(1 m it I' i '. 1 a . :,-- i -- .; pertinent i highly prejudicial to the pub lic intertsts. Add to thia the restivecess of the press at the restrictions placed upon j the transmission of military news, and a eortaiu blantness o manner which is the occasion of offence being Hometimea taken where none is intended to be given, and you have the solution of his alleged un popularity, and the veasona why he has thus been singled out for swift dostruc tion. To praise Gen. M'OIellan, whilst de nouncing Secretary Stanton, is a part of the plan of the rebellion .sympathizers ; hoping thereby to create division and dis sensions among the friends of the Union and the supporters of the Government. I doubt that man's judgment who de nies to Gen. M'Cleilan great military bkill, coupled with the mot ardent and enthusiastic devotion to that flag under which he marshals his hosts for battle, as I question the sincerity and patriotis.n of hiin who, whilst exalting Geo. M'Cleilan, villifies and abuses the President and his constitutional advisers. The truefriend of our glorious cause support? in their respective jurisdictions both Stanton tnd M'Ciellan, for they are alike cnicap'ed with all their great powers iu sustaiuiug and upholding the best government that ever iloated on the tide , of time, and in crushing the most damna ble rebellion that ever men or devils were engaged in, since the arch fiend himself made his iunpijus attempt to supplant the master of Heaven, and to dethrone the Creator of the Universe. Let us, my friends, beware of the de vices of these hollow hearted, pretending friends, and let the true men of the nation, whether in the tented field, or in the council chamber, be upheld and sustained, and let our denunciations be reserved for those who are endeavoring to destroy the Government and disunite the States. Our fathers constructed this Government by long suffering, and under great and terrible privations. They cemented the Uniou of these States with their life's blood, and thus raised and reared the . magnificent edifice, so that it should re main a monument to their wisdom and patriotism forever and forever. Shall their sous permit the destruction of this fair temple, and pass to their children, not the glorious inheritance which they re ceived from their fathers, but a divided, mutilated and dissevered estate, without ''form or comeliness," to be regarded only Sy the nations of the earth as a fit subject for scorn and reproach ? Shall the language of England's great . poet ever be applied to this ."America of ours?" 'Land of the unforgotten brave, "Whose clime, from plain to mountain's cere, "Was Freedom's borne or glory's grave. Shrine cf the Mighty, can it be That this is all remains of thee?" No, no, Heaven forbid; rather let us look forward to that day when peace shall again be restored to our common country; hen no government, or pretended govern ment, shall be recognized by any part of the American people, except that govern ment which was presided over by Wash ington in its iufancy, strengthened and perfected by Adams and Jefferson, Madi son and Monroe in its youth, protected Ay the iron will and unflinching courage of Andrew Jackson in its early age, and now preserved from the attacks of a trait orous brood by the strong arms and wil ling hearts of more than five hundred thousand true American soldiers. To this end, let us maintain our country's cause with our treasure, and if needs be, with our blood. Let us refuse all inter course, politically and personally, with i'uch as are now I'hUq to the old flag, and Jet vlh fwear by our manhood, and our hopes of heaven, never to yield to this Rebellion, e'en though, in resisting it, our hearthstones shpuid become a desolation and our Homes a dream. , The Paterson Guardian has this tjmely reminiscence "It is a fact not gveral!y known that during the Revolutionary War, when a .citizen tvas drafted in Virginia, he was allowed to find an able-bodied man as a substitute, and no distinction was made tn accouut of color. Very many of the slaveowners .sent tlieir able hands to fight in place .of themselves or their sons, and history says these sons of Africa fought braVely and well, spilling their blood freely for our independence. vAfter the war, these black soldier pat riot? desired to be free men, but their owners put forth their claims, in every '.rTnstauce, and the blacks who survived thj-ar, affer having served till our free ifom. j?as achieved, found out that there Vai to "be no free'dom for them with their owner's consent for the owner of a slave t-cldom relaxes' his grasp. 'Thc Legislature of Virginia, at the t insttdce ofThomas Jefferson, in order to . render justice to these blacks, found it necessary to pass a law declaring that, having served through the war, imperiled fhtir. lives for their country, they were entitled to their freedom, ind a law was fffcrdrTgly passed to carry into effect . this just and public determination." " The l'ost-Oflice Department .will . 'continue, after the 1st of August to issue etamps for currency -; those thu3 intended w'i4LJLe' without gluten, and will be re- dtCmable af the Treasuries, or exchanged . 'jLt the-Vcst-OSices fur stamps intended for pest , jJ,.Ex.Irc?hIeirt Martin YanBuren .dled'on Thursday, 24th in-;t., at Lis resi- V.t.o .' Kii'uhn-hook -N. Y. Onlv two '.-p.jvetfidc-iit. elcctcii by the pcopl. aro ; "now liviir Frnkrarieicc ahd Jhckjj ItlGJIT OR WRONG. W H S KIGIIT, TO E K KEPT EIGHT, W UK X WUONO, TO BE PCI KIOUT. eisexsburg: TIIURSDAY:::::::::::::::::::::::::::JULY 31. The People's Platform. "That we hold it to be the duty of all loyal men to stand by the Union in this hour of its trial ; to unite their hearts and hands in ear nest, patriotic efforts for it3 maintenance against those who are in arm3 against it ; to sustain with determined resolution our patri otic President and his administration in their energetic efforts for the prosecution of the war and the preservation of the Union against enemies at home or abroad; to puuish trai tors and treason with fitting severity, and to crush the pnesent wicked and causeless rebel lion, so that no flag of disunion shall evr again be raised over any portion of the Re public ; and to this end we invite the co-operation of all men who love their country, in the endeavor to rekindle in all the Sutes such a patriotic fire as shall utterly consume all who strike at the Union of our fathers and all who sympathize with their treason or palliate their guilt." People's Part j Nominations. AUDITOR GENERAL:. THOMAS E. COCHRAN, of York. SURVEYOR GENERAL : WILLIAM S. ROSS, of Luzerne. CONGRESS : A. A. BARKER, of Ebensburg. Subject to decision of the District Conference.' ASSEMBLY : JAMES COOPER, of Taylor township. PROTHONOTABl" : WILLIAM K. CARR, of Wilmore. COUNTY COMMISSIONER : JOHN ELDER, of Chest township. DISTRICT ATTORNEY : JOHN II. FISHER, of Johnstown. POOR HOUSE director: WM. BERKSTRESSER, of Susq'h. tp. AUDITOR : C T. ROBERTS, of Ebensburg. coroner : T. R. DAVIS, of Jackson township. county surveyor: E. A. VICKROY, of Yoder township. A Few JXore Ciioice Extracts. The hostility of the Democrat & Senti nel to the Administration becomes dailj more apparent. The miscreants who con trol that journal seem to have thrown off all disguise iu the premises, and come out now openly and above board as the cham pions of Jeff. Davis and his spurious Con federacy. That they have all along been secretly the enemies of the Republic and its holy cause, and tacit believers in the doctrines promulgated by Traitors and Tories, is a matter pateut to all ; but a salutary fear of well-merited punishment "deep, dank dungeons," and that sort of thing has hitherto deterred them from avowing their pestilenti-heresies. Now, however, since a pre-arranged and unani mous howl has gone forth from the throats of every unkicked Secession-sympathizing cur in the nation a howl of opposition to the stringent measures about to be adopted by the Administration for the suppression of the Rebellion the Dcm. id Sent, issues from its kennel, and, in all its hideous deformity, ranges itself under the banner of its first and only love. Its time has come the fitting occasion ha3 arrived and it rushes frantically and joyfully to its-.-elf-imposed and damnable task of villjpying the government and the constituted authorities, hoping tobreed dis sensions where should be unity and har mony of both thought and purpose. It fiauiIM its true colors to the breeze, boldly and defiantly, and "Disunion" is indelibly inscribed thereon. "We are not surprised at this step in our neighbor the extent of our emotion con sits simply being gratified. An open, avowed-enelny ia less to be feared than hewho stabs covertly and in the dark, and the Z?m. & Sent, is now permanently located. As a sequel to the foregoing remarks, wc glean a few extracts from the Dcm. d Si-it. of the 16th inst., which we here re produce, that our readers Democrats as well as Republicans may see for them selves that we judge aright. Ih speaking of tho prosecution of the war, to which the Administration has lent its heartiest and most earnest efforts, that paper "ays : "The Republican party has, already, proved itself inadequate to the undertaking it is not capable of averting the fearful calamity which It has, durVg its brief administration, inau gurated npon the country, and for wbicb it must be htli responsible." And again : "The people have elevated to power one of these heterodox factions, whose lead ers, now in power, care not for their pledges nor for the interests of the Nation, but seek only their own selfish aggrandizement, and the consummation of their wicked purposes. To these ends they have nullified the Consti tution, and trampled upon the nearest and dearest rights of the American citizen." As also : 'It is not their purpose to restore the Union, but to continue this war in order to secure their own political and personal inter ests." It requires no flaring capitals to render the meaning of these extracts apparent. Disaffection and Treason are so plainly stamped on every syllable of them, that he who runs may read and understand. And what shall we say to the vile ingrate who enunciates the sentiments they con tain ? This that he is a disgrace to the Patriotism and Common Sense of the "Mountain County." While the Uuion of our fathers is in deadly peril through the machinations of Traitors while the fair fabric of our liberties is shaken from turret tp foundation-stone, and our dear est and best interests involved he, for sooth, stands coolly by and glibly prates of "party," and "platforms." and "pledg es," and "abolitionism," and does his small utmost to encourage dissensions among the people, and thereby embarrass the Administration ! The man who can not in this trying hour sink the partisan in the patriot is an much an enemy to the cause that thousands of our brethren are doing battle for as tho most broad mouth ed follower of the trembling fortunes of the Stars and Bars of Secessia. Such an individual is he of the Dcm. & Sent. A Traitor by every manifestation that has been allowed to proceed out of his mouth, his name should be a stench in the nostrils of every lover of his coun try. An ingrate to the Government which protects him, he should be shunned as a viper. A disgrace and shame to his na tive county, he should be-kicked and scourged from the presence of every hon est man therein. And in the end, the community will be justifiable in hurl ing after him, and each one like unto him, their heartfelt malison in this wise : "In hell's hottest, fiercest furnace cramm'd, May he be damned superlatively damned ; And why not dainued for such trunscendant crimes ? Yea, damned eternally, ten thousand times V Letter from Pittsburg. Pittsburg, Monday. July 28, 18C2. . To thegditor of The Alleghanian : Knowing the anxiety that exists among the relations and friends of those brave men who are mostly unaccounted for, since that day of terrible carnage and strife, near Mechanics ville, on Friday, June 27th, in which the gal lant sons of tbenslurg participated, I wish to present to the public, in consequence of many conllicting rumors, a statement of what I heard and saw of the Eleventh Regiment. Being engaged on the Sanitary Commis sion, I visited all the Pennsylvania regiments in the field, among whom were (on the 25th of June,) the Cambria Guards; the boys were all well, with one or two exceptions, and enjoying excellent spirits, and were, at that time, anxious to meet the foe and give him battle. That evening, I bid them adieu ; and little did I think, at that moment, that the few parting words that passed between U3. wentd be the last uttered on this vale of tears, but such is, undoubtedly, the case with a few of their number ! " Dost thou weep For the loved ones that are sleeping, Silent iu the grave's dark keepivg, Death s cold s'eepV" The next day, 26th of June, the right wing of our army was attacked by the rebels, who were greatly superior in force, which -was continued on Friday, the 27th. During. the first day's fighting, the Eleventh Regiment were all . performing picket - duty above Mechanicsville, and on the memorable 27th, they were ordered to camp. No sooner had they reached their destination, thau they got orders to unsling knapsacks, and counter march, at a double-quick, to relieve the Third Pennsylvania Regiment, which was then en gaged in the fight. This they did in a short time. They were fighting on the extrejne right of McCall's Division, consequently, they suffered more severely thau any regiment. It was greatly exposed to the raking fire of the enemy, but they held their ground un flinchingly, and behaved bravely. Nine com panies of that (the tenth company, B., was at that time on fatigue duty,) regimen were en tirely surrounded by a rebel brigade, but they, unhesitatingly, refused to surrender, and charged on the rebel lines endeavoring to cut their way out. They were overpowered ; a great many fell, killed and wounded, and all were taken prisoners. As soon as I learned of the fate of the Eleventh, tht evening, I retraced my steps from Savage Station towards the field of ac tion, with the intention of giving a helping hand to any of my friends in the Cambria Guards, who might, perhaps, have been woun ded during the day, but all in vain : the rebels occupied the battle-field, consequently, I was compelled to return without seeing one of them. On the Sunday following, I saw fourteen of the company, who were not in the fight on account of sickness. Felix 11. Brunot, Esq., who accompanied me from Harrison's Landing to Baltimore, it formed me that Capt. Andrew Lewis was shot in the right leg, above the knee; the wound being so serious that amputation was neces sary. He died in prison, at Richmond, on Wednesday, July 2d. Capt. Lewis was a good commander, and" a brave and tried sol dier. Although, not being personally ac quainted with him, I, nevertheless, greatly deplore his sudden death, knowing that the country bar lost one of it3 bravest defen ders; the community a good citizen, and his beloved wife a kind and affectionate husband. "Who can grieve too much, What time shall end, Our mouruing for so dear a frien." . Sllls R. Williams. Tlie Campaign. It seems to be a pretty well established fact that Beauregard, with a very con siderable portion of his Corinth army, had" migrated to Richmond in time to give, in connection with Jackson, an overwhelming preponderance of force to the Confederates in the recent carnages. The inquiry forces itself, therefore, upon the consideration of , the country: Ilow come3 it that the rebels so suddenly con centrated, while the armies that had con fronted them remained scattered and en itirely unavailable for the great exigency ' This will involve a calm and comprehen sive survey of the disposition of our entire military forces throughout all the depart ments at the time the Confederate con centration began. We shall by this sur vey be enabled more clearly to understand how this most unexpected concentration was so completely effected. The United States army of the Potomac had been divided into three commands, the principal of which had been assigned to Gen. M'Cleilan, and consisted of 120, 000 to 150,000 men. M'Dowell, with 50,000 men, more or less, had been de tached from M'Clellan's command to ad vance to4rd Richmond by the Rappa hannock, and at the same time oppose the advance of any force the enemy might, by his railway facilities, suddenly throw for ward from llichmonS ; while most of Banks' command in the Shenandoah had been transferred to strengthen M'Dowell, giving the latter, in round terms, 75,000 effective men, and leaving Banks with a few fragmentary regiments, amounting all told, to less than 5,000. Stonewall Jackson watched his opportunity. M' Dowell, a far too easy-tempered General, slept upon the Rappahannock. Stonewall Jackson pounced. Banks escaped. Wash ington suddenly opened its eyes and or dered over Fremont from Franklin. Jackson knew it, and countermarched for his life. Fremont was soon in tho Shen andoah. Where was M'Dowell ? Still sleeping on the Rappahannock, dreaming of an imaginary foe immediately in frout, or about to be there, and only sendjng Shield's division to intercept the headlong retreat of a desperate army of 25,000 men. That division, it is evident, was regarded by the authority ordering its movement of itself sufficient to check Jackson. The part of it that reached the vital bridge in time were, of course, suddenly overtaken, trampled down, and driven to the winds. Jackson was safely out. It was then alleged, to save the awkward appearance of mismanagement, that Shield's detach ment had been ordered to bum the Irufyc, but it is not at all probable. Thus our foroes between Washington and Richmond were left, as they weie found, in an utterly disjointed and coma tose condition, under the distracted lead ership of three Major Generals, acting entirely independently cf each other. Jackson had cleared his own way both in and out. Fremont, in turn, was retiring, being not without much reason appre hensive of a reinforced descent upon his small and exhausted army. Banks was still far behind, recovering from the fa tigues and consequences of his retreat, and not yet convalescent. M'Dowell was the Government itself did not exactly know where ; but nowhere to be of any service iu the critical juncture. His com mand, instead of being concentrated and posted, as it would certainly have been under a competent commander, to have dealt the death-blow to Jackson in his desperate retreat from his desperate ad ventures, was miserably bewildered, divided up, aud sent astray in various useless directions, playing, as it were, a merely imbecile game of blind man's buff with the most wary, wiry, and wide-awake of all our enemies in Virgiuia. In this fatal manner, Jackson was enabled to consummate his salvation by joining his reserves, leaving M'Dowell very much in the condition of the cajoled crow, who wa3 (we trust , fabulously) distinguished for having dropped his cheese into the gaunt and crafty maw of a certain strategic foe. . Soinf appearance of force had, indeed, been kept up, and was still kept up on M'Dowell's front; of which we are not apprised, however, that ho even felt. In six days from this time Jackson's entire army was consolidated with the army of Richmond, and all ready to attack M' Cleilan ! . " Were Banks, Fremont, and M'Dowell also cenc.ntrated (as uo one will deny they Bhould have been,) simultaneously with Jackson, and moving after him with all possible vigor ? So far from it they were scatered and wasted along, the Shenandoah and Rappahannock to the Potomao. In short, the disposition of 100,000 of our men in Virginia was such as to be totally unavailable fur the great action which was every moment immi nent. Turning for a moment to the con sideration of the Western Department : After six or seven weeks of the most la borious preparations to take Corinth Gen. Halleck ' woke up one fine morniug the very morning upon which he purposed to reap the reward of his great labors tj find the Dodo had utterly destroyed his nest, and flown South with his whole brood. Upon which timely discovery there was, of course, a great heyday and alarm of pursuit. Gen. Pope was an nounced to be already beyond Farmington and "pressing them hard." Very soon the telegraph had taken 10,000 prisoners, and very nany thousand stand of arms. But the doors of our military prisons have gaped in vacant astonishment ever since. Dividing hi 120,000 men at his leisure, as he could well afford to do, Beauregara j left Bragg to play the same general garao 1 with Halleck that was being played with M'Dowell, and started by railroad for Richmond with 60,000 of hia best forces. Such, , at least, is the best information from the most diverse Southern sources, cot only from prisoners taken in the late battles, but from other persons directly from the South. In the meanwhile, where was the army of the West? Gen. Mitch ell was iu North Alabama and Tennessee with 25,000 men. Gen. Buell was on the way to Iluntsville, Grant to Memphis, M'Clernand still at Corinth ; Gen. Wood was here, Pope there, and Nelson yonder with their divisions in tho heart of the South. the hot season approaching in all 200,000 disappointed men lying almost idle in the shad, while Beauregard was at Richmond, and the army of the Poto mac was being overwhelmed on the Pe ninsula ! Curtis in Arkansas, Butler at New Orleans, Hunter in South Carolina, Buruside at Newbern in all probably about 60,000 more. This with some im material exceptions completes the survey of our forces and their respective dispo sitions outside of the Peninsula, just before and at the time this sanguinary flank movement became necessary. And here, to any one who will for a moment take any late railway map of the country, one most remarkable aud striking fact must instantly present itself, viz : The unin terrupted railroad connections which the enemy has all along contrived to maintain with Richmoud, thereby keeping all his departments, outposts, and depots in easily transportable relations with Richmond and with each other. This, alone, gives him an incalculable advantage, and it must be equally apparent that in the present dis position of our forces, we have, by no means, the same facilities of concentration which we have so long and so blindly indulged him. And, in this connection, our intelligence in not having with our adequate force completely severed the great Southern thoroughfare of reinforce ments and supplies, must sometimes strike all minds, with any military proclivities whatever, with overwhelming force. Every military mind knows, every military eye see3 at one glance, that to have done tlris would have been to have severed, at a blow, the aorta of th$ rebellion, and its great ascending and descending veins These extraordinary railroad advantages which our plan of campaigu has thus far allowed the enemy have been nowhere more manifest or disastrous than in the instances of the Richmond railroad toward Washington and the Potomac. By means of tho parts of these roads which they still possess the Confederates are enabled to strike suddenly out, menace Washing ton, and draw as suddenly back and strike M'Cleilan. And that before either of our divided armies can know whether they are coma or gone. And this brings us directly to the conviction which we think we may safely say has been entertained for some time past by nearly the whole country : that the division of M'Clellan's army, and the consequent transportation of the command assigned to him to the Peninsula, necessitatingan off-side advance upou Richmond, and depriving him of the all-necessary co-operation of M'Dowell with the rebel railroads between them was, to say tha least, an extremely haz ardous, and, as has been conclusively proved by the six days' battle, a most un wise and disa Ivantageous policy. The Department at Washington, seeing its grave error in having too much divided and diffused the forces in Western Vir ginia, the valley of the Shenandoah, and on the Rappahannock, immediately de termined to re-organize them, and, that there might be no ill-nature, to subordi nate the three independent Major Gener als' then in command under a fourth. Major General Pope was forthwith ordered to Washington, and assigoed to this exceedingly important command. In a few days the President tak.es the train for West Point. A visit to" General Scott is announced. The President's mind is evidently disturbed, at least perplexed. An ominous silence ensues, with dark hints and apprehensions concerning the army of the Potomac. At length, the silence is broken with the thundering reverberations of ari almost continuous bat tle of six days. M'Ciellan finds that Beauregard, Jackson, Lee, Johnson, Ma gruder all have been actually concen trated against him, and sees that to wait in the Wdiite Oak Swamps is to be over whelmed and annihilated. He moves at once. So does the enemy bearing down in one compact mass, numbering, as all must 8ee.from the combinations they had made, not oue man less than 220,000. Then came the fix most desperate and bloody days that ever dawned upon the New World. We now know, with ap proximate definiteness, the result ; that the special advantages and disadvantages of these consecutive slaughters, gains and losses, do not sufficiently swerve the beam to enable us to determine with cer tainty the preponderance either way, and that by dint of masterly generalship, and by the' general Spartan bravery of the whole army, it was triumphantly extrica ted and established where it now is, the enemy Ving fearfully handled, and at last repulsed. Burnside is now ordered from Newbern, reinforcements expedited, a new quota called for; and finally, the President very judiciously and properly goes up James river to see the army for himselt. We trust that we are now to see a more coherent and concentrated policy in the management of this war. t(3.The Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany, with characteristic liberality, have donated $50,000 toward the Volunteer Bounty Fund of the State. Thi is wor thy of emulation by -other corporations. Summary of War Nevr. The Rebel report of the battle of Sevea Pines has just been issued. It claims the capture of 10 cannon, 6,000 muskets, one garrison atrid four regimental colors, tenta, and camp equipage. They admit a loss of about 4,300, but add, as a Cataplasm, that the Union loss exceeded 10,000. Dispatches from Gen. Pope's army state that Stonewall Jackson is at or near Gor donsville, with a force of 30,000 men, and his intention is to break oar lines unA make a dash at Washington, so as to lores M'Cleilan to leave the Peninsula. Gen. Kwcll commands a part of Jackson's for cert. SerMor Jim Lane has been cominis. sioned by the Government to raise acd organize an army in the Department of Kansas. lie has the assurance of the President and Secretary of War that this time his pesuliar plans shall not be inter fered with. . The following order, appointing Gen. Halleck General-in-Chief of the United States armies, ha3 been issued by the Prei- ident: "Executive Mansion, July 11 18G2 Ordered, that Major-General Ilea, ry W. Halleck be assigned to . the eoni mand of the whole land forces of the" United States, as General-in-Chief, andf that he repair to this capital bo soon as he can with safety to the positions and op erations within the department now under his special charge." Morgan, the rebel guerilla chief, ha been driven out of Kentucky. Gen. Dix, on the part of the govern ment, and Gen. Hill, on the part of the rebels, have made arrangements for a gen eral exchange of prisoners. The first order under the Confiscation bill was issued from the War Department on the 22d. . It directs that our comman ders iu Virginia, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi), Louisiana, Texas, and Arkansas, shall seize any property necessary or convenient for mili tary purposes, and employ as many Afri cans as they can advantageously u.e ; keeping accurate accounts of both proper ty and negroes, for future settlement. The negroes are to be paid for their labor. The President has decided that niue and twelve tnoaths volunteers under Gov ernor Curtift's lite proclamation will be received only until the 10th August ; after that date they will be sworn ia for three years or the war. 2?- The announcement will be hailed with universal gratification that arrange ments have been made by General Dix whereby "an immediate and general ex change of prisoners" will be effected. This is but an act of simple justice to thousands of our brave soldiers, whose terrible experiences of prison life in rebel dom have thrilled the whole North with horror and indignation. Let us have them released at once, and restored to their homes aud families ; and let the release indeed be ''general," as promised. The sufferings of Colonel Corcoran and hun dreds of his brave cumrades, whose pa tient endurance has wrought upon tho sympathy of our people, have been suffi ciently prolonged, over "a year having elapsed since the battle of Bull Run, while the only reward meted to their gallantry was the terrible late of captivity, and the slow torture of a cheerless dunrcon. The Government, in coroiug to this decision to exchange prisoner?, has done nothing that the most captious ftickler for conventional etiquette can cavil at It has admitted nothiug and recoguized nothing, save that its own citizens must be protected everywhere, aud by all honorable and lawful means, from contam ination with disloyalty. 4 DMINIFTRATOR'S NOTICE. Letters of Administration on the estate of Martin Wagner, late of Blacklick town ship, Cambria Countv, deceased, have been granted to the subscriber, residing near Iel sano, in said township. Persous indebted to said estate will come forward and make pay ment; and those having claims against it wilHrcsent them, properly-authenticated, for settlement. JOSEPH QUIRKY, Adin,'r. Delsano, July 31th, ISG2-Ct. STRAY MARE! llan awisy from the subscriber, on Mon day evening, June 3Cth, a small dark bay Mare, with heavy mane, three white feet, large star in the face, and r callous lump on her back, caused by -a saddle gall. She had ou a saddle and bridle when she left. A re ward is offered to any one who will givt in formation concerning her whereabouts. Address J. It. M'MURRAY, New Washington, July 17, 1SC2 Clearfield co., P- DMINISTRATORS' NOTICE. Letters of administration on the tstat of Gordon Sinclair, late of Carroll township. Cambria county, deceased, having been gran ted to the undersigned, all persons indebted to said estate are hereby requested to mak payment without delay, and those having claims will present them properly authentica ted for settlement. ALEXANDER SINCLAIR, GEORGE M. REED, July 17, 1862-Ct Adm'r. UDITOR'S NOTICE. John Roberts, Eq., Sheriff of Cambria County, r$. George Cupp. In the Common Pleas CAmbria county, No. 154 Sept. T., 1859. Al. Fi. Fa. The undersigned, having been appointed by the Court of Common Pleas of Cambri county to report distribution of the- proceed of the above stated writ, hereby notifies all parties interested in the same that be will attend to the duties of said appointment et his office, in the borough of Ebensburg. " WEDNESDAY, the 13ih day of AUGUST next, at one o'clock, P. M. F. A. SHOEMAKER, Auditor. July 17, 18S2-3t lOOKS ! BOOKS ! BOOKS ! 13 For SaT hv T. ROBERT? Ca. 5 - ! r II
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers