i it hopo yet to let the people of Cambria and Somerset that our being held back vras not our fault If it is blood thev want, we feel like Falisfvinsr thorn to the lull extent cf our power. 3tit Tve would I av to them, that Terhan if t Vr-v wntibl r.ddrcsa the Secretary of War, thty tni-ht have some influence in petting us out fur a target lor Rebel Lulls ! IIoRACK. Tliso J ll eglianian. KIGI5T-OR IVISOXG. WHEX BIGHT, TO BE KEPT RIGHT, MTHES WRONG, TO BE PCT RIGHT. TnUR3DAY::::::::::::::::::::::::::::M AY 22. .People's State Convention The "War news of the past two or three weeks, glorious as it has been, has so tres passed on our columns that we have really uot had space to publish or otherwise no. tice the admirable call, issued some weeks ago, for a People's State Convention. It gives us great pleasure, however, to attend to this duty to-day. The call is as fol lows : THE PEOPLE OF PENNSYLVANIA, who ! desire cordially to unite in sustaining the NATIONAL ADMINISTRATION in its patri- J otic efforts to suppress a sectional and unho- ly rebellion against the UNITY OF THE RE PUBLIC, and who desire to support, by eve ry power of the Government, one hundred j thousand heroic brethren in arms, braving disease and the perils of the field to preserve j the Union of our Father?, are requested to select tke cumber of Delegates equal to the Legislative Representation of the State, at such times and in such manner as will best respond to trie spirit of this call, to meet in STATE CONVENTION at IIARRISRURG, on THURSDAY, the SEVENTEENTH DAY OF JULY next, at eleven o'clock on said day,. to nominate Candidates for the offices of t! JttTOR GENERAL and SURVEYOR GENER AL, and to take such measures as may be deemed necessary to strengthen the Govern ment in this season of common peril to a common country. A. K. M'CLLRE, Chairman People's State Committee. Geo. W. IIammeeslv, lSecretaries. Johx M. SuLtivAX, J We heartily endorse this call in every particular, and rejoice over the wise ac tion of the Committee which prompted it. The language in which it is set forth is exceedingly well chosen, and the great object-which it proposes a union of the People of Pennsylvania for the sake of the Union is one eminently dear to ev ery loyal and patriotic heart. It is pe culiarly acceptable in the fact that it pre sents a basis of action which cannot, in the slightest degree, be obnoxious to any one who is in favor of preserving our lie public, and of thwarting and punishing the wicked men who have undertaken to bjjng about its overthrow. The present is not a time to engage in hair-splitting distinctions and bitter controversies about party ; the question is : Shall the ad ministration of Abraham Lincoln be encouraged and sustained with men and money, in its efforts to crush Treason and uphold the Constitution ? That it ehould be, is a Platform long enough, broad enough, and high enough for every one to stand upon, who really sympathizes with his country in this hour of its tiial. We are well aware that there are a Jew so called Democrats who do not approve of this idea of a People's Conven tion, but il is none the less admissable on that account. The men and the journals in the State that find fault with it, are generally of the Brkckineidc.e stamp, and it would be impossible for loyal men to take such action as would please those who adhered to . the sinking fortunes ol that rebel chief. We are perfectly ton tent to pit this call against the manifestoes Tccently emanating from Yali.aniii ii am & Co., or any similar document, and let the Pf.ofle of -Pennsylvania be the judges. Our Snxy. We publis'i on our outide to-day, a pcech cf the lion. Hiham Wai.hrii'GK. of New York city, delivered at Tammany Hail, on the 21st of August, 1856, and we trut that each and all of our readers will give it a careful perusal, in view of the important subject of which it treats. xl Tiu uc '.-Jiutu - w lu I . . I 1 I. iitfw.ii I f Ki r if r-. re - f Iia incorporation ot a "Aliutia ot ti:e feeas on an original and most effective b?isi, for uniting to our great and growing com mercial marine, the means fur its pvotcc- tion, and at the tame tune strengtncnmg j mounti,1n: Parrott guns, have Leeu erected our national defences. Though delivered j UH around the city. Our troops have a ncarlv six years atrvtho publication of ! portion of the railroad, between Charlcs this address we coaccivc to be peculiarly t Vanrruh, in their possession ! Ti : At last ac-oun.s, Gtueial M Clellan iittiu- at thi. time. It exhibits ich WflS T;gorWslv, ,lUnmin,, the retreating riorccf.-fc and- valuable mfoimution, and n.i,ris and was within GiUwu miles of tLytfl. its "fK iu-cc'-i'oujj may Lithvrtu iU.-hmoud. N have fallen unheeded, we trust this will be the case no longer. The recently threatening aspect of our Foreign Rela- tiri3 added to our domestic troubles, soffpsfs lhf i?Trrrtnnrfl nf more earnest and greater efforts to place the Republic, Iy sea as well as by land, upon the most ! effective war-footing. In all our national ; difficulties, the navy has proven itself a ! most powerful arm of the Public Service, and, as such, every judicious means should be employed to give to it still greater strength and usefulness. General War Xcus. The following despatch has been recei ved at the War .Department frum Gen. 31'CleIlan : ''The gunboats Galena, Mon itor, Aristook, Naugatuek and Port Royal were repulsed from Fort Darling, seven miles below Richmond, yesterday. A porthfli of them have returned to James Island, near Williamsburg, in the James river. Lieut. Morris, commanding the Port lioyal, sent overland to us this mor ning for intelligence in regard to the ports below the Island, and also to assist in burying the dead which he brought down with him. Seventeen bodies have been interred on the banks of the river, and there are a number of wounded on board, includiua: Lieut. Morris himself. The 100 pound gun of the Naugatuek ex ploded at the first fire. The Monitor could not. elevate her guns sufficiently to reach the higher battery, which rendered her useless. The banks of the river were filled with rifle pits, from which an inces sant fire was poured upon the fleet, a part of which was encased at from six bun dred to one thousand yards of the main battery. After an action of four hours, the fleet finding it impossible to silence the battery on the bluff, under the cir cumstances, withdrew." The latest intelligence from Corinth says : There is a general advance along our lines to-day towards the enemy's en trenchments. There has been much skir mishing and several severe engagements. Gen. Sherman's Division lost forty-four killed, and a large number wounded, in attacking Russell's House, which the reb els have occupied for some time past, worrying our pickets. We succeeded in driving the enemy from his position back to his works. Our men are ttnder arms night and day, and are daily expecting to be attacked. There is skirmishing f rom the Kighth Missouri, only about three hundred yards from the enemy's breast works. Several guns were captured in the skirmish on our right, perfectly new, and marked ''Breeze fc Fiilmen, Dremen." They are much superior to the rifles used by our sharpshooters, having a range of twelve or fifteen hundred yards, while ours are only effective at about a thous and. Deserters from the enemy report that a great deal of hard feeling exists between Missouri and Tennessee troops and those from Southern States, the for mer urging that their States being resto red to the Union, they see no reason why they should be compelled to fight for the Independence of the Cotton States. A dispatch from Cairo says that a Mem phis paper has been received, which con tains the following dispatch from Pensa cola, dated May 10: At twelve o'clock last night the Pensacola Navy Yard and forts were set on fire and destroyed. When the enemy discovered what wa3 go ing on, Fort Pickens opened a furious bombardment and kept it up during the conflagration, but without doing any dam age. At Pensacola all public property, except the Custom House, which was in capable of being burned, was destroyed, but ail moveable Contederate property had been saved. The railroad track leading out of the city towards Montgomery was torn up. A Federal vessel with a flag of truce, came up to the city- to-day, deman ding a surrender. Mnj. Bolbee refused to complv with the demand, but stated that as all the military forces had left, he had no power to oppose. The Federal officers replied that they would occupy the city to-morrow, but that the inhabi tants need not be alarmed. The War Department has received the following dispatch from Prig. Gen.. John W. Geary, dated Rec-tortown, Va., May 1G : "A company of Infantry of my com mand was yesterday ordered to Liuaen to remain stnioned there. A detachment of seventeen, guarding the company wag on, reached there a short time before the m?in body of the company, which was on a train, when tiny .were attacked by a body of cavalry, variously estimated at from iiOO to CUO, coming upon them from four directions. Our men resisted them, keeping up a sharp fire, under shelter of the depot, which was riddled with bullets. My men were overpowered. One was killed and fourteen taken prisoners, three of whom were wounded, uheu the enemy hastily retired, under hre, and with some j Joss. I have been informed that a por- i tion of (ten. Shields command had a skir- misdi vith them' Late advices from Port ' lioyal state, that Gen. Hunter's proclamation had been i . t i j-publi.-lua in lnarieMon, ami a negro in s ssurrcotion there was imminent. ast preparations arc making to nomoaru sa vannah. Our gunboats have proceeded nr the river, and our pickets are within i four miles of the city. .Massive uaucnes. Kiglit Betvrcen llic Eyes ! From the Xew York Tribune Geu. David Hunter, commanding the Department of the South, having ascer tained that the liebel authorities in his department were impressing slaves, arm ing them, and organizing them into bri gades, has issued the following important order : IIeadqtaktehs Dept. of tue Socrn. "I Uiltox Head, S. C, ilay 9, 1EG2. General Okdeks, No 11. The three States of Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina, com prising the Military Department of the South, having deliberately declared themselves no longer tinder the protection of the United. States of America, and having taken up arms against the said United States, it became a military necessity to declare them under mar tial law. This as accordingly done on the 23th day of April, lh?G2. Slavery and mar tial law in a tree country are altogether in compatible. The persons in these three States. Georgia, Florida, and South Carolina, heretofore held as shires, are therefore decla red free. Official. DAVID HUNTER, " Maj. Gen. Commanding. Ed. YV". Smith, Acting Ass't Adjt. Gen. This Order, we understand, is based upon explicit instructions to Gen. Hunter to countervail any attempt of his traitor adversaries to use negroes against him by the most obvious and efficient means. The instructions carried out by General Sherman would of themselves have justi fied this step, but we believe there are others to the same purport, but more re cent and explicit. Thus far,- the Iiebcls have had a full year's start of us in the employment of "contrabands" in this war. Slaves and free negroes have alike been compelled to open roads, throw up entrenchments, con struct fortifications, plant batteries, and do all the fatigue duty of the War. Slaves have, of course, grown the food of the liebeb and produced the wherewithal to buy all that they did not steal of their arn3 and ammunition. Blacks have for months been enlisted, mustered, organi zed, and drilled, for the support of the Iiebellion. Meantime, cur tide has al most uniformly evinced a strange reluc tance to avail itself of the services of this species of force, which has led impartial observers to conclude that we were not in earnest, and that, after a decent show of resistance for form's sake, the liebel Con federacy was to be acknowledged. Up to this hour, the liebels, as it thoroughly m ! earnest, have wielded against the Union ists every weapon they 'iould clutch ; while our side has seemed specially solic itous not to hurt the liebels. 1 AVe judge this is now to end, at least in Gen. Hunter's department. That ma jority of the People of South Carolina who have been steadily and are heartily loyal is now relieved of all National obli gation to be bought and sold, whipped and paddled, at the beck of the most obstinate and flagitous liebels. If compelled to serve these traitors any longer, it will not be by authority nor under compulsion of the Unifed States. "But what good will thi do V it is asked, "since the liebel soldiery are be tween us and the slave?, and will not al low them to know whut we propose to do for them ?" It will do this good, at least, Sir ; it will assure every negro in Gen. Hunter's Department that ours is for him the side of Freedom that, if he can only escape from the liebels and reach the lines of our forces, his Slavery is ended. He will no longer be puzzled nor confused by the lying assertions of white scoundrels that we are seeking to steal him and sell him to Cuba; or, if he is, it will not be our fault. But the liebel master's curses on this order will convey its purport into every household, and very soon nearly every negro in the Department will know that "Liberty and Union" are indeed "one and inseparable." Many are so be nighted, debased, hopeless, that they will make no cflort to escape from their chains ; but thousands will be on the aleit to gain their freedom ; and a consciousness of this will distract the attention and para lyze the arm of the liebels. They must fight us with one hand, using the other to collar their bondmen. At all events, this Order is a great fact. It indicates Progress. It points the way to unity-" and victory, devolutions take no backward steps till their full circle is accomplished. And this infernal rebel lion, fomented and inaugurated in the in terest of Slavery, and -designed to insure to thai great wrong boundless aggrandize ment, security and sway, is destined, in the Providence of God, to work its utter downfall and ruin. New Youk, May 10. The I'rilv.ncs dispatch says it is confidently asserted that the President has determined to modify Gen. Hunter's Order of Freedom, by re quiring him to conform to thcTact of Con gress, passed at the extra session, by which only the slaves actually employed in mili tary service by the rebels are liberated. There is reason to believe, however, that whatever the inclination of the President's mind may have been at the reception of the order, or whatever he may have eaid to anxious querists, the decision is yet to be announced, and will be postponed un til those members of the Cabinet who are now absent, return. An effort has been made to have General Bcnhani placed in command of the Department of the South, instead of Gen. Hunter, but with no hope cf success. 3?" It is stated that Com. .Goldsbor on 'ih has taken two batteries on the James i viver, one of which the Gulcna silenced. Tlie Accusation and Hie lrool". There is something fearful and truthful in the following interrogatories and their replies. We copy them from the Wilkes barre Record of the Times, and reprint them, as the clearest conviction which has ever been made in the case of any po litical party : What party attempted nullification du ring Gen. Jackson's administration ? The slave-holding democracy. What party elected James Buchanan to the Presidency ? The slave-holding democracy. What party did Floyd belong to when he stole our arms and ammunition, and sent the loyal United States troops where they could uot aid in suppressing rebel lion ? He was no Republican. What party did Breckenridge belong to when he ran for President? No Republican voted for him, thank heaven I Who broke up the Democratic party at Charleston to defeat Stephen A. Douglas and ruin the land by a wicked rebellion ? The friends of John C. Breckinridge. Who fired on the Star of the West, and the United States flag ? The Breckenridge party. Who bombarded Fort Sumter ? The Breckinridge party. Who treated wounded Union soldiers at Bull Iiun worse than brutes last J uly ? The Breckinridge party who always called themselves democrats. Who massacred our friend"? at Ball's Bluff, and left their bones unburied to bleach in the weather for months, until Union men found them ? Men who had always called themselves democrats and Know Nothings, and who are now Breckinridge men. Who hung and drove out Methodist preachers from Texas 'I Men who hate Abolitionists and voted for Breckinridge. Who threatened to hang Parson Brown low for daring to support the Union in East Tennessee ? Breckinridge and Buchanan democrats who pretended to be opposed to "coer cion, war, and high taxes." Who have just been driving hundreds of Union loving citizens out of Tennes- see : The same Breckinridge men that per secuted Parson Brownlow. Who fired on peaceful citizens of New Orleans as the rebel army was retreat- Rebel democrats, who could not endure the deliirht of women and children at the approach of the glorious old "Stars and Stripes." here lias rebellion looked for sympa thy from first to last ? To the democratic party. Why ? Because the rebels were all democrats, and had been promised aid if they atlempt ed to overthrow an administration elected by the free labor cf the North. Are all democrats traitors ? No! Very few good democrats are really in favor of rebellion, but a very large portion of the party used flcmocrury to cloak their hideous political deformity, and for years ruled the party. And the wicked spirits sent out by these men yet infest many who should have the nerve to drive them out, for they teach love of slavery arid hatred of free iabor, and lead their victims almost unconsciously to sym pathize with rebels, and oppose the patri otic endeavors of the Administration to subdue our enemies. Are there any Republican rebels ? I never heard of one. - Do republicans uphold the Union and the constitution, and strive to put down treason and rebellion ? To a man. They ask that tho best gov ernment on earth be spared to them, and that the free white labor at the North be respected. What party is justly responsible for all the debts and taxes entailed on us by this rebellion " That question is easily answered. The Breckinridge party is alone responsible. Does the Republican party oppose high taxes ? Yes. , Egi, The Homestead Bill having now become a law, those who will directly be benefited by the measure, may justly tiace that benefit totjhe energy and pcrseve-rt-nces of the Republican party in Con gress. This splendid achievement cannot possibly be over-estimated. No measure has passed Congress in ten years or twenty that carries on its shoulders such sheaves of wealth as.this docs. It is a stately ad vance step in this sluggish world, and as we follow it for fifty future years, its promise reaches to the Pacific, and fills a zone of earth w.ith the new music of sum mer toil, and the new beauty and fragrance of summer fields. And not merely those future dwellers, but all the people of the nation, to-day, will turn in gratitude to the men who have made this bill a law. y A "diamond cut diamond" story is. told of tho. Winstead Bank robbers. They left the gold they obtained from the bank in charge of a New York accomplice who stole the money and went to Europe. Green and his companion followed, found him, ajid demanded the money. The sharper refused to disgorge, threatening to expose the bank robbery, and they were compelled to come home without it. JEQT'.If a new'military Governor has tc bo appointed for Virginia, as will be the ! case if New Virginia is recognized as a j State, John Miner Dotta is talked of for I the position. Stand From Under Prom the llarrisburg Telegraph. Every man who has a dollar invested in the loans recently negotiated by the government, for the purpose of supporting the army, while the soldiers who compose that army are battling to suppress rebel lion, tendered the lean in good faith and confidence that it would be repaid with interest. It was not made as a speculation, nor is it now a "fancy" of the money mar ket. The investment was a solemn and a sincere business transaction, accepted with its attendant risks in the emergency of the defeat of our armies. If our country was destroyed if the Union was irrevo cably dissolved, the great business inter ests of the loyal states, with those who had risked their individual resourced and means in the conflict, were ready also to go down. This was the spirit in which men invested their fortunes in this contest, aud theretore the attacks of certain politi cians and presses on the war debt, with the direct purpose of counseling repudia tion, is as contemptible as their former actions were mean and dastardly. The people who have thi3 money invested in the war debt, must watch the feeling on this subject, as it is expressed by and con fined among a certain class of politicians. They must watch the men who are now attempting the re-organization of the Dem ocratic party, as one of the objects of that re-organization is to repudiate the war debt, and thus force the north into a bank ruptcy which southern treason and dough face complicity with rebellion could not produce-. This scheme is now one of the morsels which the locofeK-o press aud semi-locofoco traitors in Congress are busi ly digesting, so that we may look for the announcement any day that Congress or the President had no authority in the first place to make war for the suppression of the rebellion, and consequently no right to contract debts in furtherance cf such a purpose. It will require no more boldness to make such a plea and assume this posi tion, than it did to declare the war" a measure cf coercion, and afterwards per sistently maintain that there was no authority in the Constitution to confiscate the property of rebels. One argument follows another; one pretext springs from another in this entire business, and the man or men who contend that the proper ty of rebels cannot be confiscated, or that this war is an act of aggiession or coercion, are equally prepared at any time to assert that the entire war debt should be repudi ated. The traitors who sought the erection of a Southern Confederacy will never be able to liquidate the debts they contracted. Even the States which negotiated loans for that purpose will fail to discover their obligations, so that as repudiation follows rebellion in the south, bankruptcy attends the career of both, the Democratic press and leaders ot the loyal states will once more bind the south to their allegiance, by making repudiation a policy of their party. The party that lias advocated slavery for fifty years, and on ail occasions made that institution supercede all other interests, will not shrink from the advocacy ct repudiation. Jt will narmonize as cordially with the feelings of such men to I make the bankruptchy of the nation their object as it did to make the dissolution of j the Union their grand political purpose. ! This subject is worthy the attention of the loyal American people, at a time when the leaders of acsham Democracy are la boring to re-orgauize. If the war debt is to be repudiated, and if taxation is to be resisted, we will become most effectu ally disgraced in the eyes of the world. The shame will be greater than it could possibly have been made by the success of the rebellion. It behooves honest men, therefore, to resist the machinations of the leaders of the locofoco party to achieve power. If they are successful, repudiation becomes inevitable. The Secession armies are as cruel ' as they are cowardly. Each battle-field affords a new illustration of their savage and inhuman spirit. They commenced the practice of shooting our pickets alons: the line of the Potomac, and delighted in the cold-blooded murder of the brave guards of our outer lines. At Bull Run they killed defenceless prisoners, and ' made drinking cups .of the skulls of their defenceless victims. At Pea Ridce they j employed Indians, who repeated all the atrocities of savage warfare. At Nw Orleans they fired upon an unarmed crowd of Union men, women, and children. At Y'orktown, recently, they followed the practice they adopted pt Columbus, cf leaving behind them torpedoes and infer nal machines, for the purpose of wounding or killing a few of our soldiers. War, at best, is horrible enough, but the unneces sary slaughter of human beings against the rules of warfare which all civilized nations respect, or to gratify a mere blood-thirsty spirit of revenge, without aiming at or expecting any military results, is as essen tially sheer murder during the existence of hostilities as it would bo in times of profound peace. The enemy have dis played all the instincts of rude and reck less barbarians, and few or none of the traits of gallant soldiers. Tdiey are as sanguinary where their power is uncheck ed as they are timorous in the presence of equal or superior force. They are as rea dy to commit outrages, which noble spir its would prcveut at the hazard of their lives, as they re to flee at the approach of danger. IJrig. Gen. William II. Keim died in llarrisburg, on Sunday last, of typhoid fever. The deceased was well known j throughout the State fyr lm patriotism 1 and many virtues. liebel Barbarities. One of the volunteers in the 72d Penn sylvania (Baxters Zouaves,) in a published letter now before us, describing the battle at West Point, says : "The rebels found six of our men wounded. They robbed them, and then cut their throats. I saw two of these victims of their savage bar barity yesterday." The New ork Evening tost has an able article on this subject. After refer ring to the barbarities practiced upon Union men in Tennessee, it says : The circumstances of the death of Maj. Reyerson, of New Jersey, at the battle of Williamsburg, are no less illustrative of the barbarous ferocity of the rebels. Major Reyerson had been wounded, ad in the heat of the engagement was left on the field, at his own desire, expressing his confidence of good treatment from the' enemy should he fall into their hands. His body was afterwards found, stripped of clothing, pierced with bayonet wounds and the ears shamefully mutilated. Ho was a brave and meritorious officer ; he had behaved on that day with admirable coolness and courage, and an enemy not lost to all sense of generosity and human ity would have honored the wounded hero aud treated him tenderly: At the satae battle the rebels searched and rifled the pockets of every soldier whom they found stricken down on the battle field, and sometimes murdered the wounded by piercing them with bayonets, and with the butts of their rifles broke in the skulls of the dead. We cannot refer these enormities to any other cause than to an institution which gives an almost boundles license to the worst passions cf mankind. The people of Tennessee are cf the same stock with ourselves a generous stock ; in tra cing their origin a few years back, the lines of consanguinity meet; their ances tors and ours were the same, among the descendants of whom in that State have been many whom we are proud to claim as our kinsmen. Slavery is the sole causo of this frightful backsliding in civilization and of all the horrors" we have enumera ted. God forbid that we should have a word to say against any measure which promises the extirpation of the root of eo many evils. IN TEW GOODS I ! NEW FIRM I ! ! W.tf. DAVIS & SOX3 are receiving and opening, at the old stand cf "Wm. Davis, on High street, a superior assortment of Guoda, which they offer to the citizens of Kbcnbcrj and vicinity at reduced pricet. -Their stock consists in part of ' DRY GOODS. GROCERIES, HARDWARE, QUEENS WARE. NOTIONS, HATS CARS, ROOTS SHOES. CLOTHING, etc., etc., etc. All cf which will be sold as cheap as th cheapest. No charges for exhibiting good?. Country Rroduce of eery description waa ted in exchange for goods. WM. DAVIS k SONS. Ebeusburg, May 22, 1862-3t JfcSf All persons indebted to me are re pectfully invited to coiue forward aud seltld without delay. WM. DAVIS. A UDITOR'S NOTICE. jL. The undersigned, having lten appoin ted hy the Orphans' Court ot Cambria, coun ty, to report distribution of the funds in the hands of Wm. Kittell. sq.. being proceedj of certain real estate of Thomas Jackson, dee d., sold by virtue of an order of said Court, pursuant to proceedings in partition, hereby notifies all parties interested iu said fund, that he will attend to the duties of his said appointment, at his ofnee. in the bor ough of Ebeusburg, on Thursday, the 22d dav of Mav. at 1 o'clock. P. M. A. C. MULLIN, Auditor. Ebensburg, Way 1, lS62-3t. 131 PORTA NT NOTICK. The undersigned. Administrators of Jacob Stahl. dee'd.. have in their possession about 22 Watches, which appear to have been left with the said Jacob Stahl during his lifetime, for the purpose of being repaired. As we wish to close the business of the estate, no tice is hereby given to the owners of the sai I watches to come forward, on or before the 12th day of June next, prove property in th same, and take them away, otherwise thev willbe sold immediately after that date. Wfl do not know who are the owners. ELTZARETII ST All L, II. KINKEAD, Ebensburg. May 15, 18C2 Adm3. PUBLIC SALE!! I will expose to public sale, tt my res idence, in Wiluore. Cambria countr, on SAT I'RDAV, the 31st day of MAV, ins'tant. at in o'clock in the forenoon, four head of horses, cows, wagons, hacks, sleds, sleighs, Ii.irEe.e?, farming utensils, stoves, and an" extensive amount of beds and bedd-ng, carpets, chairs, tables, china of every variety and a variety of articles too numerous to mention. Terms made known on day cf sale, w hen a reasonable credit will be given by WILLIAM PALMER. "Wilmore, May 15, 1802. "NOTICE. Whereas, my wife, Margaret, has left my bed and board without just cause or provoca tion, all persons are forbid harboring or ma ting her on my account, as I will pay no debu of her contracting. RICHARD R. DAVIS. Cambria Tp , May 15, 1802-31. J1 ST RECEIVED THREE BARRELS LAKE TROUT, A PRIME ARTICLE, AT A. A. BARKER'S STORE. ONLY TWENTY-FIVE CENTS' PER DOZLN' CALL AND SAMPLE THEM Ebensburg, March 6, lt3. - Cft- Rhiuks of every li- n'.j'tvji p-iiut? ' at thi o!h- io oi-ltr. i! irT
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