Tlxo llos:V23LltZl. i an m : . r- u? t. w-y aj HIGIIT OR WIIOXG. vnsM RiailT, TO Bit KU f I VHil y WHQVO, TO ill fV7 h I fi H T, THURSDAY:::::: JUNE 10. j .People's County Convention. THE rEOPLEorCAMURIA COUNTY, who NATIONAL ADMINISTRATION in its patri otic efforts to suppress a sectional and unho ly rebellion apainst the UNITY OF THE HE PUBLIC, and who desire to support, by every power of the Government, ono hundred thoui- nad heroic Peunsvlvanians in arms, braving ! disease nnd the perils of the field to preserve the Union of "our Fathers, are requested to meet in their respective election districts on lTmn V Ka "wrV. .J:iv r.f JITLi . next, be- ! tl'ook" tweeu the hour3 of three and seven o 1. M.. and jtlect two delegates from each of laid districts to represent them in a COUNTY , CONVENTION, to be held at the Court House, t la EBE.NSBURG, on j Monday, 7tii pay or July, fxsuino, j at one o'clock, P. M., when and where Con- j pressioual and Senatorial Conferees will be appointed, a County Ticket nominated, and uch other action taken ts the usages oi tne party require or the exigencv demands. ' M. S. HARR, Chairman reoplt County Committer. June 19, t62. Death of C. I. -Hurray, Esq. Our fellow-townsman. Charles D. " Murray, Esq., is no more ! The mel ancholy fact is briefly told in our obitu- t n ry column to-day, but the subject of his life and death is one which demands more than a passing notice at our hands. Charles D. Murray was born in Ar magh, Indiana county, in August, 1S32, and was therefore about thirty years old at the period of his untimely death. All we know in relation to his earlier days is what we have learned from those who were intimate iu the family. We have been told that his childhood and youth gave great promise of future usefulness and ability. lie had few educational ad vantages afforded him, but this want he overcame by his native quickness and in telligence. Of him it may be truthfully eaid that he was self-educated and sclf inide. Constitutionally unfitted for man ual labor, as he advanced in life, his in clination ran in the direction of school teaching j a business which he followed, at intervals, for some years, with consid erable Euccess. Ambitious, however, of entering the medical profession, he enrol led himself as a student under Dr. Wm. Lemon, of this place, with whom he read for several months, and with a result that was strikingly apparent in the knowledge of the profession which he subsequently displayed in conversation. But for some reason or other he disli ked the theory of the healing art, or per haps he may have felt that, physically, he would be unable to endure the hardships incident to its practice, and accordingly he quit the Aesculapian studio that he might pursue the study of the law under the direction of Col. Michael Hasson. He was admitted to the Bar, at tho Term of December, 1853, and we are informed by legal gentleaicn who were on his Com mitter, that ho passed the examination with the highest credit. Shortly after his admission, he formed a partnership with Col. MicnAEL Dan Mageiian, and was for several months associated with that distinguished lawyer. One would have supposed that Mr. Murray would have cultivated and im proved the field thus opened up to him, as a place in which, above all others, to j develop and display his talent3. But however much he loved the theory of the law, he did cot cafe to make its practice his profession for life. His real taste and desire ran in an entirely different chan nel. He preferred the ups and downs, and the eeneral excitement incident to politics and political life, rather than the dry plodding and grave cares which per I2in to a law-office. Wbile quite a youth, Lc identified himself with the fortunes of the Democratic Party: he was alwavs a favorite with the nuuse? cf that organiza tion in this county, and ut their request, lung even before he was himself entitled to exercise the elective franchise, he frc fiueully addressed their popular assem Mies, And when, in 1S53, that Party united with the Old Lir.e Whigs in this ounty, Mr. Murray was put forward by his friends as their choice for County Trea.urer ; he received the nomination ai;l was elected. The records nf that ff.cr, while ttnJr chanrc, will furVUb their own hot pftneifvii-. and 10 ftp si relates to th oth. cr dutica which the position devolved upou him, we need only repeat what we have often heard, that they wcro performed with the utuio.t impartiality and fidelity. Near the close of his official term, he as sf.clsited kiuue-'f with Judge Devine, in tho publication of the Democrat tt Sent! v.rh A few months later, we believe it vs'DS in February, Uat gentleman retired -from the establishment, and thence for'h the editorial control of the p;.per de volved wholly upon Mr. Mi.iuv.VY. lie continued in that position-up to the pe riod cf his death, being also, in the mean time, employed a few mouths as Clerk to the County Commissioners. , As a writer, Mr. Murray po?scssed considerable merit. His sentences were well rounded, and in general his subjects were well choseu and well handled. lie had a fine poetical taste, and had at his peu'3 end, quotations to meet almost ev ery conceivable case. In his editorial contests he was frequently very bitter and sarcastic, and in his political articles ul- I wa3 8 evinced himself a thorough partisan. lie was apt and ready as a debater, al- ways expressing himself with clearness and fiueucy. The accident, which reuUcd in his death, we have already adverted to in these coluinus. On the night of Satur day, the 31st ultimo, at about 11 or 12 o'clock, .whilst returning to his home, he unfortunately, amid the pitchy darkness, stepped from the pavement and fell down the basement stairway of the Town Hall. He fell headlong, it is supposed, a distance of eight or ten feet, and at the end of the fall his head struck violently against a sharp corner of a stone in the jamb of the basement door. From the blood upon the ground, it is supposed he lay there several hours iu a state of utter insensibility, and then recovered sufficiently to go home. This he did, it seems, without any aid, and on arriving there, at about four o'clock in the morninjr, undressed himself and retired to bed, no one about the house knowing that any unusual occurrence had befallen him. The following day, medi cal aid was called in, and on examination his skull. was found to be severely fractu red. Every attention was shown him, and two of our most eminent physicians ex hausted their skill in his casn, but all to co purpose. lie lingered, almost all tho while in a state of unconsciousness, until Friday eveniug last, when Death put an end to his sufferings. He was buried on Sunday, in the Cath olic grave-yard, at this place, whither his remains were attended by a large con course of sorrowing relatives and friends, and among them the members of the Bar, whose resolutions, pissed on the occasion of his decease, we publish in another column. He has left an aged and pious mother whom he fondly loved, and who cherished him as her greatest earthly treasure. But that same mysterious Providence which has thus berett her of her darling boy, will be with anl comfort her, and be to her a pillar of support in the dark and trying hour? that now hang upou her household. ihus this 3-oung man, m tne sprin time of life, has been taken from our midst ! If he had his frailties and his foibles and who has not ? it is cot fitting that we should speak of theni now. We throw over them the broad mantle of charity and of silence. It were the part of a craven to do otherwise, now that his eye is sealed and his tongue and hand silent in Death, and he is no longer here to confront an accuser. Ever bold, impulsive, and cut- Fpokcn, it is not to be be concealed that I he had his enemies ; but he had his friends too friends who will long cherish his memory, and make it one of the brightest, greenest spot3 in the garden of their hearts. It was well said by one of his admirers, that "his place might soon be supplied, but it could never be filled " lie is gone, aud 'We ne'er shall look upon his like agaiu." jDST Thomas A. Scott, Esq., who has for some time past ably filled the position of Assistant Secretary of War, has tender ed his resignation, which has been accep ted, lie has been indefatigable and faithful in the performance of his duties, and rendered efficient aud valuable aid to the Government while in office. The Directors of the Pennsylvania Railroad have unanimously elected him Vice Pres ident of their Company, a position which he filled previous to his appointment at Washington. JC--S?" "Cross Keys" is the name given tie battle between Gen. Fremont's divis ion a:u the rebel army of Gen. Jackson. Gross Keys is a finall town on the Shen andoah, and located about five miles Troin each of these points. late freshota in the eastern pan cf the State committed great damage. 23rovnlovr ut Philadelphia. Rev. William 0. Brown low, the sturdy patriot of Tenofcfsso, wet with a most cor. dial receptioa at the hands of the people of Philadelphia on Friday evening last. la addition to speeches Winer delivered by Kx-Cov. Pollock, Gen. Walbrid-e, Hon. Horaeo Maywsrd, Hon. Caleb B. Smith, Secretary of the Interior, and Gen. Cary, a Union Flag was presented to tho bravo daughter of tho Paro:, Mrs. Sawyer, by Hon. Wm. I. Lewis, in acknowledgement cf her devotion to that glorious ensign. The editor of thi paper was present on the occasion, and is constrained to say that the proceedings, ail in all," -ere a splendid and fitting ovation to the hero-p-atiiot. Mr. Brownlow spoke at consid erable length, handling the monster Se cession without gloves. The following are his concluding remarks we are sorry we have not room for the entire speech : Mr. Brownlow next proceeded to show how by fraud and violence tho bogus Confederacy had elected their President and Vice President how the election was forced in Tennessee. The rebels determined, by au act of the Legislature, to rob all Union men of their arms and all meaus by which they could defend themselves. This was well carried out throughout the whole South. In spite of all these wrongs imposed on good people he was sorry to say that here iu the North were many who sympathized with this in fernal rebellion. He would say to them that they were the most hell-deserving and God-forsaken wretches, and worse man inose oi tne same sore wno are South. Applause. When the speaker wa3 thrust into jail, he found there one hundred and fifty true Union men, guilty of nothing else on God's earth but wish ing to sustain the old flag. One or two of them were old Baptist ministers, who weie only charged with voting for Lincoln. When he was placed there these men expressed their regret, and said they nev er expected to see him in such a bad sit uation. He made them a speech told them to cheer up ; they were not there for any crime, but only because fhey were loyal to the best Government on earth. He was there for the same offeuce, and he told them that there he would rot before he would denounce his creed. There we lay in prison, day .after da, until they commenced hanjriu us. The rebels were accustomed to drive up to to the prison with coffins in carts we knew some one was tj hang, but not which one; wc all trembled iu our boots. How do you think your humble servant felt ? for if any man in that jail, under their law, deserved the gallows, I claim to have been the man. I knew it, and they knew it. Applause. They came sometimes with two cofiius, one in each cart, and they took two men at a time and marched them out. lie af terwards learned that at a drum head court-martial he lacked oiie vote of being hung, and this vote v.as so given for fear that otherwise it might damage the Con federacy. The speaker narrate 1 the ease of an old man and his son, who were hung i one after another. They made that r.oor old man, who was a Methodist class-leader, sit by and see his son hang till he was dead, and then they called him a damned Lincolnite Union-ehrieker and said, "Come on ; its your turn next." He sank, but they propped him up and led him to the halter, and swung both off on the samo gallows. During this horrible scene the wives and daughters of Secessionists were enjoying the .sight at a distance. He thought that when once the spirit of Se cession possesses a female South, she has within her more devils than ever weut cut of Mary Magdalene. Laughter. In that miserable jail lay a number of sick, nigh unto death, and soma of them died after his discharge. One case he would never forget that of the son of an old minister acquaintance of his, James Madison Catc, j a most exemplary and worthy member of the baptist Church, who was there for having committed no other crime than that of refusing to volunteer, and who lay stretched upou the floor, with one thick ness of a piece of carpot under him, and an old overcoat doubled up for a pillow, in the very agonies of death, unable to I turn over, only from one side to the other. II 13 wife came to visit him, bringing her youngest child with her, which was but a babe, but they refused her admittance. I put my head out cf the jail window, nnd entreated them for God's sake, to let the poor woman come in, as her husband was dying They at last consented that she might see him for the limited time of fif teen minutes. As she came in and looked Upon her husband's wan and emaciated face, and saw how rapidly he was sinking, she gave evideut signs of fainting, and would have fallen to the, floor, with the babe in her arms, had he not rushed up to her and cried, "Let me have the babe," and then she sank down upou the breast of htr dying husband, unable at first to speak a single word. lie sat by and held the babe untiil the fifteen minutes had expired, when the officer came in, and in an insulting and peremptory manner no tified her that the interview was to close. He hoped he might never see such a scene again ; and yet such cases were common over all East Tennessee. Such actions as these show the spirit of Seces sion in the South. It is the spirit of mur der aud assassination ; it is the spirit of hell. And yet you have men at the North who sympathize with these infernal mur derers. Applause. If he owed the devil a debt to be discharged, and it was to bo discharged by the rendering up to him of a dozen of tha meanest, most revolting, und Godforsaken wrctche that ever could bo culled from tho ranks cf depraved hu man society, and hc wanted to pay that debt and got ft premium upon thopaymeut ho would make ft tender to hla tanii! Majesty cf twelve oithern men who sympathized with this infernal rebellion. Great Cheering. Why, gentlemen, alter tho battle ct'Manaa3a3 and Bull liun, the officers and privates of tho Confederate army passed tb rough our town ou their way to Dixie, exulting over tho victory they had achieved, and some of them hud what they called Yankee heads, or the entire heads of Federal soldiers, soine of them with long bcard3 and goatees, by which they would take them up and say, 'See I here is the head of a damned sol dier captured at Bull Bun." That is the spirit of secession at the South. It is the spirit of murder, of the vile untutored savage; it is the spirit of hell; and he who apolo gifce3 for them is no better than those who perpetrate the deed. Cheers. But in the town of Greenville, where An drew Johnson resides, they took out of the jail, at one time, two innocent Union men, who had committed no offence on the face of the earth , but that of being Union men Xashy and Fry. Fry was a 1 1 - . 1 " 1 I , r poor suuemaiver, wun a wire ana nail a dozen children. A follow from way down East in Maine, by the name of Daniel Leadbeater, the bljodiest and the most ultra man, the vilest wretch, the most unmitigated scoundrel that ever made a tfaek in East Tennessee. This is Col. Daniel Leadbeater, late of the United States Army, but now a rebel in the Se cession army. He took these two men, tied them with his own hands upon one limb, imniediatehy over the railroad track, in the town of Greenville, and ordered them to hang four days and nights, and directed all the engineers and conductors to go by that hanging concern slo'T, in a kind of snail gallop, up and down the road, to give the passengers an opportu nity to kick the rigid bodies and strike them with a rattan. And they did it. He pledged his honor that on the front platform they made a business of kicking the dead bodies as they passed by; and the women (he would not say ladies, for down South we make a distinction between ladies and women) the women, the wives and daughters of men in high position, waved their white handkerchiefs iu tri umph through the windows of the car at the sight of the two dead bodies hanging there. Leadbeater, fur his murderous courage, was promoted by Jeff. Davis to the office of Brigadier General. He had an encounter, as their own p3pers at Rich mond state, at Bridgaport, not long ago, with a part of Gen Mitchell's army, where Leadbeater got a glorious whipping. Ilia own party turned round and chastised him for cowardice. He had courage to hang innocent unarmed men taken out of a jail, but he had not courage to face the Yankees and the Northern men that were under Mitchell and Buell. He took to his heels like a coward and scavenger as he is. Applause and cheers. Our pro gramme is this that when we get back into East Tennessee we will instruct all our friends everywhere to secure and ap prehend this feliow, Leadbeater, and our purpose is to take him tj that tree and make the widow of Fry, tie the rope around his infernal neck. And yet you have in your midst sympa thizers with these rascals. You ought to drive them out of Philadelphia on a rail, and if we begin to do so to-morrow he would help. Loud applause. He congratulated his audience, in con clusion, that the South could not hold ouc a great wnue longer, mere were thousands who were tired and sick of the work, and were destitute of clothing. arms, ana ammunition, lney had no cause to fight tor; hell and the devil were on their side, aud that Was all. The blockade had literally ruined them. When he left Tennessee no sheriff's posse could find a fine-tooth comb in the whole town, and, iu consequence, the heads of their children were very much taken possession of by little inhabitants contending fertile right of squatter sovereignty. The Government had encountered a re bellion in Massachusetts, and a Whisky Insurrection iu Pennsylvania. More re cently still, we had a rebellion in the neighboring State of Rhode Island, known as the Dorr rebellion, and the Government very efficiently and properly put it down ; but the great conspiracy of the nineteenth century and the great rebellion of the age h now ou hand, and he believed that Abe Lincoln, with the people to back him, will crush it out. Cheers and applause. It would be done, it must be done, and it shall be done great cheering and, haviug done that thing, gentlemen and ladies, if they will give us a few weeks' rest to recruit, we will lick England and 1 ranee both it they wish it loud applause and he was not certain but we would have to do it particularly eld England. Great laughter. She has been playing a two fisted game, and he was well represented by Russell, for he carried water on both shoulders. He did not like the tone of her journals, and when this war is finished we shall have four or five hundred thou sand well-drilled soldiers, inured to the hardships of war, under the lead of expe rienced officers, and then we shall be ready for the rest of the world and the balance of mankind. Applause .We might have to give old England what Paddy gave the drum, "a devil of a beat-iug-i' Great laughter aud applause. It it believed thtit Kansas lias ed 5.00 wliita inhabitants trnm Mk. ivuli and Arkansas during the past year. Pennsylvania bud tho War. When ths Rf-posifory end 2tmscrtpt, tho abld organ of the P.epublicana of Franklin county, declares that the posi tion of Pennsylvania in the war mut ba a source of pride to every loyal heart, it reiterates a statement which is essentially true. When hoards of perjured traitors resolved upon the destruction of oar be neficent Government, and firtd upon th gallant band that defended the Etan and stripes of Sumter, Pennsylvania respon ded in defence of our flag by offering thou ands upon thousands more troops than the government could arm and equip; aud the first silver lining -f the black cloud that hung over our beleagured Cap ital in April, A. D., 1861, was the appear ance upon Pennsylvania Avenue of a reg iment of ununiformed and badly armed but patriotic and fearless Pcnnsylvanian, who threw themselves between the Gov ernment and its treasonable foe?. Then a thrill of joy went up throughout the land, aud the millions of true but despon ding hearts in the North rejoiced that Pennsylvania had saved the National Cap ital. Since then the noble old Keystone State has more than met every demand made i upoa her, to restore peaco and unity to the Republic. Although second to New York in population, she has to-day more troops in actual service than any other State iu the Union. Over one hundred thousand of our brethren are now in the field, well equipped, armed, and more per- feet in all their appointments than the troops from any sister State ; and how he- roically they can fight, and how bravely die in defence of the Government of our forefathers, let the crimsoned records of Winchester, of Williamsburg, of Hanover Court House and Fair Oaks tell. 1 here is scarcely a family circle in our fctate wherein hearts do not beat uneasily when the lightning wings its brief but thrilling reports of another engagement ou the Pe ninsula ; aud many very many hearth- stones have been surrounded by parents, Schenck's Brigade was less, although L wives and sisters mourning for household j inflicted severe loss on the enemy, princi Gods who have been borne from the car- j pally by artillery fire. Of my staff, I lost naze of the bloody field to the "city of a good officer killed. Captain Nicholai the dead." In three brief weeks well nigh ten. thousand men have fallen on the Peninsula. Many have fallen and yiel ded up upon the field their heroic spirits to Him who isalike tho "God of Battles" and the "father to the fatherless." Many more are writhing under ghastly wounds and racking fever; and all have fallen in the holy cause of vindicating a common nationality. Of those who shall mourn tne bereavement 01 :neir iovea ones, a vast preponderance are Pennsylvanians ; and wide spread as is the joy over the tri umphs of our cause, is also the deep gloom that surrouuds saddened aud oft?n desola ted homes. In this mingled joy and grief joy for the triumph and grief for the fallen it is a source of the liveliest satisfaction that no Pennsy ivanian suffers moie thau the stern necessities of war im peratively demand. Our dead are gath ered, wherever possible, and conveyed home to rest with their k'ndred, and our wounded arc borne from the field and ca red for in every way that human effort and skill can invent. Of all the States, Pennsylvania stands alone iu her tender care for her fallen sons. An independent corps of Surgeons, under Surgeon General Smith, (a State officer) is ever at hand when death is deal- ioZ with our brethren ; and ample trans portation is furnished by our State Gov ernment to bring the wounded home, at the earliest possible period. Thus hun dreds of lives have been saved by the en ergy and skiil of our State officers. Take Pennsylvania, all in all, and she stands in this war without . a parallel. Her State government organized, in the very best manucr. the largest number of troops furnished by any State ha? done it promptly, faithfully, and at the- least cost in proportion to the number of men furnished by any State in the Union. Even partizan malice has been shamed into silence by a vindication the fullest investigation has furnished as to the pa triotic. untiring and successful efforts of Governor Curtin and his able cabinet have contributed to maintain the war. Credit able as have been the effo. ts of loyal Ex ecutives generally in sustaining the gov ernment, still the record of Gov. Curtin stands out in brilliant contrast with all the rest ; and whether we would learn of a grateful National government that has felt thestroncrsustainins: arm of our State ; or whether we would learn of those who j have received from the State oui martyr ed heroes to decorate their tombs with the tokens of affection ; or whether wc would leaan from the sickened aud woun ded who have been miuistercd to with the tenderest care ; or whether we would learu of the mainsprings of finance, who point to our State credit as first of all each would bear proud testimony that in all things pertaining to the credit, the honor, the humanity and glory cf a State, Pennsylvania and her patriotic Governor must stand foremost in the thrilling his tory of this unholy rebellion. KS The Rebel Government has pub lished a "General Order" directing the drafting of every male white and mulatto capable of bearing aims, whether they had substitutes or not. What a blessed state of society they are enjoying down in Dixie ! K3i,i:ivc iiunureu oecessiou in iuncrs, captured by Gen. Fremont's division be- j tween Mrasburg and liarnsonourg, a., arrived at Harrisburg on Sunday, and were taken to Camp Curtin, where they will be kept, until exchanged. General War Xcu. Tho most importact event of the U the complete defeat of the t Jackson's army by the Federal troop3 der Gen. Fremont. The following t tial report from Gen. Fremont, datsj p.. Republic, June 12, explains itself, uy troops renewed their march this mor" against the enemy, entering a denso w&j;' in battle order, hU cavalry appearia- J our flanks.' Gen Blanker had theVC Gen. Milroy tha right, and Gen. Selit. the center, with a reserve of Gea. StiL' brigade and Gen. Bayard's. The entt was found in full retreat pat Port Itep4 lie, and our advance found his rear g' barely across the river, and tho bridge ; flames. Our advance came in so sudJe denly that some of his officers, remain:: en this side, escaped with the loss cf the horses. A cannonading during the f noon apprised us of an engagement, u I am informed here that Jackson attaci ' ed Gen. Shields this morning, and, af;i: a severe engagement, drove him down ti. liver, and 13 no-w in pursuit. This mo:, ning detachments were occupied in searc;. ing the grounds covered by a hard fouL; action on yesterday at CroiS Keys, fortl.t dead and wounaed. 1 am not yet fi j informed, but think that 150 will eortr ! our loss in killed, and GOO that in woun- ded The enemy's los 3 we cannot oscer- tain. He was en craved during the nig'n in carrying off his dead and wounded. j 3 his morning on our march, upward cf 300 of his dead were counted iu one field, the greater part being badly mutilate! It cannon shot. Many of his dead wre aC scattered through the woods, and man. j had been already buried. A large nunj. I her oe prisoners have been taken duricj j the pursuit. I regret to have lost manj good oflicers. J roin the beginning c: the fight Gen. Stand's brigade lost in o- cers 5 killed and 17 wounded, and one ti hi3 regiment alone, the 8th New York, has buried 05. The rst cf his brigado also suffered severely. The loss in Gen. Dunnka. Many horses were killed in our batteries, which the enemy repeatedly at tempted to take, but were repulsed ly canister fire generally. I will send iu a full report a3 soon as possible, but I aia unable to make any more particular dis tinction than what I have already pointed out." Advices received at the War Depart ment state that Jackson's army attacked Gen. Shiclds's advanco on the 10th neur Port Republic. The conflict is said to have been maintained for four hours It 2,000 oF our men against the main body of Jackson's army. The enemy's force became so overwhelming in numbers that our advance was compelled to fall back, which it did in good order, until it met the main body of Gen. Shiclds's command, near Courat's store. As soon as this was effected the enemy in turn fell back. Our forces tried to reach the bridge over the Shenandoah to destroy it, but wero met by showers cf bullets and had to re tire. A large cavalry force crossed and attacked our troops, while their infantry followed. Our men opposed them at ev ery step, often driving them back with heavy loss ; but th number, after Gen. iyler s brigade arrived, were so much in. j ferior to the enemy there being at least live to one that it was impossible to hold our position, and we were comnclled to fall back three or four miles. A body of cavalry svere sent to attack us, but they were received in such a manner as to com pel them to retire, when the engagement ended, having lasted five hours. Our loss in killed and wounded is net known, but it is large, as is also that of the enemy. We lost a great many prisoners. Tho rebel Gen. Ashby was killed. The latest news from Gen. M'Clellan reports everything quiet, with the excep tion of a few slight skirmishes iu which the rebels were invariably worsted. TEW FIRM AND NEW GOODS'.'.! C. T. Roberts & Co. The subscribers take pleasure iu informing the People in general that thev have just re- ce'ved, at their rooms, on High street, a lrg and varied stock of WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY, NOTIONS. FANCY GOODS, CUTLERY, MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, &c, ic, All of which they are prenaredio sell cheaper than ever. Thankful for past favors, the new firm' would ask a continuance cf the same. No charge for showing our stock. .-.- . CALL AND EXAMINE ARTICLES! Clocks, Watches and Jewelry repaired with neatness and despatch- We have experienced workmen in our employ, and the public can rest satisfied that their work will be don satisfactorily. We do our best to render cus tomers satisfaction, tharnt moderate. C. T. ROBERTS Co. Ebensburg, June 19, lS62-tf. JUST RECEIVED Til REE BARRELS LAKE TROUT A PRIME ARTICLE, ' AT 1 RATWr'0 CTAni) 0NLY TWENTY-FIVE CENTS PER DOZEN CALL AND SAMPLE THEM. j Ebcnhurj, March f, li?PS.
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