t 3 TI'?5T.iY IEIXSEURG, PA, fTnvABVxr, " : : : Re 2G, I8G7. A jiektiso of the Democratic Slate Central CmmUfee will be hold nt the . Iemoeriitic Club l?ooma, Harrisburg, on Tuesday, Jjin. 7, 18G7; nt 7 o'clock p. i. A full attendance is especially desired. Wir.M.t A. Wallace, Chairman. Cen. "WinsxI! Scott Ilancoclt. There is something in jv nam! The i;encr:il order of the hero cf Williams 'urg ic .".So:ning iha command nt Nov Orh'Rfis proves ihr.i we have at least one military commander, who recognises the Constitution as lie paran-.our.t .mv uf the imul, atui who is dit ermine to wield l.is p-wd in Subordination, to its provisions. Ther. Is on roYilary chieftain, who :J1 bwlicvvs tb'i chil pofver superior to the arra .. the niilifury in time of pro found peace : who still regards the writ t Huberts Corpus and trial by jury as the ioiomon biithright of the American peo ple : an 1 who is willing to aecord to wvcrtin Wtu'.es the power to govern themselves. Sacb a loan is worthy of the name of the presiding ofHcer of the immortal jifiy sa, who signed the Declaration of Inde pendence worthy of the prefix of the Hero -A Lundy's Lane and ccrtqscror of Mexico. We do not favor military chieftains for IVoident, nor are we willing to take any thin for Grant-ed as to their political c phiions : but should the Democracy bs thrown upon a military chieftain at all then Gen. Hancock is our man, and all the people will say, Amen. A warm hearted Pennsylvania!!, reared in sight of Independence; Hull, amid the clas-ic fields of Vulley Forge, Brandy wine and Germantown, he could not be s than a true-hearted patriot. ' If the other district commanders would follow in his f jotste p., instead of seeking to enslave the South, the work of reconstruction would be easy. AEGRO ni7L.IL Lntc intelligence frcra the West Indies presents a frightful picture of nero rule "in Hayti, The particulars concerning the a86cination of Montez, remarks the Age, are well calculated to arrest the attention of the friends of Christian civilisation in all parts of the world. After starving him for four days, an ineffectual attempt was made to complete the business by poison. W this.. Suli.ave. the negro President e oi me so-eawetf mpubiic, ordered one ol .' i . . .i . . . . . . ms uwussir.s to Einouier mm, Out tins at tempt also failed, and he was finally stab Ld, ar.il his skull cut to pieces with a ehiel. His body was delivered to his frinls bootless and hatless on boards a 1 conveyed to the cemetery, his friends insisting on burying it without placing it in a Cir?a. Intoxioatiwsr Iiauora were lret'ly distributed to the people to induce tlv m tf cheer for President Salnave. The brother of Montez was captured, and chained to the bloody bed of his murder ed brother I.eon. Slontez's parents have Ueen crazed by his assassination, and have fled t Dominica for fear of the vengeance .-of the negro President.' .Now, as the Kadicsls insist upon Afri ramzij.g tt;n Sutcs of this Uuion, of put ting power in the bauds of the negro race, i it not time fur white raen to pause and ponder upon such facte aa those presented with reference to r.egro rule in Hayti? "What has happened in that island ivill hstppen in this country, if the Radical pol icy is carried cut in the South. Already J nrgroes are demanding power and author- j vtti Mll.nj 1UIN III llJ.lt SUWllOII. Wheu that is denied they rfort to force, nd mirdir8 and outrages are becminor of daily occurrence. This is but the he pinning of a policy which will result in far Miore terrible scenes when the negroes are fully organized under tha lead of desper adoes, both white and black. .Recent events in Hnyti bear strongly upon this quustion of negro domination in the South ern portion of this Republic, snd we hope the facta will be read with attention by every white man in this coun'.ry. Tub overthrow of Radicalism, in 1867, is the title of a lithograph print published by tha Philadelphia News Company, and represents Radicalism in the shape ' of a bydra headed dead duck, slain by the IleFCuIes Popular WtilJ One of the char acters has just heard the Ohio election re furnn, and with tears coursing his cheeks, nd a hand covering bis eyes, he pours fjrlb the lamentation. "No mere ridin in de kcar?, no tuore buaein wid de white folks, O I O ! Ohio !'.' Another Ameri can citizen of African descent tries to eonsole him ; he is sitting on a large trunk Itbtlkd Ficcdmeu's .Bureau," with bas ket aud ambrella by Lis side, exclaiming 'No use cryin' Sam, white man's shook you dis time." The dead duck is on his back, twisting bis tail, and manages to Lep one of his beads erect," while be lucJ hi the noeb of his other bead from tr to'blt'vs tmiictedby the "popular 4 vlK 4 NEWS OP THE WEEK. . A $65 pearl was found in an oypter at Alexandra, .Va., the other day. A son of the martyr," John Brown, was lately placed in an Ohio lunatic asy lum. Two wealthy Ch'wagonna ave gone to law about n lot of four inches front", on a Hreet i Chicayj, -It is repo.t.( (bat the engineer whose carelessness caused the Vermont railroad disaster Aa become insane. Albert Smith, a freedman, has been "ppoiotod by General Pope a Justice of the Koacc in Tuscaloosa county, Alaba ma. A serpre shock of an earthquake was experienced at Uticr. N. Y., and the ad joining country, early on Wednesday morning. A young wife in Northern New York threw her bonnet and fchawl into the river, left a puieidal note for her husband, and eloped with another man. A rubber took $10,000 worth of dia monds from a jeweler's store in Cincinnati, on Wednesday night. The scoundrel was pursued, captured, and nearly ail the.valti ab'.e property recovered. The late.Scth Hinshaw, a noted spiritualist, of Greensboro, Henry county, Ind , had his gravestones engraved and prepared for about twenty years before his death. lie used them as counters in his store. On Saturday night last, Willliara Rogers, of Chattanooga, Tennessee, ac cused his wife of infidelity, which she de nied, whereupon Rogers leveled his revol ver, and' shot her twice, killing her in stantly. ' The Cumberland County Poor House took fire.on Thursday nieht, and was dam aged to. the amount of $2,500. Three persons were burned to death one, an insane man who was chained to the floor, being literally roasted alive. The widow of a former membvr or Congress, rei iiug in Ilallowell, Me., late- ly oianied her hostler. Ho tr-4 i v, and 6he applied for a divorce, whereupon he decamped with 20,000 in bonds, leaving her in destitute circum stances. They have earthquakes at St. Thom as at the rate of 47 in 24 hours ; or about one every 30 minutes ; and in St. John, recently, they had 114 in eight days. For these desirable residences, we believe Mr. Seward wants us to pay 7,500,000 in gold. S. J. Woodman, of Chicago, HI , writes to the New York Farmers' Club, that a barrel or a cask of new sweet ci der, buried so as to be well covered with fresh earth, will turn to vinegar in three or four wec-ks, as good as ever sought affinity with cabbage, pickles, or table sauce. The Pacific States have boen visited with a decidedly unpaciiic storm. Califor nia, Oregon, and Washington Territory have- been afliicted, some stnvl towns have been swept away, and any number of dams carried down stream. It requires tuoia nerve n the part of gold miners to ! lpsc their dams without swearing. A negro boy was arrested at St. Jo seph on the 5th instant for setting fire to the house in which'he was employed as a servant. A reprobate old African told him that he was working for "rebels," and urged him to burn them ont. Ac cepting this Radical teaching, he placed bunng coals on the roof of the kitchen. The Cooper Ironworks at Phillipsburg, N. J., with the mining lands belonging to them, were sold last week for six bun died thousand dollars. One of these mines belonged to William Penn, and the fir?t lot of American iron made from it was landed at Liverpool, England, thirty years before the Declaration of Independ ence, The Coronet's jury, on the bodie3 of the persons that perished by the late tene ment house fire in N. Y., returned a verdict Thursday to the. effect that the fire was originated by Max Miller, and censured the owner of the house for not providing suitable moans of escape from the building. Miller has been committed for trial with out bail. A few days since a boy in Littleton, N. H , pet fire to a stump ou the land of his father, near the village, and, it having burned away, he discovered in the earth, at roots, a small tin can, tightly seal eu', whic.1 was found to con'ain a quantity of counfri d'8 we preserved in oil. It had evidei.''y remained there for some length of lime. The dies were well exe cuted, and for the pwrpos3 of making small American coin. The attempt is again being ratiJiJ to confederate into a single nation the South American Republics on the Pacific slope of the Andes. Peru has taken the initia tive, and has addressed a circular upon the subject to the government of Ghili, Bolivia and Ecuador. These four nations, winch, it is proposed, shall form the new Republi", have 3,900 miles of sea coast, contain G, 8000,000 inhabitants, and cover 1,185,000 square miles of territory. Colonel Parker, the Indian chief on General Grant's staff, who was to lc been married oa Monday last to a belle of Washington city, ha9 turned up. ' He fc-nys he was drugged by a brother Indian, to pre74iot him marrying a white woman. As Colonel 2'urker. is about the color of a new saddle, in view of the future, he had bettvr take a darker ituej aLclen claiming to be of the superior race. It is iiif-lv he would not be drugged under an arrange merit of this kind. A novel wedding took place in Co lumbia, Conn., recently. The bridal par ty was to be married and leave town on the next train. They started for the clergyman's residence, having but little time to spare, and met him on the way: In order that no time might bo wasted, it was proposed to have the marriage cere mony performed then and there right in the middle of the road. No objection be ing made, the minister did the. business, several people meanwhiln arriving as pass ers by on the road, who were accepted as competent witnesses. The married cou ple get ro the cars in ample sasoa to start.jco tboir tour. . ' . The Ajmjola Catastrophe The ter rible railroad catastrophe at Angola, in the western part of this State, turns out to have been even more destructive of life than h.ts been reported. There is now reason to feir that the slaughter will not fall short of sixty. The peionaJ horrops connected with the atiair ar even soore heart-rending than in ordinary railroad ca tastrophes, and the appalling nature of the entire scene is too shocking for the imagi nation, The dead are out of all common proportion to the wounded, and, consider ing the circumstances, it is remarkable that a spark of vitality was found in any of the p:isscngers. The unfortunate vic tims were not only burned to death, but the great .part of them were past all recog nition. Our first report gave the state n&ent that the accident was understood to have arisen from a defect in a rail ; a la ter report says the train struck an iron frog at a switch, and another report says that the disaster was caused by the break ir.g of a wheel, By one or other of these means the car was thrown from the track and precipitated over an adjacent embak ment, with the ghastly results alfoady mentioned. In any event, there is no doubt that there wa culpability, horrible culpability, on the part of the managers and agents of the Lake Shore Railroad. The charred remains of the entire body of murdered victims have, we suppose, been gathered up, and will probably be snt to their families. The surviving friends will forever mourn over their irre parable losses. There will be suffering of many kinds, for many long years to come, in hundreds of hearts, because of the rail way slaughter at Angola. For these things it is out of the power of men to furnish reparation or remedy. But we again add Knottier to the thous and warnings and appeals we have made in times nast in r.-nn- " .:,i. ever-recurr:r.g .'',oaa disasters. We de- I "ana at nrc justice for the culprits, and llic P1'00 tf something like common . precautions against the recurrence of such heart-rending outrages. A. Y. Tunes. A Long Seakch for Relatives bt Two Boys. About fifteen years since, William G. Berry and family, two sons and a daughter, removed from Charles town, Mass., and located in New Ulm, in Minnesota. Here they remained until 1862, the family having increased to three sons and three daughters. It was in the month of October of that year that the hostile Indians of the Sioux tribe com mitted their ravages in that State. One afternoon two boys, eight and eleven years of age, went out in pursuit of a stray cow. When they returned at night they found their father, mother, three sisters and a brother all murdered, and some of them scalped by the Indians. There was no residence very near, and these two children were left to their own resources. They passed one farm house where a whole family were hanging in front. They had heard of Cbarlestown, and wished to reach there, hoping to find the relatives or friends of their parents. These two children commenced their journey, stopping on the way and doing such work as they were able in various towns, and at the end of five years they reached Boston and Charlestown. But no one could they find who had anv knowledge of the family. They stopped a while in Boston, then went to Glouces ter, -where they sought an uncle named It N. Heath. They were told that be resided in Portsmouth. On Tuesday evening they arrived here and appplied for lodgings at the police station. Marshal Johnson heard their story and gave them accomodations, They can find nothing of their uncle here, and are now at the City Farm until some place for them can be secured. The oldest, William Berry, is now 1G, and Joseph is about 13 years of age. They arc intelligent boys. A reference to the records of the times shows that Indian outrages were committed in Minnesota at the time they state. Ports mouth (N. II.) Journal. As Ei-kphaxt Kills his Kekper. The elephant Romeo, known as one, if not the largest in the country, was placed a short time since on a farm in Ilatboro, Montgomery county, Pa., for winter quar ters b' his owner, Mr. Forepauch, and leaving his keeper, Mr. W. S. Williams, in charge. On Wednesday last Mr. Wil liam? went to the place where the elephant was kept, for the purpose of washing the face, tusks and portious of the body of the animal, and while thus engaged Ro meo attacked Mr. Williams, thrusting one of his tusks into his body and treading unon him. The cries of the keener nt- . 1- 1 trarted a number of persons, when the elephant .allowed the wounded man to be removea without opposition. Williams was so dreadt'u'.'v injured that he died in about one hour after being attacked. The elephant seemed to be pcrfeCJ'r docile shortly afterwards, but it was thoi'c'11 proper to confine him with chains, so .as to prevent future accidents. Mr. Wil liams, the deceased, belonged to London, in Canada West, and leaves a wife who was with him at the time of bis death. He had charge of Romeo for four or five years, some fifteen years ago, and did not again assume the duties of keeper until one year ago. If a lettenwriter trom Lima, Peru, is to be believed, there is a region forty leagues from that city, called the valley cf Juaca, where the climate "restores consumptive persons to health as certainly as night4 follows day." No other medi cine is required except the pure air of the valley. Hundreds of persona are said to go to Juaca from all parts of Peru yearly to be cured of this terrible disease ; and although the writer anticipates that medi cal men "will smile at the idea of con sumption being curable," he still avers that every invalid excepting only those in the last stage of the malady returns physically sound after a residence in Juaca of from one to two years. This state ment ought to interest the medical readers and those who tnay be afflicted with con sumption, enough to induce pome inquiry tnto tha trutti or fe'sity of it. In view of the skating season, the following, from Halfs Journal of Health may wave our friends who indulge in the m c- recreation of skating no small amount of discomfort. "Before starting for the ice, bathe your feet in cold water, drv them perfectly, a?l give them a good rubbing wun a crastKtowel, out cn a pairol wool en or heavy cotten strc!;inps, and your feet will remain cortfurtably warm for iliiee or tour hours m trie coldest weather it will be remembered that some wetks aero. William G. Grave wns ars rested in Michigan, as tire accomplice of nase. in the murder ot Mrs. McDonald, in Jefferson county, last February. He has been tried, found guilty of murder in the second degree, and sentenced to eleven j'ears and eight months in the Penitentiary. Am-ericah Waltham Watches. The true value of Machinery applied to Watch making is not that by its use Watches are made rapidly, but that they are made cor rectly, very few people know a Waltham Watch should be superior to any other. In the first place, at Waltham the Watch is re garded as only a machine, to be constructed Iik iny other. machine, on mechanfcal prin ipk. If the watches &Te good it is because the machinery u good. Of course there must be no dt feet in the principle or plan of move ment -no mistake in the sies or shapes of the pieces of which it is composed nothing wsLutirij-nerr properties, and no error in tfceir pot-Uinns. These points ooce thorough ly settled, it rests wholly with the machine ry, constructed with iufinite diversity of form and function expressly for the purpose, to produce the finished pieces. By means of multiplying gaiiges ud microscopes, tests and inspection for the detection of wear in the cutting tools, and for faults and flaws in steel and stone are made Is accompany the work in every stage from beginning to end. As a necessary result, the watch goes togeth er a perfect machine. Every part is found to fit properly in its place. Eveiy pin may be pushed till U pinches, auCl ?Prv Re.rew turned home'. Iustead of teriih and feeble action, the balance, even under the pressure of the lightest mainspring, vibrates with a wide and free motion, and tha brat has the clear ringing sound always characteristic 6f the Waltham Watch. The machine is a timekeeper from the start. Tbis system of watchmaking Is unknown in foreign countries, and is entirely original with the Waltham Company. The Compauy claim that by it they produce watches that cannot be equalled for every quality which makes a watch valuable. Simple in plan aud correct in principle, the movement is not only beautifully finished, substantial, accu rate and cheap, but is uniform in the minu test details, not easily damaged, and when repaired always as good as new. There are different grades of finish in the different va rieties of watches made by the Waltham Gmpany, as there are different sizes and shapes to suit all tastes and means ; bat ev ery Watch that bears the genuine trade-mark of "Waltham" is guarantied to be a good one. and nobody need be afraid to buy it. Evert Watch fully warranted. For sale by all first-class dealers in the United States and British Provinces. For further information address the Agents, BOBBINS & APPLE- TON, 182 Broadway, N. Y. Da. Schekck's Manpbakb Pills. A Substitute for Calomel. These Pills are com posed of various roots, having the power to relax the secretions of the liver as promptly and effectually as blue pill or mercury, and without producing any of those disagreeable or dangerous effects which often follow the Ui,e of the latter; la all bilious disofdfrs these Pills may be used with confidence, as they promote the discharge of vitiated bile, and remove those obstructions from the liver and biliary ducts which are the cause cf bilious affections in general. , Sehenck's Mandrake Pills cure Sick Head ache, and all disorders of the Liver, indica catcd by sallow skin, coated tonpue, costive ness, drowsiness, aud a general feeling of weariness and lassitude, showing that the liver is iu a torpid or obstructed condition. Ia short, these Pills may be used with ad vantage in all cases when a purgative or al terative medicine is required. Please ask for "Dr. Schcnck's Mandrake Pills,' and observe that the two likenesses of the Doctor are on the Government stamp one when in the last stage of GDsuniption and the other in his present health. Sold by all Druggists and dealers. Trice 25 ceots per box. Principal Office, No. 15 North Cth Street, Philadelphia, Pa. General Wholesale Agents : Dermis Barnes & Co., 21 Park Bow. New York; S. S. Hance, 108 Baltimore St., Baltimcre, Md. ; John D. Park, X. E. cor. of Fourth and Walnut St., Cincinnati, Ohio; Walker & Taylor, 131 and 136 Wabash Avenue, Chi cago, 111. ; Collins Brothers, southwest cor ner of Second and Viae Sts., St. Louis, Mo. Usb thb Best: Blades' Eup7inial Lu bricators are a medical preparation in the form of a Lozenge, and are universally con sidered the most pleasant, convenient and ef fectual remedy in use for Hoarseness. Coughs, Colds, Croups, Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis, Diptheria, and all Pulmonary Complaints. They are wabranted to give quicker and more lasting benefit in the above affections than any other remedy. Also to contain no deleterious ingredient, and not to effeud the weakest and roost sensitive Stomach. Blades' Constitution Pills are so called be cause of their peculiar effect upon the Liver, Stomach, Blood and Nervous System. For inactivity of the Liver, for the Stomach in derangement, or Dyspepsia, they will de light the patient with their mild and bene ficial effect, especially if after long continued indigestion and costiveness, they are left with periodical returns of the Sick Headache. Ill case of a severe cold, producing Chills and Fever," you can break it very aoon by using the Pills as per directions with each box. JOHN U. BLADES & CO., augS-Jy Proprietors, Elmira, N. Y. For sale by all Druggists ; 25 cts. per box. To OWSEES OF HojtBES AND CATTLB. Tobias' Derby Condition Powders are war ranted superior to any others, or no pay, for the cure of Distemper,' Wrorm6, Bots, Coughs, Hidebound, Colds, &c, in horses ; and Colds, Coughs, Loss of Milk, Black Tongue, Horn Distemper, $-c., in cattle. They are per fectly safe and innocent; no need of stop ping the working of your animals. They increase the appetite, give a fine coat, cleanse the 6tomach and urinary organs, also in crease the milk of cows. Try them and you will never be without them. Hiram Wood ruff, the celebrated trainer of trotting hor ses, has used them for years, and recom mends them to his friends. Col. Philo. P. Bush, of the Jerome Race Course, Fordbam, N. Y. would not use them uutil he was told of what they were composed, since which he is never without them. lie has over twenty running horses in his charge, and for the last three ears has used no other medicine for them. He has kindly permit ted me to refer anyone to him. Over 1,000 other references can be seen at the depot. Sold by Druggists and Saddlers. Price 25 03'iU bc. Depot. 5G Cortland St.. N. Y. HALL'S VEGETABLE SICILIAN HAIR ITS EFFECT IS MIRACULOUS ! It is a perfect and wonderful article. Cures baldnerttf. Makes hair grow. A bet ter dressing than any "oil" or "pomatum." Softens brash, dry and wiry hair iuto Beau tii'u! fcilkeu Tresses. But, abova all, the great wonder is tht rapidity with which it restores GRAY I1AIR TO ITS OUIGINAL COLOIi. . . ; The whitest and worst looking hair re sumes its youthful beaHty by its use. It does not dye the hair, but strikes at the root and fills it with new life and coloring matter. The first application will da good ; you will see the katdbal colob returning everv day, and BKFORE YOU KNOW IT, the old, gray, discolored appearance of the hair will be gone, giving place to lustrous, shining and basuitiful locks. Ask for Hall's Sicilian Hair Itenewcr ; no other article is at all like it in effect. See that each bottle hA3 our private Gov-, ernment Stamp over the top of the bottle. AVL others are imitations. li. 1 LI ALL & CO., Nashua, N. II., Pro prietors. For sale by all druggists, d.12. To Cossumptiyes. Kkv. EDWARD A. WILSON will send (free of charge) to all whodesire it, the prescription with the direc tions for making and using the simple rem edy by which he was cured of a lung affec tion and that dread disease. Consumption. His only oliect is to benefit the afflicted, and he hopes that every sufferer will try this prescription, as it will cost them nothing and may pi ore a blessing. Please add rests Kev. EDWARD A. WILSON. No.165 S. Second St., Williamsburg, N. Y. ILsli. J. LJoyeJ, Druggist, Ebensburcr. is Agtnt for the sale of the above preparation. r: no it us of youth. un-uiou w.iu puucji'u toi j vara i 1 v l u M?rvous Dc-umty. Premature Decay, and all the effects of youthful indiscretion, will, for the sakw of suffering humanity, send free to all who need it, the recipe and directions fur making the simple remedj' by which he was cured. Sufferers wishing to profit bj the advertiser's experience, can do so by addressing, in porfect confidence, JOHN B OODEN. 42 CbdaT street X. Y. Information. Information guaranteed to produce a luxuriant growth of hair npon a bald head or beardless face; also.' a recipe for the temoval of Pimples, Blotches, Erup tions, &c, on the. fkin, leaving the same soft, clear and beautiful, can be obtained without charge by addressing THOS. F. CHAPMAN, Chemist. 823 Broadway, New York. Yankee Notions and T..ts may be very nice tilings for the children to play with, but Coe's Congh Balsam will cure them of Croup, Coughs and Colds, and should always be on hand ready for immediate use. It is an ex cellent lemedj' and very popular. No. 37 Fifth Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. We have now to announce to oar numer ous patrons and friends the publication of Duff's New System of Book-Keeping SPLENDIDLY PRINTED IN COLOKS by Harpbr & Brothfr.8, New York, Pp. 400. Royal Octavo. 3.75; postage 35 rests. For sale by booksellers. This splendid work includes all late improvements and labor saving forms iu Merchants' & Masltactvueus' liooKS, fully illustrated in six complete sets of Books. Next follow Duflfg National Dank Hooka, Illustrating a fall, set of TWENTY-FIVE BOOKS ; practically recording a series of transactions from the formation of the com pany to tke declaration of the first dividend ; exhibiting new forms of the Receiving and Paying Tellers' Cash Books, Deposit Ledger, &c. These are followed by Duff's Itallraad Accounts, Practically exhibiting the business regarded in thu Sevkw Principal Books in surveying, grading, building and equipment, with op erating disbursements and receipts until the first dividend. The next are Duff's Private Ilanker's Dookn, Fractically illustrating the Private Banker's business iu Ten BtrgixEa Books. Iu this work all useless theories are reject!, and much new and important matter, found in no pre-existing work, is substituted. It is tho first work of the kind published, bearing the recommendation of the Chamber of Com merce of New York. No course of business education given elsewhere will therefore com pare with it in effieiency. The College terms and a full description of the above work, are given in our new 11 Page Double Quarto Circular, mailed free. Address P. DUFF & SON, Pittsburgh, Pt. Dec. 19, 1867. lm. TRBENSBUIIG AND CRESSON HAIL ROAD COM PA NY. Notice is hereby given to the Stockholders of the E. & C. R. R. Co., that the annual election for a President and twelve Directors of said Co. will be held at the office of Uoa. A. A. Bar ker, in the borough of Ebensburg, on the 2.1 Monday, 18th day, of January next, begin ning at the hour of one and closing at four o'clock r. m. D. J. JONES, Sec'y. Ebensburg, Dec. 19, 1867. Lection notice. Notice is hereby given to tk members of the Protection Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Cambria County, that' the annual election rL Board of Drectors will be held at the Office of. the Company, in Ebensburg. on the second Monday (18th day) of January. 1868, between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 2 o'clcck r. u. R. J. LLOYD. Dec. 19. 1867. Soc'y. TRAY" STEER. Came to the premuea.of the ubscriber. In Carroll township, Cambria county, tuma time lat Spring, a BLACK STEER, three years old next Spring. No marks distinguishable The owner is requested to come forward, prove property, pay charges and take him away, otherwise he will be disposed of ac cording to law. JOIlK AGER. Dec. 1, 1867.-3t. , . - J "DENTISTRY. Dr. D. W. Zeig- ler, having opened an office in rooms over R. R. Thomas' Store, ofifere bis prof siotal services to the eitiaeus of Ebeimr, and vicinity. , TecVi tmtracted tc','0t4 vain by use of Kltrous Oxidet1 .he office, , ib,;M""nJ'rfA" IB VARIETY ! STYLE! BEAUTY ! XS7"e MORE NEW SUMMER GOODS AT Lowest Prices ! IVIIG JIST RECEIVED A NEW AND EXTENSIVE itocr or D3ESS GOODS, CLOTH INC, NOTIONS, &c, I DEFY Competition! EITHER is GOODS OR PRICES &&A larite tho ATTENTION or PURCHASERS TO MT SUPERB STOCK OF Cheap Goods V. S. Bi 1,1 1RRER EBENSBURG, CXUBfUA-Gfc. mHk. A Library of Un iverRii tT- TUE NEW AMERICAN CYCLOPEDU . A Popular Dictionary of General v ? ' of General i, . IlllTCT, "VI Vl, GEO. RirLEY AM) niT? . ..... --. a. Dv in all branches of Science 4 r ritlT . ,un meet CO xjiiersunre i "-""i"--"i""w jjagis n each ine leading claims to pBbllc new American Cvrt. . Htl,4 sesses may be thus briefly stated t Ta ... it - a. ii, fcuipaites an other Work cess and ability of the arfil . "e3- Uuited States. 'gtoil, "2. 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Tbc iLJ tion of Andrew llaug rUc.:f keep an Eating House in Carn..tJ ougk, has been filed and will be pres the Judges of our Courts at the f.'1.-. gument Court, on Thursday. J- ir GEO. C. K. ZAHM, Pr0" Ebeusburg. Dee. 19, 1267 J - Si ' STIUYElOT Pkace. Johnstown, Ta. , w coror of Maxktt st--;ti , it ----- cm Willjr j