Tlx -A JLXo s;33-cti - UIGIIT OK WROSG. WHEN RIGHT, TO BE KEPT RIGHT, VuEX ffttOXG, TO BK PUT RIGHT. THUIISDAY::::::::::::::::::::::::::APJIITj 4. Another View. Since the whole lov'ofoco party declare the Union ' destroyed, and, in talking of restoring fraternal feeling, speak only of a reconstruction of the Confederacy, Pays the Ckamher&hurg Repository & Transcript, what assurance do they propose to give that the new Union would be more bind ing than the old one ? If, for no Teal cause, men could be induced to commit' the most unheard-of acts of violence, per petrate the most unjustifiable outrages in open day j trample upon their oaths of al legiance ; raise large armies in time of peace, with the avowed object of making war upon the general government, as have occurred day after day, for many months past, in the far South, what guarantee do the re-constructionists offer against a re currence of these same unsightly scenes, in four or eight years hence, if another election goes contrary to their wishes ' These loud-mouthed creatures talk as glibly of raising and throwing down vast Governments as children could, and do, about building and destroying their little play houses. Consequently, if the demol ishing and re-constructing of great, power ful empires causes no more trouble than the little labor connected with preparing and passing empty paper resolves, to the mighty giants who live on the other side of the Potomac river, might not prudence dictate to us the policy of recognizing the recent rebellion as a successful revolution, and forming treaties of peace and comity with these people; formerly part of one family, now, according to their own alle gations, a separate and distinct foreign nation. We could then treat them as we do the rest of mankind in peace as friends and in war as enemies. The whole song from one end of cotton dom to the other is, give us all we demand and there will be a re-construction of the Union. If we are to have less liberty, en joy fewer privileges under some new form of Government which our would-be mas ters claim the right to dictate, if the sons of the sires of '7G are to get a form or system of laws more degrading to their manhood thau that which desceuded to them from their glorious ancestors, as the result of the existing foolish, political ex citement among the hot-heads at the South, and as the price ihey are expected to pay for permitting these wicked agitators to discontinue their unnecessary acts of folly, the information the oligarchy seem anxious to obtain may as well be given to them at once as to delay the matter till some future period. ' The highborn sentiments which anima ted our fathers to resist the oppressions of (rrcat Britain ; which impelled the noble heroes of the eight years' war to deeds of hardy daring, still swell the bosoms of their descendants. Liberty, that blessed boon, filled the'r souls with jreuerous, en nobling desires; fired their hearts and nerved their arni3 to endure the terrible privatious of the days of the Involution, and the same holy feelings course through the heart and pulsate through the system of each of their sons, Therefore there can be no more preposterous idea thau that which supposes them capable of becomin the slaves and serfs of arrogant, haughty tyrants wherever they may dwell. The great wonder is, not that there has beeu this hasty, violent action on the part of our neighbors of the sunny regions of orth America, bat, that a disruption has i a I I n not sooner laten piace. ror many vcars the most heartless acts of cruelty, without the shadow of legal sanction, and without causing the better portion of Southern so ciety to repudiate the wrongs, have been inflicted on the purest and best citizens of the North by heartless fiends in human form, extendiug to driving from their midst Innocent, unprotected females, who had been induced to go South to teach school, or who had been drivcu thither for a restoration cf health under the genial ejects of :i warm elimate. Ia other instan ces families have been broken up; husbaudu have been compelled to fly for their lives, in the darkness of night, away from' their T ivtj and children, leaving all their ejrth- iy jrwds bemnu mem, io efceupe ui: mij of a Southern mob. Eveu the Senate Chamber of the Gov ernment, and the Halls of the House of Representatives, have been desecrated by the brutality of these very men who de mand at our hands the most abject, craven submission to these outrages, as the terms upon which we are to be allowed to have their abuse to continue their friendship they utterly refuse us. There is no cause for surprise at the contempt these men entertain for us ; have we not yielded obe dience to their imperious demands thus 1.1 j . 4 far; have we not pocketed all their insults tamely; do they not denounce us as being inferior to them declaring that a North ern mechanic is not fit to associate with a Southern gentleman's body servant do they not call us mean, cowardly poltroons ? Then, as we are so very dissimilar in all our feelings and desires, why attempt to bring us together again? Let us have a Convention of all the States, and separate peaceably, but forever. If the Union is only a football to be kicked about by every aspiring politiciau and if it is uow to be deemed as having been kicked into the Ocean of oblivion, it might as well remaiu there and no longer be a source of annoyance to our Iocofoco brethren, whose sole occupation for years has been to help each other to kick the everlasting football. There is at least one comfort to the whole country, in the downfall of the dear old Union that we all have been schooled to love : that is : with it3 fall there will be nothing left of the old Iocofoco party, the head and front of secession, and the source of every trouble our beloved Government ever endured. If, then, the prediction be true, that the fall of the Union is the death of locofocoism, the question will be very evenly divided, whether the loss or the gain is greatest. TJie latest ! A special dispatch to the New York Tribune of Monday states that rumors nrfv.iil in Washington to the effect that Fort Sumter is to be re-enforced, notwith standing reports to the contrary, but noth ing official is known. The re-enforcement of Fort Pickens appears to bo determined on. The Foreign Missions. All the new Ministers are expected to start for their posts immediately. The law allows thirty days, usually for preparation, but the con dition of .affairs iu the country requires their presence immediately, especially at the leading missions, to counteract the ef forts that will be made for recognition by the Southern Coufederacy. Notwithstanding the reports from abroad there is authority for stating that none of the great powers will recognize the Mont gomery Government, until the United States have first admitted or accepted it is an accomplished fact. The position of tnc Administration in that respect will be soon defined, since the instructions to the new Ministers must cover this crTound completely. The President lias no power, under the Constitution, to acknowledge secession, and, therefore, he cannot receive the Com missioners sent to Washington by Mr. Davis in any official capacity, to treat concerning the public propcrt'. This position was clearly and emphatically sta ted in the Inaugural, and the President has in no way departed from it. But the Federal laws are entirely ignored in the seceded States, and a conflict cf authority is about to occur in regard to the tariff and other questions, which will soon mor ally determine their exact status, one way or the other. Our Government or their Government must prevail. Both cannot exercise functions at the same time. The New Senator from Missouri Waldo P. Johnsou the new United States Senator from Missouri, has been a promi nent Democratic politician in that State, but has never been in Congress. j.ne ct. JjOuis .Democrat tnus com ments on the issues involved in his clec tion : "lie was one of the Commissioners to the Peace Conference, and, we understand exhibited anything but a disposition for compromise. In politics he differs little, if at all, from his predecessor. I hey are both conditional or prospective secession ists extreme southern or State-rights men. Personal considerations rnusttherc- fore, have decided the choice of the ma jonty in preferring him to Green. The Senator elect has always borne a hih character for integrity and personal pro- i C J A. 1 1 1 r juifij oi cuuuuci among ins neignoors- the people of the south-west. In the struggle between Benton and his enemies, Judge Johnsou siued with Bentoa and opposed Phelps. tk,Thc President of the Confederate States has accepted and drafted into the regular army the Zouave llegiment of New Orleans, numbering GoO men com manded by Col. Coppcu, formerly of, the French Army. A large majority of the regiment have seen real service iu Europe all aro French, and the orders arc to be given in the French language. tQ-.Loth to leave us Winter. EDITORIAL HOTIKGS. B,The lecture of Miss Louise K. Vickroy lit llollidaysburg w:is well attended. Eg, A patent skirt extender the wind oil Monday. BBV'hy i3 it that the only apologists for Secession are to be found in the Loco-Fo-co ranks ? Ej The Legislature has passed and the Governor signed the bill for the suppression of fortune telling. The initiatory stejs are being taken for the establishing of a Loco-Foco paper in Indiana. B-The Tribune say.? that AUoona is pestered with rowdies. Let -'em slide thro j noosed rope. A toast Woman: to her virtues we give love; to her beauty, admiration ; and to her hoops, the whole sidewalk. EgL. Currently reported that Ebensbtirg needs a "hotel on the modern plan." Does that mean a hotel where they charge $2.50 a day for feed and a dime for drinks? Cassius II. Clay, who declined the ap pointment of Minister to Spain, has been tranferred to Russia. Carl Sehurz has been substituted as Minister to Spain. It is held to bo a great crime to steal a niirsrer or even a mulatto, ana yet. tne se cession leaders of New Orleans kidnapped 100,000 "yellow boys" at once. JCsSf An agent from Mississippi visited Springfield, Illinois, a few weeks ago for the purpose ot soliciting corn lor tne sniicnng poor of his State, and the home of Lincoln contributed one thousand bushels. 5. The Confederate States having abol ished Yankee Doodle a3 a national air, it is suggested that they adopt the 'Rogue's March' .13 a substitute. The chaplain of the Southern Congress, it is understood, opens the sessions with prayer and reading the hymn commenc ing, "I love to steal," etc. BOX-The Mississippians arc already expe riencing the benefits of secession. There is already a special tax levied of 50 per cent., and if they get through their career, says a Louisiana paper, without having their taxes increased more than 500 per cent., they will :ome out well indeed. The local of the Echo says that an old bachelor of Johnstown wa3 recently thrown into a highly rapturous condition by the accidental finding of a garter on the pave ment. One Bulwcr's standing interrogatory suits this occasion precisely What Will lie Do With It? Jgg" The following is the receipt of John Vine Hall, the father of the commander of the Great Eastern, for the cure of drunkenness, which has enabled so many rr.en to overcome the malady: Sulphate of iron, 5 grains; mag nesia, lOgruins; pcpperniintwater, 11 drachms and spirit of nutmeg. 1 drachm, twice a day. The Times' correspondent says that the Gautemala mission pays $7,500, and 50 per cent, of the above amount extra for Hon duras. "The duties are light consisting of swinging all day in a hammock, and running around at night to tertuhas, and flirting with the Senoritas." Poetical the conclusion to the stere otyped pull of a certain city firm : Stop your blinkin', And keep a thinkin' Of Old A. HIincoln, And you'll know Where to go Like winkin'. 3?-What We Want not given in the Mountaineer's catalogue, but should be! No Compromise With Traitors, a good livery sta blc, plenty of specie and a perfect looseness as to investing it in public and private enterpri ses, a total annihilation of Loco-Focracy, a cash system, less diluted whisky and things, earlier spring weather, go-aheadative public officials, oil wells, and a few other items that we haven't time to mention just now. KSf Mrs. Towuseud, wife of a respectable farmer in Ararat, Susquehanna county, was seized with symptoms of hydrophobia while riding with Mr. Townsend, some days ago, and died during the night following. Two years ago, while crossing a field near her father's house, she was attacked by a large dog, from which she happened to escape without receiv ing any wound of which she was conscious It is now supposed the animal was mad, and the virus penetrated the system through some abrasion of the skin. "If the present President is right, (as regards Lincoln's policy in the Fort Sumter matter.) how infamously has his venerable predecessor been slandered." Mountaineer. And Avho, allow us to inquire, was more forcibly opposed to the course of Buchanan than the Mountaineer? Who slandered this "venerable predecessor" more eloquently than the Douglas press throughout the country? Echo answers nobody. Why don't the Moun taineer at once come out with a public avow al of the error of its way, and promise to do better in the future? While the lamp holds out to burn, etc. XgQ, "Circumstances alter eases." -A few weeks ago the Mountaineer denounced Presi dent Buchanan for not re-enforcing Major Anderson, and for not chastising the South for insulting the American Flag. Now the same paper comes out as tlve apologist of the Old Public de-Functionary, on the ground that Abraham Lincoln has not performed the same duty that was required of Buchanan has not re-enforced Sumter. There is a great diiTcreuce in the positions of the two Presidents. Buchanan could have re-enforced the frt at the proper time, and did not, while Lincoln, whose hands are tied b' the procrastination of his imbecile-predecessor, cannot. We think we see the "circumstance" that alters this particular "case" in the Mountaineer's eyes .hat heart-rending article, "Can Wc Unite?" makes it discernible. If the Mountaineer de sires to eat dirt of course we will offer no ob XEae Kgw I'enissj Ivaaiia .Staple. A jrenrleiiian has collected from various printed and private sour c-s, some particu lars in relation to the oil business in West ern Pennsylvania, which seem to indicate that the product of this discovery will eventually tako its place as an important staple. There is no doubt that much ex aggeration has existed in relation to the quantity of oil produced, and that specula tion has been actively at work, by which some men have realized great profits, and others have suffered great losses. Iut this proncness to tur.i everything into a speculation has been hhown when coal mines were hrsfc worked, or wherever gold or pearl-bearing muscles have beon discov 1 . .... , i crcd. lhc masses neea no especial stimu lant to induce them to take hold, but rush in voluntarily, some, in every instance, sure to lose. Jut it is not luuiviuuai profit wc are now considering, but commer cial results. They are shown to be already quite remarkable; for the number of bar rels ot oil which came over the rsunburv and Erie railroad to the latter city, during the year 18G0, is as follows, showing an extraordinary rapid increase of the pro duction : January, C3 September, 2.239 2.775 2,9C9 C,431 22,119 14,500 I ebriiafy, October, November, December, Total, 1SC0, Jan'y, 13C1, March, April, May, June, July, August, Total, 31,G19 In addition to this, the freight on cn- gines, pumps, supplies ot an Kinus ana passengers, growing out of the rush ct population to the oil region, is expected to furnish quite an equal amount of business and revenue. The large quantity above referred to has been supplied almost ex clusively from two localities, namely, Tid- coute, on the Allegheny river, about lour tecm miles below Irvine Station, and Ti tnsville, on Oil creek, about eighteen miics from the station of Union Mills. From those points it is principally hauled by teams to the line of the road, although in the summer season much is boated from Tideoute up the river, and much finds its way down stream from both points to Pittsburg the most, if not all, of which will come to the railroad when suitable branch roads, uow in contemplation, shall be constructed. At the points named the wells are bored into the oil bearing rock from the depth of seventy-five feet to three hundred feet before striking the veins, and at each of the said points, there are, up to the present time, about thirty wells in successful operation. liar. Telegraph. President Jeff. Davis. The so called Southern Confederacy, says Parson Brownlow's UVi?, was. conceived iu sin, shapen in iniquity, and born out of due time, because it was rushed into the world with indecent haste, expressly to prevent the people from beholding its deformities. No uian, living or deid, is better adapted to preside over such an organization than Jell' Davis, lie is as vain and proud as Cottonocracy itself. lit is as weak and imprudent as he is ambitious and unprin cipled. He has been producing discon tent and teaching treason against the Gov ernment ever since he has becu in public life. A vile traitor, a trained rebel, and an inflated bigot, he as richly deserves to be hung as ever old John Brown did. O This is the blusterer who, in a public speech a few years ago, slandered the Tennessee volunteers, when ic is notorious that Tennessee can whip out the whole Southern Confederacy. And yet, Ten nessee is asked to go into the Government over which this traitor presides. ESUThc lialelgh (N. C.) Standard is one of the newspapers in the slave States which dares to speak truth in the teeth of secession. "Yequote from a recent is sue : "It is criminal to say there is 'no hope for the Union.' If five hundred of the public men of the two sections could bo transported, or confined in dungeons for six months, the Union would be restored and reconstructed during thatpeiknl, and j it would be more glorious and prosperous than the one threatened with destruction. The disuniouist per se is a mad man or a bad num. He who prefers disunion to union, and who labors to provoke and ag gravate the two sections against each oth er, is an enemy to his race. He who is for discord instead of concord, for war instead of peace, for disunion for disunion's saiTf is guilty of a crime more stupendous than any which has been committed siuee Cain slew his brother. KS, The Raleigh (N. C.) Recorder, and other Union papers South, think the evc uation of Sumter the worst sort of a "force bill" that could be enacted against the secessionists. "Just let them alone," sa's the Recorder, "and leave them to work out the problem of a separate and independent government, and before Christmas some of them will be glad enough to return to the fold of the Union. Texas and Florida are not able to support themselves, much less contribute anything to the support and strength of the newConfederacy. Missis sippi hasn't credit for a shilling in the markets of the world, and the voice of a majority of the voters of Louisiana was not heard when that State seceded. The taxes of the new Confederacy are most burthensome, and the people will ere long take the matter in hand, put down the leaders, aud come back to the Union." Row, of the Raftsman's Journal Clearfield Co., has been appointed by the P. M. General, a through route agent be tween Philadelphia and the West. We are triad to hear it. 115 414 002 1,150 777 1,423 2,40 Pasuonei by Mistake. If the fol lowing article, which we copy from the Pitt-burg iW, is true, it proves that Governors are, like other men, liable to make mistakes at times. Iu the case de scribed, the error appears to have been a fortunate one for one prisoner, and it is not likely that the other will be permitted to suffer long for it : - "A good joke is current with respect to a pardon recently granted by Gov. Cur tin. It seems that a worth' and influen tial German citizen, who felt an interest in a fellow-countryman named Miller sent to the Penitentiary not loug since, for passing counterfeit money visited the Stale Capital, -ibout a month ago, for the purpose of procuring a pardon for liim.- After a consultation with Gov. Curtin he came home with the assurance that the pafdon would be sent upon the following morning, 'ihe papers in the application for a pardon in the case of a young man man named Mitchell, confined in the Pen itentiary for larceny, were also on file in Harrisburg, and the Governor, remember ing his promise, but confounding the names, had the necessary papers for the pardon of Mitchell made out and forward ed at the time designated. Whether the Governor's promise to our military friend has been yet redeemed, we are not advis ed; if not, the ether pardon thould be forwarded at once, as .Miller fchoftld not suffer through the (lovernor's bad memory when it was the iutcntion to pardou him. The pardon of Mitchell, though the result of a mistake, was well deserved as since his release lie has given every evidence of having become thoroughly reformed. So "all's well that ends well. A Gallant Heoiment. Major Rob ert Anderson, who has so justly acquired the admiration and favor of all l.nion loving citizens of the United States for his gallant retention of Fort Sumter, not withstanding the mcusices of South Caro lina, is Major of the First legimcnt of U. S. artillery. Lieut. A. J. SIcmmer, the hero of Fort Pickeus, 'at Pcnsacola, in Florida, who next to Maj. Anderson, has set a brilliant example of loyalty and chivalry to all United States officers, is of the same First regiment of artillery. Capt. Bonnet II. Hill, who in Texas, first dared to disobey the treasonable or der of Gen. Twiirs, and refuiri'' to sur- rentier the troYcrnment property unuer his control to his country's enemies, avow ed his purpose to defend it and called iu reinforcements of United States property already seized by the Texas authorities, al so belongs to the same First regiment of artillerv. Capt. J. B. Rickets, commmanding Ft. Brown, in Texas, who, in imitating the example of Capt. Hill, also refused to sur render the post under his charge likewise belongs to the same First rcgimert of U. S. artillery. Pauson Brown Lcnv, is an odd fish, but of his ability, iudepeudeuc aud daunt less courage, there is no question. Speak ing cf Lincoln's Inaugural, he says, with great force and truth : "Let the numerous readers of this pa per attentively peruse this document, and not rely upon the false and exaggerated notice of it, in telegraphic dispatches, and violent Southern papers, whose partizan prejudices and bitter hostilities forbid their doing its author justice. One ot the unpardonable falsehoods travelling around is that the Iuaugural repudiates the decision of the Supreme Court. Wc endorse ihe entire addiess, as cue of the best papers of the kind we have seen, and we commend it for its tempera nee and conservatism. It is peace-loving and conservative in its recommendations and eminently firm in its nationality of senti ment. ,lt is, out and out, a Union address worth', tho approbation of every Union and conservative man South, as well as North. Had it been delivered by Jack son, Polk, or Breckinridge, even the Cot ton States would have declared it to be the height of political perfection." . Sam Houston Readt for Battle. A special Washington tekgram to the New York Post says that stirring news may soon be expected from Texas, aiu Houston, although formally deposed from the Governorship of the State by the reb el Convention, docs not intend to give up his place without a struggle. Despatches fom him just received, draw a gloomy picture of the condition-of affairs, and de clare that civil war is inevitable. He has the Convention and a heist of the rebels arrayed against him, but he is not the "Old Sam" of former days if he cannot find backers enough to show fight. The latest inlormatiou indicates that he has studied his position, and taken a firm stand against the seeeders. He expresses no fear of the ultimate result of the conflict, which he seems to regard as very near. Official information of the machinations of the secessionists in New Mexico ha been received. A few of tha rebel leaders are known to be busily at work in that territory trying to revolutionize it. The territorial Governor is strongly suspected of active complicity in the plot. The new Patent Law is worktu" very satisfactorily. The change comes quite opportunely, as only 15 is now re quired to be paid on presenting an appli cation. The abolition of the excessive fees heretofore reeiuired of foreigners will do much to stimulate them to iutroduce many valuable inventions into this couu try, and enable them to protect them selves against unscrupulous pirates who lay violent hands upon everything within their reach. KEIOX Ot' j'KBRiiR ix lilCHMOND 7 rorrctuondcut of tlic N. Y. Inl t rem Kichmoud : 'There are. I ry to say, symptous of the beginning 0f . lleifrn of Terror, in this citv. if net tV ...V out tuv. t;iin iuicjy party ol vL I spoke ill my last, procured aLothor stronger pole, purchased new gvs a-" aeain elevated tho l'uttlepii&i.--'5 uL lhursuay last. Xuc negro trades U themselves, icosc on this occasion. XL are usually loose enough in their tncra? their manners, their language and t' ;' swagger ; but on this occasion nrodom was iu the very zenith of its glorvEv grog shop in the fish-stall locality 2 opon, all at the expenses cf the W UlUalutu, Ruaiuus auu Urutal anir-r . - . r . lecherous and brutal V oi fluui aim euuuy. nen. tne fl- hoisted to the top of the stau ? huzzas of the drunken mass th?at sv.V and surged like the sea, I s :: ; ai( ' say, but ro, like a 111 thy ptx.1 d.Ui" by the wind, a rash hid-vidaal, v.bl remembered the Union cf c r slio the word?;, 4iI v.i.:Ii it .1 11.-117 down before morning." a minute hat man v. as ruiinin-T lor 1 lile, with the yelling crowd at JiceJ.s. l'esr give mm wings and Lc t caped. J"The first intcrnaticr.al diScuhy with the Southern Confederacy has occur red in Brooklyn, in the case' of Patrick M'Cluskey whose name betrays Lis ori gin who was brought before a Justice, on a charge ff intoxication. He denied the right of the court to try him, as he was a citizen of the Southern Cowfe.. in i proof of which he pulled a small Pal- mctto flag out of his pocket and flourished it dehantly helore the justice. The court however did not recognize the right of se cession, individuallyor by States, so Pat. rick was convicted, fined S10 and costs, and in default of payment was sent to jail for (en days, protesting vehemently that it "would be the oerssion of war" between the United States and the "Confederate States of America." Secession Good for Something The following item from the Baltimore American makes it evident that the war like demonstrations of the Palmetto State are doing some jrood ti States further North, by ridding them of some of their sores : "Over one hundred recruits for therej ular army of the Confederate States left here in the Norfolk boat yesterday, en route for Charleston, South Caroliua. Some few of the party are young men of respectable connections, who have been bitten by a desire for military glory, hat the majority of the worst class cf our pop ulation. If the Confederacy can put them to any serviceable purpose, it will aehifve what society has failed to accomplish here." Privateers. The New Orleans Cre scent continues to depict the terrible things which privateers might accomplish for the South. It says : "With a tolerably accurate knowledge of what is gfing en and deliberately weighing all the circum stances we conclude that, at the lowest estimate, seven hundred swift sailing, staunch, substantial vessels, fully equirped carrying, on an average, four mighty cum apiece, can be put afloat in four months to wage war on Northern commerce block ade Northern ports, cripple Northern strength, and destroy Northern property. We are sure that two hundred c sn le Cm tained in a very, tvy few days tud they will come from the especial home of mock philanthropy and false religion, ia Yankee land. This, however, is Dot cur affair." Agents wanted to sell the Lnc Sewiu Machine. Wc "vill jrive a commission or pay wages at from 825 to StO per nuin'h. and expenses piud. Tbe Ekie is a new ni:u-lnn mid very simple in its construction. Ai'-l' in a was awarded our Machine l-y lii" ' trial Association of Farmers aud M": ' ; ' held at Chambersbuip, Pa., at its in 1S;0, over the (!rever& Baker, an A -r Machines. It is equsl to any !:::':: : and the price is but fiftcf-n .:!' it. J AMES, General A'.ent K. r. i ":'!;r: Ohio. " ' '-"I NEW ADVZniSSEritNTS. VTEW TAILOR SHOP. Li The iin.lorsiSiicd having opened out Tailoring Establishment, over the iif' occupied hv 1. J. Evans k J-'on, ri-ict tu informs the public that tbe business wnltae be earned on iu all its uraiu-bea. will be done in the latest style, will; u' and dispatch, and upon the most reason " terms. 1UIT. ! TuOMAb- Ebensburg, April 4, liGl. JOB WORK OF ALL KINDS NEATLY ASI EXPEDITIOUSLY EXECUTED AT TUB "ALLEGIIANIAX" OlTIC'K, HIGH St., KBENSClT-tf, rA' publication orrirfi : DAVIS & JOXES BUILDIN-Vl' THIKU POOS PACk r.ivr rs A cali-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers