.
It contains tho Carrier's New Year's
Address about as bad poetry as we have
ever seen. The sheet before us is entirely
guiltless of editorial.
So much for the "light of other days."
Romance ix Rka.l Lifb. During the
ealy part of the present week a young
married couple, more blessed with honesty
and industry than with worldly wealth',
left Chicago to seek employment and for
tune in the far West. On arriving in this
city their small capital was stolen from
them by some graceless scamp, and they
were compelled to obtain employment at
once. The wife obtained a situation as
dininpj-room servant at the Pacific House,
and the husband as porter at one of our
wholesale establishments. On Wednes
day last an elderly gentleman arrived here
from Montana, and took quarters at the
Pacific At dinner he was waited en by.
the-young wife, and recognized in her a
daughter from whom he had been sepa
rated for many years, without knowledge
even of her existence. 'Tho greeting be
tween parent and child was very atfect
ing, and caused considerable excitement
in the dining hall. The best part of the
stery is that the father, who had started
for Montana in straitened circumstances.
A . I A
ruiumeu wm a most formidable fortune,
ne started East last night with his daugh
ter and son-in-law, promising them that
thy should fully share in his good for
tune. SL Joseph (Mo.) Herald.
No oEFiciAL returns have yet been re
ceived from the elections last week, but
enough is know to show that -the Demo
crats have gained immensely everywhere.
The' majority in New York will be about
, HEWS Or THE WEEK.
A New Orleans widow, on the sunny
side of forty, has just taken to herself an
eighth husband. -
Horace Greeley says, in his charac
teristically mild way, that Thurlow Weed
is "an eminent veteran liar."
A dead child, with one head and
two faces, one front and rear, with but
one body and four legs, is on exhibition
at Albany.
A man named Michael Conlin is now
being tried for cow-stealing in Chicago.
The theft of thirteen cows has been proved
against him.
The Kads. used to call Sambo "a
man and a brother ;" recent experience
has made them conclude that he is a
"man and a bother."
One McNeeley ran against time at
Terre Haute, Ind., on the first inst. He
made three miles in 17 minutes and 37
seconds, winning fifty dollars.
Virginia has nine and a half millions
acres of improved and eleven and a quar
ter millions acres of unimproved lands.
Plenty of room for improvement BtilL
Lieutenant Husk irk, of Monroe coun
ty, Indiana, is a frail specimen of humani
ty, standing six feet ten in his stocking
feet and weighing four hundred pounds
gross.
An awful boiler explosion took place
in Pittsburgh, on Friday morning, at
Messrs. JJeese, Graff & Dale's mill, by
which twenty men were killed and a large
number severely injured.
The oil refinery of Messrs. McKeown
fe Bro.'s, at Pittsburg, was consumed bv
fire on Wednesday Jnight One of the
employees of the establishment perished
in the flames. Loss, $50,000.
A couple from the country put up at
the Bay State House, in Worcester, Mass ,
on Saturday, and upon going to bed blew
out the gas-jet. They were found insen
sible in the morning and their lives were
caved with difficulty.
A gentleman in New York hai in
vented an instrument by which counter
feits, however well executed, can be readi
ly detected. If two bonds or notes be
printed from different plates, the fact is
immediately made apparent.
An exchange says that when George
Francis Train was in Australia, he sent
his wife home so that their coming child
might be born in the United States and
be eligible to the Presidency. The child
vras born and proved to be a girl.
The word "Tariff comes from the
old Moorish fot tress of Tarifa, on a pro
montory at the Straits of Gibraltar. The
Moors occupying this fortress exacted a
duty on all merchandise coming in or
going out of the Mediterranean Sea.
Ned Buntline, otherwise E. Z. C.
Judson, is alive, and in a letter to a
Nashville paper denies ever having had
any connection whatever with the pretty
Creole girl whose death as a pauper has
been so extensively noticed y the South
ern papers.
A person in Southern Ohio fell into
a trance, was buried in a vault, and 6tayed
there two days, when a bright idea struck
J la' kicked the lid off and got out.
The neighbors shot at him for a ghost,
and through much tribulation he finally
got back to his own house.
In three of the States which held
elections on Tuesday, United States Sena
tors are to be chosen at the approaching
sessions of their Legislatures, In Wis
consin, a successor to Mr. Doolittle; in
New York, a successor to Mr. Mergan,
and in Maryland to Kcverdy Johnson.
The government has ordered head
board to be pat at the graves of the con
spirators who are buried in the arsenal
grounds for the purpose of identification.
The request of their friends for the disin
termeot of the bodies, in order to "give
them honorable burial, has been declined.
In the case of Rev. D. H. Murphy,
arrested in St. Louis on the charge of offi
ciating as a minister of the Gospel with
out first having taken the infamous oath
of bo called loyalty, the Supreme Court
decided the test oath to be null and void
and accordingly ordered the discharge of
tne prisoner.
"Bill Arp," the good Union man, so
called, is tho Mayor of Rome, Geergia.
Mayor-Charles H. Smith is a grave, dig
nified gentleman, and withal a Presbyte
rian elder. A stranger would never take
him for the author of the amusing let
ters which have given him a world-wide
'rotation,
Xliddlebury, Summit county, Ohio, is
the BannC Democratic township in Ohio,
this year, hwr'no juven the largest per
centage of increv rotes on the ris,ht
side. The Democrat'" State Committee
awarded the township tht.' $200 silk ban
ner. The township gave but xOUT Demo
cratic votes in I860, and twenty in" 1867,
being an increase of four hundred per ent
a a . .
ii. wooaaawiog tournament came ot
at Lafayette, Indiana, a few days ago,
during which thirty-six cords of wood
were sawed for the poor by four contest
ing parties of nine each. A large crowd
with bands of music, attended the contest,
and a largo sum of money was realized in
contributions, admission fees, and from
the sale of saws and bucks, at the com
pletion of the contest.
A letter received in Baltimore from
the Dry Tortugas states that the soldiers
at that post have unanimously signed a
petition to the government for the release
of Dr. Mudd, in consequence of his great
exertions in attending the yellow fever
cases. The letter states that Dr. Mudd
deserves the greatest credit for what he
has done, and that every soldier on the
Key has the greatest confidence injhim as
a physician.
Tlie Commissioner of the Land Office
is in receipt of a letter from A. W. Att
wood, Esq., of London, England, makin"
inquiries relative to obtaining a quantity
of land for the settlement of fifty thousand
emigrants, whom it is contemplated send
ing to the United States. The Commis
sioner has replied referring to the great
body of unoccupied lands west of the
Mississippi, and the facility for obtaining
title to the same, onder the provisions of
the pre-emption and homestead law, .'and
commuaicating to the applicant full in
structions'dn the points of enquiry pre
'Republicans who are . scolding at
"heavy taxes" should remember that the
way to lighten them is to restore- the
Southern States to their proper condition,
so that their industry may help us at the
North. - There is every prospect of a hard
winter for Northern mechanics ; but it
might have been a profitable one, if the
Radicals had not destroyed our Southern
market. Hut taxes will be just as heavy
as if the times were good. ;
The Pittsburgh Cltronkle asserts that
there is a lady named Mrs. Hughes now
lying at the Homoeopathic Hospital, on
Second street, helpless, and almost hope
less, who claims to trace her misfortunes
to the terrible work of the modern Borgia,
Martha Grinder,' who expiated her crimes
on the scaffold, two years ago. She is
utterly prostrated at present with " a ner
vous complaint, which she says is the ef
fects of poison administered to her by
Mrs. Grinder.
Mrs. Wealthy Whipple, relict of
Marmaduke Whipple, who was a Revo
lutionary soldier, is probably the oldest
widow now living. Her maiden name
was also Wbipplea sister to the late
Barnabas Whipple, of Albany. Sbo is
also a relative to Wm Whipple, one of
the signers of the Declaration of Indepen
dence. This venerable lady is a resident
of Union Village, Washington county, Pa. f
where she has resided the past eighty
years. Her age is 104. She enjoys ex
cellent health, and is quite active. She
draws from the Government the yearly
pension of $96. She ought to have 060
at least. Maybe her Christian name
keeps her from getting more,
Extraordinary Bank Robbert. For
some time past Messrs. Pettis & Ingalls, of
Tremont, Tazewell ccunty, have been do
ing a banking business, and have become
the depositories of the surrounding business
men and farmers. They had established
themselves in a snug banking house with
a fire-proof vault, and deemed that they
were safe from the element or burglars.
Within the vault was a large safe, and
within that a steel burg'I.ir-proof case
weighing four or five hundred pounds,
which it was deemed impossible jor any
one to break into. -
On Friday morning last, an early riser
was passing by the bank and noticed the
door standing ajar, an indubitable evidence
that a burglary had been committed. The
proprietors of the establishment were no
tified, and on their arrival at the scene of
action, an examination was made, and
it was found that the outside door of the
building had been broken open, the door
of the vault was cut through, the safe
blown to pieces and the steel case carried
away entirely. So far as known, all of
this work had been done without alarming
any one: It is probable that the burglars
arranged their powder in the safe and
closed the door of the vault before they
ignited it, thus stifling the noiso made by
the explosion.
Tho safe contained from one hundred
to one hundred and fifty thousand dollars
in bonds, notes and cash. The bonds be
longed principally tc people in moderate
circumstances, and were in the nature -of
special deposits, so Messrs. Pettis & Ingalls
will not be responsible for them. The
amount of money in the safe belonging to
the owners was not large, as they had
fortunately made remittances before the
burglary was committed, and the greater
portion of the loss was in bonds, of varieus
kinds.
The services of the Peoria detectives
have been, engaged, a despatch sent to
Chicago to get assistance from there to
ferret out the matter, and word passed
along the telegraph hnes. Up to yester
day afternoon no clue had been obtained
to the perpetrators of tho deed, though
some arrests had been made on suspi
cion. The general impression is that the
work vvas done by some one who was not
an entire stranger to the premises. Peo
ria Democrat, Nov. 3,
A Hastt Marriage. Improbable as
xt may seem to some, the statement we
are about to make is absolutely true. Tho
incident occurred in Juniata comity, only
a few weeks ago. A rather good-looking
stranger come into the neighborhood, ped
dling spectacles. Arriving at the house
of Mr. -Smith we shall call him, for
short,) he exhibited his stock to the old
lady. She tried several, and finally one
suited her exactly, but she had "no
money to buy with." Peddler pressed
her to buy. She reiterated the fact that
she had no money, but jokingly remarked
"I'll trade one of my daughters for a pair
of spectacles." Upon this the eldest of
the girls spoke up" You needn't trade
me, mother, for I won't havo him."
Thereupon the peddler turned to the
younger and said, "Well, will you have
me I" The answer was promptly "Yes I"
Accordingly the spectacles were handed
oyer, and arrangements at once made
for th wedding. That night the hap
py! paiV (who had never seen each other
before that Jay) were united in the holy
bands of matrimony" by Esquire L. A
short honeymoon of three days passed
pleasantly enough, the peddler going out
on a trading expedition each jnoruing and
returning faithfully in the evening. All
seemed delighted, the old folks as well as
the young, the new-made husband being
exceedingly amiable and apparently a per
fect gentleman. One or two . nights he
absented himself, but made satisfactory
explanation of the circumstance, and be
sides made additional amends by present
ing his wife with a sum of money , suffi
cient to buy a new dress and pair of shoes,
both which she very much needed. An
other night the family roof covered the gay
spectacles man, but that was the last
He took his departure next morning as
usual, but failed to 'return at even, and,
(to make a long story short,) has never
been seen by the interested parties since.
Who he is or where he come from are
alike mysteries, and as for the name he
went by whilst making his interesting so
journ in Lost" Creek Valley, that was
probably assumed for the occasion,' and
will hardly help to discover whither he
has gone. Letcistown Democrat.
JunGE Siiarswood's actual majority
tOJUIlMCATIOS.
Mr, Editor As a friend I wish you
to insert what I am about to write, 'as it
may be the means of relieving some poor
suffering creature of a painful and distress
ing affliction, such as the subject of these
lines was afflicted with. While in the
army I became acquainted with a young
gentleman whose kindness and aid during
a spell of sickness, served as a great pro
moter of attachment for him who thus
kindly cared for mo, though himself
wounded at the same time. Years rolled
on, the war ended, and we both returned
home to follow the bent of our inclinations.
And just here permit me to say that I was
glad to learn that he had concluded to
study medicine with our good friend L- r. R.
S. Hunn. Before concluding his studies,
his mother, as kind-hearted a farmer's
wife as one would meet in a day's travel,
became the subject of rheumatic pains,
which in spite of all the medical skill ap
plied, grew worse and worse, until finally
her limbs became much drawn up and
distorted and in an almost hopeles condi
tion she was confined to her bed, enduring
such intense suffering and excrutiating pain
as only those who have been afflicted in
like manner can form any idea of. Fi
nally, the medical course ef the son was
completed, he received his diploma and
located in Carrolltown as a practising
physician. Aad now comes that which I
wish to relate. The son undertook to
cure his mother, and after a short time
the effect of the treatment he adopted
could be seen operating in her favor ; and
as I pen these lines the suffering mother
is able to go about the house and rejoice
that she has been delivered from her ex
cruciating suffering by the skill of her sonf
Dr. James J. Oatman. I have written
these lines without the knowledge of Mr.
Oatman, and have done so for the benefit
of afflicted humanity.
Truly yorus, H, II. S.
DKSrrKATE COHFIJCT WITH A MURDKR-
xii. Some time last spring an old lady
named Elizabeth McDonald was coolly
and deliberately murdered in her own
houso, in Washington Township, Jeffer
son County, Pennsylvania, and robbed of
J.000 in gold and some other money and
valuable?- The crime was committed by
two desperate- villains, one of whem was
arrested soon after, tried, convicted and
hung. Before he w&i hung he said that
W. D. Graves was his partner 4in guilt.
The officers of the law have ever since
been on his track. The other day he was
found in a school house at Cedar Springs,
Michigan. The officer entered, and call
ed on him to surrender, which he seem
ingly did. He laid his pistol down in or
der to iron him, when the man seized it,
and pointed it at the officer. Hie latter
thereupon drew another revolver. . Tha
two remained a moment aiming at eaeh
other, when Graves turned and ran for
the woods. The officer fired several
times, but did not hurt him. He was
finally overtaken, when a bloody and
desperate fight took place. The man
fought with clubs, stones and anything
he could command, and until he was com
pletely covered with blood, and so perfect
ly bruised and cut to pieces by the officer
that he could no longer make a show of
resistance. Finally, when taken and
ironed, he begged the officer to shoot him,
or give him a pistol that he might end his
own life ;J knowing, as he did, that if it
was not ended then it would be in a few
months hence on a scaffold ia Pennsylva
nia. Consumption Curable by Pa. Schesck'h
Medicines. To cure CONSUMPTION the
system must be prepared so that the lungs
will heal. To accomplish this, the liver and
stomach must first be cleansed and an appe
tite created for good wholesome food, which,
by these medicines will be digested properly,
and good healthy blood made ; thus building
up the constitution. SCIIENCK'S MAN
DRAKE PILLS cleanse the stomach of all
bilious or mucuous accumulations ; and, by
using the Sea Weed Tonic in connection,
the appetite is restored.
Schenck's Pulmonic Syrup Is nutrlcous as
well as medicinal, and by using the three
remedies, all impurities are expelled from the
system, and good, wholesome blood made,
which will repel all diseases. If patients
will take these medicines according to direc
tions. Consumption very frequently in its
last stage yields readily to their action.
Take the pills frequently, to cleanse the liver
and stomach. It does not follow that be
cause the bowels are not costive they are
not required, for sometimes in diarrhoea they
are necessary. The stomach must be kept
healthy, and an appetite created to allow
the Pulmonic eyrup to acton the respiratory
organs, properly and allay any irritation.
Then all that is required to perform a per
manent cure is, to prevent taking cold.
Exercise about the rooms as much as possi
ble, eat all the richest food fat meat, game)
and, in fact, anything the appetite craves
but be particular and masticate well. '
ERRORS OF YOUTH.
A gentleman who suffered for years from
Nervous DfihUifr-
all the effects of youthful indiscretion, will
mo o.o ui sunenng numanity, send free
to all who need it, the recipe and directions
for making the simple remedy by which he
was cured. Sufferers wishing to profit by
the advertiser's experience, can do so by
?3?Tv1?i?S;lV.PSrfectconfidenc, J0IIN B
OGDEN. 42 Cedar street N. Y.
In yoBMATioif . Information guaranteed
to Produce a. tn-rnrianf ir.nn,tk r v.:
- . , , feiunbu u uair upon
a bald head or beardless face; also, a recipe
for the removal of Pimples, Blotches, Erup
tions, &c, on the skin, leaving the same
soft, clear and beautiful, can be obtained
without charge by addressing
Auua. i . uuArMAlH, Chemist,
823 Broadway, New York.
FfflHE RISING SUN STOVE POL-I3II.--For
beanty of polish, saving of
labor and cheapness, this preparation ia tru
ly uunvalled. Buy no other. For sale by
June 13, 1867. GEO. HUNTLEY
POCKET KNIVES, TablewTs
JL and Forks. Knnnna Jtr - l. i
cheap for cash at
ia.ii uu oouent
i fnr rush nf nl?A ifTTirm. Q
BAKGAi5TSrCan 1,6 Lad by"Tuyh
your goods for cash at J
Feb. 28. - GEfl I?TTvrrt.v,n
" -.1 x liLI 'S.
12
K ana tor sale v..
I.
v. s.
VARIETY !
STYLE !
BEAUTY !
MORE NEW
s
SUMMER GOODS
JkT
Lowest Prices !
uiuncEil
A NEW AND
EXTENSIVE
STOCK OF
ry (Goods
DRESS GOODS,
CLOTHING,
I
in
NOTIONS, &c,
I DEFY
Competition!
EITIIEU IN
GOODS OR PRICES
and invite the
ATTENTION
or
PURCHASERS
TO XT
SUPERB STOCK
OF
Cheap Goods
V, S,
EBENSBURG,
IB
A
il
BARKER
BOOKSELLERS, STATIONER
AND MOOR DKDEn
MANUFACTURERS OK BLak
rORTB-MONAIS. PAPKl RrS,
AW V LOOKING G LASSFs
Looking Glass and Picture p .
on Land, aud made to or,i. r i i
most complete assortment of Di a wirier"'
and Miscellaneous Pictures. conil?; 1
vyuruinop. i uuuiugB in Ull, steel Mat V
gravings. Tliin and Colored Lithnal ,
Oil Print, Photographs and " HTfl'V
lized match pictures of Laudscai n, U
mestic Scenes and Portraits, ana 5 ron '
fcrent varieties of Card I,htsrapliSi,f
inent men, comic and sentimental (rett""'''
copies of subjects by celebrate! artiu m
have al.no a varied asaortmeiit of r.irir
PRAYER. HYMN and SCHOOL liS
HISTORIES, BIOGRAPHIES Vot
&c Religious PiinU and Embkrus a
variety, aud the largest and moat c(,rr, V
Btock of STATIONERY ever brougWT
count v. 600 new and nri i .... a-'
WALL PAPER, including an SSorte
Potter's celebrated English make, fr
we are Bole agent3 in this W.kL"
Wall Papers are handsomer in
rior in finish, and 24 inche wider lUaT,
uuier riia&.e.-
Ti,vu;...-r ri i
uiiLcujui A.ucusuurg and viciutT-.
ic-sjicuLiuuy uowueu inai we mike BOfr
BINDING and the manufacture of fir ivi
BOOKS a speciality. All work rr',S
executed at moderate rates.-
OO-Store on corner cf CTintcu and Lor
strrete, imme.liaHy opposite FWterH V''
Johnstown, Oct. 24, 1867.-tf. '
J WANT SUPPLIED TTu
THE ONLY CLOTIIWm
II EOCXSDIRG. 1
FALL &, WINTER STOd
rrl . v
inr no neoa no v ci gong to bey bYJ
Ready-Made Clothinj,
a.m uucviiuu iiJ vmy ia store at t
easx oi crawioru-s liotel, a full Iirof
Overcoats, Fkock & Dress Coir
. - r-w S 1
m'SIXESS AXD O THER C OAT!,
Cas-simtre and Doeskin Pantaloon?,
- iqons !ir -every dy wear, Yeats of nil
tylei and textures, and Gn
tW.en's FURBISHING-
GOOD, to suit aM
purchasers, as well as
Trunks. Valises, Carpet-Scke.
Liu'.ieV and Gent's! Traveling Bj;i,
Ac, but he Is prepared to sell L:igJii.
Reasonable Price
a like article! cn b purchased frc i
dealer in this section of the State. Mj
;
STOCK IS UP AND PRICES DOn
. . t I
mj tun nines, us everj person can ii's
tiimselt who ruits mj establ:8bn.:,
OO-Remember that this :s t'ne only wu
first-class Clothing Store h? Ebensiiri, t
m variety, extent and cheirpiress of tlx
will be found unrivalled. EvcrjborTjii
vitad to giva me a call.
oct.17,'67? J. A. HAGrfRE'A Cf
XOTIIER NEW WRIXKL
BOOTS AND SHOES
FOR ALL AGES AXD BOTH SEW
hi addition to his large steckof ttew
Eastern made
SIIOF.S, BUSKINS, GAITF.RS, i
for Ladies7 and Children II wr,
the subscriber Ls jut added to his i
mvnt a lull ami complek- invoke
Boots and Shoes for Men nd Yo.11
which he will not only warrant to be sv
iior to any goods of like character ii'k I
offered in this market, but vastly !'!' 1
every respect than the slop-shop vrij
which the country is Hooded. L'M
that I offer no article for sale wlich !
not guarantee to be rccular custom tr.3
the best material and superior ficis. '1
while 1 uo not pretend to compete :d p
with the dealers in a!icti n "ootls, I i''
inai i can iurnisn iuu i a, miow-
that will give more service fvr Itss f
than any other dealer in this commus;'?
I pledge mvsclf to repair, free of charge :
article that may give way after a tW-
lime ana reasonable usage. r,ver'.
resreftfn'!lv invito tn rill flnr? exalte
stock and learn mv prices.
The subscriber is also prepnretl M
lacrure to order any and all work in f j
ox the very best maUn.il and wotkih-
and at piices as reasonable as like
be obtained anywhere. Fiench C''; l.
rson Calf. Morocco and all ether
Leather constantly on hand.
23?" Store on Main street, next
OrawforiVs Hotol.
jodnd. mom
Ebensburs. Sept. 26, 1861
T OOK OUT FOR 1UK0AI:
ftmM
with all its appurtenances, inclu-li"? i
ing, the engine, patterns, iUks,
all the stock, manufactured ana uj .
tured, consUtir of Threshing
Cooking Stoves, Parlor Stoves.
mined to sell, purchasers'may rely OP
finT ititt rw oil l-i k atawf IllinW
V i .i K anV1 i
in Pennsylvania. Tho public are W
call and judge for themselves.
JOSEPH ZOLNEf?
H
AS just opened, auJ ofiVrs frr
than tliev ran he boU"iu
cliwhere, a splendid lot v?J
eifhtdavatnl twpntv.f.nir hour g!
every description, ACCOKDEO'
n x . ana a vanetv of all anu v.-i
Repairing of Clocks, Watches, f
of Jewelry, done on short ncl!ceinK
reasonable terms. All worK
Call at his shon. Ifich street, err'
School House, Ebonsburg.
I .-v f -
CCD- XK ,,f
Tt ia rrnr.nnnred M. fau't'.- ;,rf
o used it. and it is prei!icteJ ' :,
supersede all other Curtain :"sji0
uso. For sale by GEOl-
Wholesale an J Retail DJ
Juotata Street, oppose U m w- -
Pa Pc 7- t o T- 0 ff
EOLUDAYSBFROj