TIIFjREEIIAN. XBKXSEUJiG, PA., StarEAj, : : : Jan. 30, 168. orn tCOl year. Tin Trecnan this week entera its ssoond year. It boasts the lett subscription list aud more reading matter than any paper u bibbed in the c unty. Dur'mg tire last year we did mere than we promised, and can only premie to do nor bet Soi the future. With tLis we know our readers will be sati.-fiod, for in the language of Eurn, : "II wLojdoes tbe bent he can "iU wlik-a do mair." KEtRl' AND MEXICO. The Alleyhaiuxn ?ays rur rcjrmrks ia re ference to the "f'.Vre," Joan W. Geary, in oounert.ion v;i:h tht Mexican war, is "rc- JhrDAntly repudiated by every Mexican sol- icr in ocr mtdfct." If the amiable editor of that paper was as old as the editor of the Freeman, he would remember the meeting held in the Ebc-EcX-arg Court Ileuse, by the "Cumbria Guards," after their return from the Mexican campaign, in which renolutlecs wera adopted dcLou&c'iBg Gtary for cruelty and cowardice: nd at which meeting the uncle of the editor of the A'Jeghanian, the brave Col. Todd, made a fpcech. KXCLAAD STILI Q1L4KIXG. The Fenian excitement in England is still umibated, and notwithstanding all the ef forts of 4l.fi government to wippres3 those -La'n; jiioT.s of Irish freedom, every day teems to add rwv strength" and vigor to the organ ization. What was only a jigsiy in re sources Kil prestige ptxviouo to the judicial lunrdtflr tf the thrve Finian martyrs, U now iiIury ucvtfcvplujj into si huge iaut that wiil not down at te- bidding of wordy pro clamation;:, or Tefniiu frofn striking a blow when oj pci tuijity effera through fear of un- just ami ba?ty prosc-cnticus. Wc arc eorry f rx-lkve Unit i Vntar.ism can never recced in acccmplLLlEp' libera ion of Jrvlftiiu - . ' at lei ft in-opro wa.f.ire.lut if it can fright cw Athl harrass John Ball ?nlo the duirg of h fi'w einqrjo acts of jiihtico towards Chat dvw'n-trodden country, lis labors and its Wi rfices wKH.'ot have been in vain. God rinxl the day of Ireland rekmptfna from tuglish tyrar.-r.y and .oppression ! T.al.dyt-f reTcOotienWs h bu-y In the tVfnj-t totnry a)to-crrdln?.tt brashes f j1 (he gnv. nrpent. It kas already paod a U'.l, tTrrgh- ou rf itb-brar h9.,repcaiiiu; that portion of th tasurafin which makes the" Tresidect Vrr,nac'3CT Tn-O.i'ef cf U-e Army: and ia fVteni.lr.ed to enforce it -over the l'lesidrnt's rto. if at the Republican Supremo Cuurt, hj a m.-ijoti'y .of its Jud, would dce'ar fhc lvi tinc-ustitativnal, aDd hd Its provi sions trt rttrght. Congress hare therefore ttftT them a bfjl hkh, If passed into a law, wll prevent a majority or that O.-ntt from fteciiiiag Constilurionrd q-rstion3. A plain, man. would word or why this ra jo txdy of Radicals- docs not r.t once abolibh tb otktr departments cf the Government, vai the Eiicuiivc and Jadicial, as well as tb Ig,;.'! ;t:ve branch. Their cbject is qu:;lty apparent, and yet . they are blind KV!h to suppio the j:ecple are Incompe tent to undcrrtand nd take cogrdzacce of their detlrnctive rufcisnrcs. aiic Jr.InjtOTvri Tribune, giocs, r.nl Stfulfng. "A l;idy In FlvriJa had a thonsand sheep fVw r tnihi! ego. Ertry one of thesi has ince Utn stolen, kiI!cU and eaten by ne-groe-." We6rd the abovr. iu the last Ebensburg Frttman. It is a fair ppeclrce a of the Den cr,ric "arjrntuents" of the day. Sapposing the fctaterricnt tt be tine, which it certainly 1? !. we ash, wto wns the masters of the srul antl t-oTi.cs .of these negroes up to 18G3? Wko horj'lxvn their associates si ace ? From Lon have the negroes learned all ttut th know ? Who have been their tMchirs I Democrats or Republicans ? DEilOCKATC ! The "nigger" down South u just hat tle Democrats made him. Botti he aud bis touchers are eaJly in need of a fw copies of the Johustowu Tribune. Our resprctable neighbor, tho Ti fiimc, from which th above Is clipped, t tting 6ancy In Its rew dress, and mast ha "talked to." It electa a paragraph which ha? been jrning tho rounds f the papers without con tntdicticn, aud which found iti way into our columns prerlsely aatdl news exocpting local dws gets there.- Ttue or false, we are not Ita author, and the Tribune Is discngenuous In ctoaticg the Impression thai the parajraph ttm original with us. W had no reason to doubt th truth of the item, or we should not have given place to It; neither has tha IMbune. Nor does it deny it fa ther than to aver that it la not "-rtainly" tree; in othet words, the Trib tint h noi certain that it is true. Indeed, tb ca'ur-cd Freeman would not conlaio all the ntra outrages, comlsting cf murder, r-ibberj , i.rc!ny, xr.d cj ec'.ally rope, which come up to us frotu the South, and r-hich r? l. .B not publiehtd, TQt wishiDg fro make of the Frcentcui a criminal calendar. But the j.ith of tlie Tribune's article is 4hat tho Democrats are responsible for nejro ahep-teuliu, because they were ''the mas .rs of tne soals and bcKlies of these negroes p to 1868." Now, Ibis theory places our 7tvd1car Crieuds in a dilemma. Trviou to th rebcliiou the Radical Ab l:tktiTa? wer krjd in aserticg wL.it the TtUfQrr now. arts : that the slaveholders t the B.jntji trltV.y relectfd the mental and rtroial culture of their slaves. That was tha aurden ol tlr!.T sr.ng. The negrocs"were rot ttujht' to rFjd and- write, but were al-.'T-fvd lOreraain in a state of nataro. They nr '.' ttH.t the Cu;s of revealenl rell iji hcTXeHtl.'a' we'ro n'o better than panu In short, the Radical Bong was, that mental ly and morally these poor negroes, who had. immortal souls to save, were in no better condition than the. "beasts of the field that perish." , And this la the Tribune's theory to-day. And yet "tell it not in Oath, publish it not in the streets of Askalon" the Tribune ud its party are determined to throw the government of tm sovereign States into the bauds of these negroes, who so far have only been educated up to the point of stealing theep. lio matter what party or what men instrup'tt'd these negroes, or failed to instruct the: no matter by whose instruction, or viLt of instruction, the Southern negro is reduced to his present level we ask, and we expect from the Tribune a candid answer: la he fit to govtrn the sovereign States of the b'euth? We don't want the Tribune to Ignore this great practical question. It id no answer to any that theso negroes wero slaves that it is not their fao.lt that they are ignorant and degraded. We can safely admit all this. lNor will it do to say that their masters were traitors. Too many of them were so, and the slaves just as generally participated in the treason. Sut all this id no reply to the question : Aro they qualified to control the destinies of the country ? We ask the 2 Wotne to meet this practical question squarely. With the past we have now nothmg to do. Let tbe past "dead bury its dead." Let na meet and cope with the great issues of the day. In the language of your Radical pott : "Xew occasions teach new duties ; Ancient good becomes uncouth ; He must upwards look and onward. Who would keep abreast of truth." We feel as much true friendship for the negro raco as any Radical. They aro free so may they be and remain forever. They are equal before our Courts and Juries we trust they may be always so. But let us not J ignore our own knowledge of their fitness, or rather their unfitness, and make them the sovereign ru'era of the country. The Indian tribes are not allowed the fran chise, nor are the Chinese. The most iutel- V..., f T- .... I "SCDl iorngner, Aossutn iiimtelt, could not kav acquired the right of suffrage without five years residence and the oath oi twu TC putable citizens that ho was of "good moral character," and "attached to the principles of the Constitution." ; The propensity of the Southern negro to appropriate the property of others to his own use, xs, perhaps, not so much a fault of the negro himself as of Radical teaching. TKey have btcn taught by Radical emh-sa- iiea that thev ato entitled tn t,r timnprtw .f their formt; ma,ters a&a it is not at an stranso that thev should rrnrnn,! r. pria(e it. Under thce circumstances wo do not think that the negro "and his teachers are sadly Sn need of. a few copies of the Johns town Tribune," as that sheet modestly urges, but rather opiue that our Radical contempo raty's teachings would only elevate the standard of crime, so that the poor negro, who is now only guilty of stealing sheep, would becomo a cattle Etealer and horse thief; In which ease our Floridian lady would, mayhap, be a still greater sufferer titan at present. Dl-clin'eof Grant Stock. The wan ing popularity of General Grant w illi the j people, since his recent duplicity in tho oianion imorogno, says Tht Age, is every hour becoming more apparent. A nota ble illustration of this fact lately occurred at a popular theatro in New York. One of the actors introduced into a new piece the old expression of "fighting it out on that line, etc.," and met with a storm of hisses from all parts of the house. A proposition to give "three cheers for An drew Johnson" was received with great upplajuse, and the audience joyfully and promptly assented to the patriotic sugges tion. Those astute politicians in the Bad ical ranks who shouldered the. General on account of his supposed availability, will soon drop him and look out for a new man and better candidate. But if he should run for the Presidency on the negro-suffrage platform, the lludical mill stone around his neck will fink him deejr than plummit ever sounded, and the prophesy of the New York IJcrald, that ho will be worse beaten than General Scott in 1852, will be certainly realizetl. Hon. Norman Williams, one of tho oldest and most prominent citizens of Vermont, and father of Norman Williams, Jr., Esq , of Chicago, and of E. II. WiN liams, Superintendent of the Pennsylvania Central Kailroad, died at his residence at Wroodstock, in that State, on the 12th insf. Mr. Williams graduated from the University of Vermont in 1810. He was the first Secretary of the Vermont Senate, and subsequently, during a period of fifty years, held various offices of trust an4 honor. He was 7G years of ae. Tlie wife of a lager beer dealer in Louisville, on the ISth gave bi'th to four bouncing boys. This is doing pretty well, considering that they have been married only about ft jcar, The happy father has ordered four extra barrels of "tho am ber colored beverage ho likes and vends, and when congratulated by his friends asks them to drink and say nothing more about it, as he "must duke somdimes to know vedJsr ho best glad or as maj ag dcr tuyvel" As tho Radical candidate for the next governorship of Connecticut is run ning chiefly npon n largo fortune accumu lated in the currier trade, a facetious in dividual combines tho would -bo Governor polities and profession by calling him the B'aek-nd-Tan candidate. -Mr. Lincoln appointeel five of the Judges now opon the Bench of the Sn ptame Court, and yet his friends will iiot trul them. This is pay inj. but. little 4 respect to trie memory of the "laUs la'uieut-i-od,f l;cad ifthe Ba.lical par'ty. Tlmt Strange Story, " After republishing the truly strange story we printed a couple of weeks ago the Troy, N. Y. Daily Press publishes the following : . There is a person in this city of the highest resjjectability, whom we will call X for convenience, who has seen this Miss Mrs. Mr. Ellen Edgar Powell Buru ham, and has been in his drug store at Hroadheatl, many times, and was inform ed by reliable parties in Broadhead of this wonderful transformation. Whether she ever became the mother of a child, or whether he has since become the father of a child, X docs not know. X was not told of anything hinting at materially, though the marriage had transpircil nearly a year, when X was informed of the cir cumstances. It is not true that Powell lived with his wife two years. The facts as stated to X, by certain residents of Broadhead, are as follows : When Miss Burnham was married, she went with her husband to Washington. Her father soon received a telegram stating there was something wrong, and calling him to Washington. He and his wife went, and soon returned with their supposed daugh ter, clad in male costume, and she was introduced among the young ladies, (some of whose beds she had innocently shared but a few weeks before) as Mr. Edgar. His father then set him up in the drug business, at Broadhead. The Burnham family is of great respectability, and X describes young Burnham as a very hand some young gentleman, of quiet demean or, growing a light mustache of dark color. He was called an excellent business man. To go farther back ; X was informed that while a child, the supposed girl was much more delighted with the sport of boys than of girls. Strange to say neither the father nor mother had any suspicion cf the true state of affairs, nor were they ever led to suppose she was anything but a female. It is said that a great fondness always existed between this Mr. Burnham and the lady he has since married, when they were girls together, and used frequently to lodge together, ignorant of this severe practical joke of Mother Nature. It is a very sad case, and the parties are to be pitied for " 'circumstances' over which they had no control." Tbe Murder or CupljUu Kclirci' In our last issue there appeared a tele gram from Pottsville, stating that young Albrigbton had divulged the facts relating to the murder of Captain E. Godfrey Kehrer, with the circumstances of whose mysterious disappearance from Ticmonr, several weeks ago, our readers are famil iar. Yesterday we obtained the following additional particulars : One of the part ner?, named Smith, had employed two men who resided at Tamaqua, to put Captain Bthrer out of the way, which they did, and threw his body into one of the ol 1 slopes among the mines, and by fastening heavy weights to it sank it to the bottom, a depth of three hundred feet. Shortly after the disappearance of Capt. K , Smith sent a letter to the assassins, advising them to leave. This letter re mained in the poetollicc, and wag finally to t to the dead letter office, where it was opened, and immediately sent to the police officers of the place where Mr. K. resided. These officials at once charged Albrighton with being connected with the affair, when he divulged the whole matter, but said he knew nothing of it until after Captain B. was missing. The assassins are now in the jail at Buffalo, New York, one of them having in his possession the watch of the murdered man. The other parties implicated are in prison at Pottsville. The mine in which the body was placed is to be pumped dry. in order that the re mains may be recovered. We shall be able to lay before our readers more full and accurate details of this alFair hereaf ter. Fat riot and Union. A Man staks His Wu-k and Thex Ccts His Own Throat. Following are the particulars of a double murder in Warren, Trumbull county, Ohio, on Sun day night, 2Gth instant: On the A. & G. W. evening train up trom Youngstown on Friday evening was a man about thirty years old, named Charles Frcece, formerly a brakeman on the road, but discharged about a week ago. Freece ws a soldier in the late war, but has not borne the best possible reputation for thrift and sobriety since his return from the army. He lived in War ren, and had a wife that belonged to a good family, and is represented as in every way an estimable woman. On the train last evening, Freece told the conductor that he was going to remove from Warren to Youngstown that he ex pected his wife would not want to go, and that he would have trouble about it that if she refused to go, there fwou!d be h 11.' Tho result proved that his threats were not idle. Or. reaching his home, it would appear that Freece, who was much in toxicated oa the train, got into some diffi culty with his wife at once. What the nature of the quarrel was at first is not known, but the result was that Freece stabbed his wife no less than seven times with a knife, and then, probably leaving her for dead, went into the yard in rear of his house and c it his own throat from ear to ear. There he was found,- of course stone dead. Mrs. Freece was still living at last accounts, but no hopes were entertained of her recovery. The horri ble affair created intense excitement in Warren, " The following is going the rounds of the press : "A rule by which counter feit greenbacks or national-bank notes can be detected, hns lately been discover ed, w hich upon thorough trial-, has proved infalliblo. It is this: Divide the last two figures of the number of the bills by four, if one remains the letter on the gen uine will be A. If two remains it ."will be B ; if three remain it will be C-.. For examplo : a note is registered 2,G11 ; di vide forty-one by four, and you will have one remaining. According to the rule, the letter on the note will be A. In case the rule fails, bo certain that the note is coaiiteM-i.it." . Try it. NEWS ITEMS. Radical Equality taxing the labor ing man and exempting the rich bond holder. Two men have agreed to skate one hundred miles on the Hudson river for SIJJOO a side. The wheat crop looks bad in York and Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and Ceci and Harford counties, Maryland. The Sioux and Ceyenne Indians are again becoming very troublesome in the neighborhood of Fort Phil. Kearnoy. As far south as Texas the snow has been unusually heavy. Titus county. Texas, has had an inch and a half of the white dressing. . John Ivane, a small merchant of Chicago, has had his head turned by the news of a fortune left him in England, and was picked op crazy in Newark, N. J. A revolting crime occurred onThurs day, in Milwaukee. A heinous outrage was committed on the person of a home less white girl by an abandoned negro, who is now under arrest. More news has been recived from Dr. Livingstone. lie has been seen alive and well in Central Africa by an Arabian merchant, and all doubts of his existence are now said to be dissipated. C 1 1 . j. oumner ueciares mat "ueiore we stop we will have a stable government." From the number of asses in the Capitol at the present time, we should take that building to be a stable already. Many or the coffins of soldiers, bur ied by contract at St. Louis, have been found filled with sticks and stones. The bodies were doubtless sold by the con tractors for anatomical purposes. The English are terribly afraid of the Fenians. Pilot engines are eent in ad vance of some of the English mail trains in consequence of information that mis chief has been threatened by tbe Brother hood. Mr. John Henry, of Charlotte. Va.. the last survivor save one of the children of Patrick Henry, and owner of the old family seat and burial place of the great orator, died on the 7th instant, in theC72d year of his ago. Six miles from Brunswick, Mo., is a farm of four hundred acres, valued at twelve thousand dollars, having an apple and peach orchard, the fruits of which this season have brought two thousand five hunew?l in cash. When every Court in the country has decided that debts contracted by in dividuals to be paid in gold, may, accorel ing to law, be paid in currency,, there is lio r?ason why the same law should not apply to the Government. At Sparta, Wis?, ''a Mothodist preacher' Bey. T. Youn?, 6t.jJ .vilify-six, has married Mrs. G. Mixjou, aged e ighfy ' three. I uetr united family numbers over one hundred children and grandchildren. This is Mr. Young's fifth wife. ' A letter lias been safely delivered to the person to whom it was addressed in Iowa, which had, besides the usual super scription, these words : "There is a ten dollar bill folded in this letter, and if you want it worse than my mother does, take it." W. H Bunnell, auctioneer in New Orleans, was seized with a congestive chill, and sent for his business partner, Mr. Bailey. ' The latter fell dead of heart disease as he ascended the steps of Bun nell's house, and half an hour later the other expired. The Boston Transcript says : "Seven children under three years of age consti tute the nursery of a lady of Chelsea, who recently gave birth to triplets. Twice previously she had been . blessed with twins. All these babies are reported to be remarkably healthy." -Huge icicles and mountains of solid ice, it is stated, have formed at the foot of Niagara Falls from the constant ac creations of spray, forming a beautiful sight. An ice bridge ha also formed below the Falls and hundreds of people have passed over it, In Ohio, a fruit farmer is planting a mammoth orchard, which will consist of 5,000 apple trees, 10,000, peach tress, 8,000 pear trees, 2,600 cherry trees, 1, 500 Chickasaw plums, G acres of quinces, twenty acres of strawberries, twenty acres of raspberries, eight acres of blackberries, and eigteen acres of grapes. It appears that the late campaign in Kansas in favor of woman's righJs has not been without tangible results. On Wednesday last, Miss Emma Hunt was elected enrolling clerk of tho lower House of the Legislature of that State. This is said to be the first case of the kind on record. The Union Pacific railroad will be completed to the summit of tho Black Hills in a few days. This is the highest point on the road, being an elevation of eight thousand two hundred and eighty feet above the level of the sea. The head quarters of the Union Pacific Kailroad engineer department . are established at Foil Sander.'. The "turning to Rome" of several Anglican sisters, and clergymen in Eng land, recently chronicled, has been follow ed by the profession of tho Koman Cath olic religion by three members of the Irish aristocracy, Lords Douth and Gran are, and the Countess of Portarlin"ton. These events have caused much com ment in religious circles in Great Britain. The Philadelphia Sundcty Transcript, an original Grant paper, in speaking of Gen. Grant, says that he has "forfeited all claim to'respect as a gentleman or confi dence as a soldier," and that "he has suf fered his lust for office to over ride his manhood," and furthermore says, "a can didate who commences his career in deceit will not fail to find shame, if nothing worse in the end." - - A remarkable medical discovery has recently been made in the treatment of deafness by Professor Scott, of the New York Medical University, by which the most apparently hopeless cases have been radically cured. The method consists in introducing atomized . Oxide of Phenyl directly into the tympanum. No unpleas ant. sensations are produced, and a feel ing of clearness seems to follow. A. destitute lather in St. Louis had not enough money to procure a coffin for ins ueacl child, bo, taking the body in his arms, be carried it a long distance to the cemetery, but on arrivinc there dia covered that he had neglected to obtain a burial certificate, and was compelled to retrace his steps and repeat his sad jour ney, carrying ins dead child all the way At Springfield, Massachusetts, i gentleman is said to own a machine which cuts meat and vegetables, sifts flour. kneads bread, works a crater, slices fruit. churns, works butter better than it can be done by hand, grinds and scours knives. It is simple in construction, and has but tour wheels, and yet does neatly every thing in the housekeeping line except scolding the servants and waiting on the table. HALL'S VKETAOLB mum HAIR DISEASES OF THE SCALP PRODUCE GRA.YIIA IR AND BALDNESS ! The use of Hull's Vegetable SICILIAN HAIR REHEWEK ! will restore it to its natural color and nro- uiovo us growin. Our I reatiso on the Hair sent free by mail. R. P. MALL & CO., Nashua, N. H., Prop'ra. To CosrirpTiVES. Rev. EDWARD A. WILSON will send ("free of charEe) to all whodesire it, the prescription with the direc tions rbr making and usine the Bttnnle rem edy by which he was cured of a lung afftc- iion ana inat cireaci disease, Consumption. Bis only object is to benefit the afflicted, and he hopes that every sufferer will try this prescription, as it will ctvt them notkln and mavpiove a hlessinp. Please address Rkv. EDWARD A. WILSON, . No. 165 S. Second St., Williarusburc. N T VyR. J. Lloyd, Draffdst, Ebensbnr fe A,gent for the salo of tho above r repraoo. gIIERIFF-S SALE. By virtue of sundry writs of Vend. Expon. issued out of the Court of Common Tleas of Cam bria county, and to me directed, there will be exposed to Public Sale, at the house of Joseph Cele, in Carrolltown, on Saturday, the 8th day of February next, at 1 o'clock p. sr., the following Real Estate, to wit : All the-right, title and interest cf Josenh Cole, of, in atid to a piece or parcel tf heed situated in Carroll town borough, Cambria county, adjoining lot of Simon Schroth on the south and graveyard on the north, con taining three acres, more or less, now in the occupancy of Joseph Cole. Also, two lota in LampbcIUtown, Cambria county, fronting on Main street and extending back to Ian of Benjamin Wertner. a:lj. land of Rerj. Wertner on the east and south, and John Stoltz on the north : and the other adjoins John Stoltz on the south and Jacob Binder oil the north ; now in the occupancy of Jos. Cole. Ta!.n ia execution and to be sold at the suit of Franci.- T. Rarboricb. JOHN A. BLAIR, Sheriff. Sheriff's Office, Ebensburg, Jan. 23, 1.fi8. A UDITOirS NOTICE. In the --- Cpart of Common Tleris of Cambria County Miller &. Rickettson, for U3e. vs. Joseph Colo ; No. C, E. D. And noT, Dec. 11th, 18G7, James C. Easly appointed Audi tor to distribute tbe niouey in the hands of the Sheriff, arising out of sale on above writ, among the judgment creditors entitled thereto. Extract from the Record. GEO. C. K. ZAHM, ProthV. In pursuance of the above appointment I will attend at tbe office of F. P. Tierner, Esq., in Ebensburg, on Wednesday, the Oth day of February, lbC8, at 2 o'clock r. .vr., where and when interested parties may at tend if they think proper. J. C. EASLY, Auditor. Jan. 16, 1808.-3t. AUDITOR'S NOTICE. In the Or phans' Court of Cambria County. la the matter of the account of II. Klnkcad, Executor of E. J. Stahl, dae'd. And now, 3d Janmary,1868, on motion of F. P. Tir ney, Esq., the Court appoint i. C. Easly to distribute funds in the hands of the Account ant. By the Court. Extract from Record. In pursuance of the above appointment I will attend at the office of F. P. Tierney, Esq., in Ebensburg, on TTidmbsday, thb 6th dat or Fbbecakt, 18C3, at 1 o'clock p. when and where all persons interested may attend if they think proper. J. C. EASLY, Auditor. t Jan. 16, 18e8.-3t. ipAllMERS ATTEND! The n- dersigned offers for sale one of the most desirable Farms in Cambria county, situate in Summerhill township, within two miles of the Pa. R. R. at Wiltnore, containing 200 ACRES, half of which is cleared, with a splendid apple orchard and a good LOG HOUSE and BARN on the premises. Tbe property will be sold together, or in lots to suit purchasers. The teims, which are easy, will be made known by R. L, Johnston, Esq., Ebensburg; and an indiputable title made to the purchaser. JEREMIAII M'GOXIGLE. Jan. 23, lS68.tf. WOTICE is hereby given that the ' following account has been passed and filed In the Register's Office at Ebensburg, and will be presented to the Orphans' Court of Cambria oounty for confirmation and al lowance, on Monday, the 24th day of Feb ruary next, to wit : . The account of Chas. McManamy, guard ian of the minor children of Peter Scanlan, late of Allegheny township, deceased. JAMES GRIFFIN, Register. Register's Office, Ebensburg, Jan. 23, 1868. WOTICE. -t- TUB TTlTJ -To the Creditors of th k Huntingdon. Cambria akd Indi ana Tubxpik Co. By order of the Court of Huntingdon county, 1 ara directed to pay to the creditors of the Huntingdon, Cambria & Indiaua Turnpike Company one per.Cent. on the amount of their claims, with interest added to January 11, 1841. I am prepared to pay said amount on presentation of certi ficates of indebtedness. ' - JOHN LLOYD, Sequestrttor. Ebensburg, Jan. 23, 18C8. . WO DWELLING HOUSES FOR SALE. Two Dwelling Houses in the Borough of Ebensbivrg are offered at Private Sale. They are both in good repair and will be sold on reasonable terms. Pos session given to purchasers on first of April next. For terms axid particulars apply to jan. 23.-3 1. GEO. W. OATMAN. P E T E R S I D E S , WITH IIICIOIAX, 1IUL.TL. Si, CO., WHOLESALE TOBACCO DEALERS, . Ml V Or A MM. 1 1 U IV ATA MM Mi m 9 Jan. 22. 15167. P H .t.AIKl.PllIA. f. 'J VAKIETY ! STYLE ! BEAUTY ! 1AEK MORE NEW Lowest Prices ! lAYIIS JESTBICEIYIB A NSW AND EXT22TSIVE fTocii ej DRESS GOODS, H T H IT I ft g vliU 1 11 1 11 Ul uoTions, &c., I DEFY Competition! iithes nr GOODS OR PRICES aid iftYlU tit ATTENTION PURCHASERS or Cheap Goods V. S. BARKER, EBENSBURG. CAHWUtA GO,. PtftNA. ' SUMMER GOODS SUPERB STOCK is& 8!f mmma im, v,-- k Y'l;?n;aS cf tte year 18CS, Thb WoELD chahenges. more confidently than ever, the sympathy and tupport of all pa triotic citizens. A gWious "work h. been gloriously begun Deep w,y nr to deep. The long fidelity of tLis 3.n,:n, to the cause of Lib'.rty protecu.i Ly L,vr stands nobly vindicated In a rplendor of vic tory shining from Maine to California. Con necticut, Ohio, Pennrylvania, Ncrr Jcrstv, Nevv York, have tLundeied foith their ver dict upon the misrule and madness -f tho x'ast. But much more still remains to lo done. Never was the Pe-,il of tbe rourtrv greater. Tbe Radical party ttiU ,cre s th death of representative ficlf-poycrr.ro n. in ten sovereign States. Armu with military despotism and wholesale Negro rViffrngr, it desperately prasps at a permnrent kare ef povrcr, in defiance of public oprDion, at the cost of enormous tases and c"pp!ed indus tries, at tbe cost of Union and Pe. To the rrcat bsittle stilt o bo fmgbt Tan stoeld wilt give nil its efforts, all its ener gies. It aeks of its friends in thir turn r.s naucli ; it asks of thrm in.r.i ir,i lenders ane! a wider inCueuce. It afks tliis wilh rrrifiVro in us claims as a newspaper ard as an organ of opinion. The chief use of a Newspaper ij to s.vo its readers ALL TOE SEWS. For this the facilities of The Worlii r unsurpassed by any iournal in thp r:tc.i States. It seeks to excel by an accuracy and candor, a spirit and freshness in it nrw columns which shall commend it to reader? of whatever party, rex, creed or place. As an organ of opinion. Thb World ! th unflinching champion of A Liberal Prcaressice Democracy. whereof the cornerstone is Freedom rfatr.inl ed by Justice; Freom pure and simple., in the largest collective measure ; tbe office oi dnstice being to protect Fiecdom from encroachments; Freedom of the individual citiien, in his rights of thought, speech, re ligion and locomotion ; in his Right to c'ior so his own food and drink, in spite of meddle some temperance laws ; i hi Sight tc csakt, any money bargains h taiaks proper, in spite of foolish usury laws; in his Right to -buy and sell in all markets, donicst:3. acd foreign, m nyitft of m jwst protective tariffs ; ip bis Riyht to representation in the Istriela- tiye ixuj-es which tax him, in spite of uncon stitutional exclusions ; Freedom of collective citizens So assemble for disrussi.ni of. griev ances : Freedom of all local communities in mnnage their local affair wi".hout-ctatral interference; Freedom, in every section cf the country, from the arrogant aDd oncon- stitutional domination of other 8?ctions. This large and compreherfive idea of Free dom sums up the politics of "The Would,' which will never be found wanting to this capital interest of the country and of tira human race. A paper published in the roetrrplis naturally Vooked to f.r cartiul Market Re ports ana authentic information, an 1 IntJlU gent discussions relating to Trade, Commerce and Finance. In these features, "Tbe Would" i:mta comparison with any other journal EDITIONS. The Weee.lt World, a large qnaTtr6r -ct, nme size as Daily, in now printed tcUUy in large fupe, and (since its union with the .ew Yoik Argus) has the lar-eFt circula tion of any weekly journal published eave one. It is an unrivalled journal for 1 he Frr nier. Live Stock cr Produce Da'er, Ccvi try Merchant, etc. Published We-dr.fsJsy. The Semi Wieklt World is a lr.rge qnr.rto sheet, same s:rn rs D.ii'v. which, hv omlttir'g the great mass of e-ity aaivevtire ments from the Daily, rcr.ta:i:s everytlii g else that appears in the D.u'v rd VTsrl.? editha. Published "luesyVnd Fri.lay. ' ii.e UAILT Uiklu anonrs a coir.nit compendium and digcujsioa cf the r.c-Rb of every e".ay. WEEKLY WOULD. 1 Copy, 1 year - 4 2 OC 4 copies, 1 yr., aeparately adJrescJ. 7. OP -10 copies, 1 yr., separately address!, 15.00 20 copies, 1 yr., to one addreu. 25 C' : 20 copies, 1 yr., separately a JJ:esoJ, C7.0.1 50 copies, 1 yr., to cna ad'drci?, 50.00 50 copies, 1 yr., separately aJdrtsic'd, 55.CC -SEMI-WEEKLY WORLD. 1 copy, 1 year - - . - 4.00 4 copies, 1 yr., separately addressed, 10.00 -10 copies, 1 yr., to one address. 20.00 10 copies, 1 yr., separately stfdreased, 22.00 DAILY WOULD. 1 copy 1 year - 10.CO club rr.iziis. For Club of 10, to one address, One Week ly. 1 Tear. For Club of 30 t. one addrea One Weekly, 1 year. For Club cf 0. t. one address, Oiie Semi-Weekly, 1 year. For uiuo or iuu, to one addrc?, One Dailv, 1 year. DIRECTIONS. Additions Id Clubs may be made any time in tbe j-ear at the above club rates. Changes in Club Lists made onlv on re quest of persons receiving club package, stating edition, post office and St to which it has previously been sent, arid en closing twenry-fiva cents to pay for trouble of the change to aeparate address. terms, cash ia advance. Semi, if bosgU ble. Post Office llooy Order or ank Draft. Bins sent by mail wiH be at the ris'k of tho sender. We h ava no traveling agents. Snecimen Copies, poetwa, c, lant free cf charge wherever aaa whenever eiebircd. Address . all orders and letters to THE WORLD. 85 Park Jtcic, 2iew York. IABM FOR SALE. WThe under iirrnpri nffVrc nt Pnrtfa Ul Viii ViT UABLE FARM, located in Susquehanna tp.. camoria county, about three miles from th village of Plottville. Said Farm containa 140 ACRES, more or less, about 50 acres of which are cleared and in good condition, having tbreon erected a new two-itory Plank Hocsb, large Bake: Back, &e. There are a Limestone Quarry and Coal Bank on the premises, which only-need capital to fully develop. - Also, a tocg orchard of choice fruit and an abnndance of -excellent water. The Farm will be sold altogether, or divided to suit purchasers. Far further information apply on tho premises, or ad dress me at Carrolltown. - Jan. 9, 1868-Ct. LAWRKXCB PES. 7 D W A ll D II O D N-E T T , ALTOONA, PA.. Prepares Plana and Designs, with fall de tails, for HOUSES, STORES, CHURCHES, &c. Also fcr Alterations and Improvements in old building?. Address or "Call at St. Charles Hotel, near Ta. R. R., Altoona, Blair county, Pa. jan.9.-Sa. S. BELFOHD, DENTIST, EOXTINUES to visit Ebenabnrg personally on the 4th Monday of each month. Dnring his absence Lewis N. Snyder, who studied with thaDootor, will remain in tho ofiLoa and attend to all business, entrusted to Ufa- . , . Jan8l.'67. TF.YOU WANT the beat Cool or Parlor Stove madf iu tho v.-c 'd. go le HPNTLF.Y'S and get Spear's AitfiDnvirr