RIG1IT OR TROXG. WHKH BIGHT, TO BI KEPT BIGHT, WHEN 'WBOSG, TO BB PUT ttlOHT. THURSDAY :::::::::::::::NOVEMIJEK 10. Thanksgiving Proclamation. PENNSYLVANIA SS: In the name and by the authority of the Common wealth of Pennsylvania, Axduew G. Ccbtin, Governor of taid Commonwealth. A PROCLAMATION. Whereat, The President of the United States by his proclamation, bearing date ou the third day of this month, has invited the citizens of the United States to set apart THURSDAY, 26tk day o NOVEMBER, next, as a day of Thanksgiving and Prayer : Now, I, Andrew G. Curtin, Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, do hereby recommend, that the people of Pennsylvania Jo set apart and observe the said day accord ingly, and that they do especially return thanks to Almighty God, for the gathered harvests of the fruits of the Earth, For the prosperity with which Ho has blessed the Industry of our People, Tor the general health and welfare which He has graciously bestowed upon them, And for the crowning mercy by which the blood-thirsty and devastating - enemy was driven from our soil by the valor of our breth ren, freemen of this and other States, And that they , do especially pray for the continuance of the blessings which have been heaped upon us by the Divine Hand, And for the safety and welfare And success of our brethren in the field, that they may be strengthened to the overthrow and confusion of the rebels now in arms against our Beloved Country, So that Peace may.be restored in all our Borders, and the Constitution and Laws of the Land be everywhere within them re-established and sustained. Given under my Hand and great Seal of the State, at Ilarrisburg, this twenty-eighth day of October, in the year of our Lord, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, and of the Commonwealth the eight v-eighth. A. G. CURTIN'. By tub Gcverscr. ELI SLIFER, Scc'y of the Commoniceahh. Bounties. From the commencement of the war, we have been among the number who believe in. paying liberal bounties to those who leave their families, friends and business to enter the military service of the United States. AVe Mievo this, in principle, is right. A country, a government with all the protection, both direct arid incidental, which it affords, sheds its blessings, to a greater or less extent, upon all its Citizens. Every man has a personal interest at stake in this contest. The poor' man nced3 the protection of the government, because he is poor"; whilst the rich man needs the game protection, because he is rich. The more property a man has, the nioro he has at etako. The volunteer, when he goes into the military service of the United States, goes not for himself alone ; he goes not only to protect his own property, but also the property of his neighbor hence there is no earthly reason why he errould make all the sacrifice. And there is no way in which the matter can be equalized between him and his neighbors except by a pecuniary consideration by way of bounty. To leave this thiog to be regu lated by the voluntary contributions of the people of a town or city, would be to nllow the miserly and penurious to escape from paying anything, and compel the generous and liberal minded to bear the whole burden. The only equitable way to reach the Matter is by taxation. Let the towns and cities act in their corporate capacity, and under the sanction of the Legislature, vote and paj bounties to those who go. Taxce of this sort are never paid grudgingly by loyal men. If men do have to sacrifice something by way of legal contributions, they ought not to complain. The sacrifice they make is not for a single moment to be compared with that of the man who takes his life in hand, leaves his wife, family, children and friends, and goes to a distant land to brave the dangers of th battle-field, the diseases of the camp, and the thousand inconveniences and ills inci dent to a soldier's life. Money, when put in the balance against human life, is nothing -it sinks into utter insignificance. This rebellion must be put down, and we must have men to do it. Volautoera make the best soldiers, therefore it is wisdom and good policy for cities and towns, under the reecnt call of the President, to vote and pay liberal bounties to all such as respond to this cal. The men who vol untarily risk all for their country, in this, the hoar of its peril, deserve not only a nation's gratitude, but deserve ako to be most generously dealt by pecuniarily. ... We see it stated that Governor Cur tin is DOW in Washington, endeavoring to obtain authority from the War Depart ment to supply Pennsylvania's quota by volunteer enlistments for"nc?c regiments, and the fact that other States have been authorized to furnish their quotas in this manner affords fair grounds for the belief that he will be successful in the object of his mission. "Whilst our patriotic Gover nor is thus exerting himself to relieve cur citizens of the disagreeable alternative cf a draft, we deem it but a plaia duty that our citizens should second Li efforts in any and every practical manner possi ble. By the proffer of a liberal Town, County or State bounty, in addition to the bounties already paid by the General Government, we h'tve no doubt our quota could easily be secured through volun teering. The experiment is worth atrial, at any rate. Let the rich and influential move in the matter. Cruelty to Prisoners. If the halt we hear in regard to the starvation of the Federal prisoners in the South be true, it is about time, say the Pittsburg Gazette, that the Government was looking into it, and resorting to some means of retaliation, in oase these barbar ities cannot otherwise be arrested. It cannot afford to allow our soldiers to suffer in this way without resenting it. If the apology be want of food, the rebels ought as an act of mere humanity, to release the men they hold, on their parole. That they should insist on detaining them under such circumstances, is cruelty before un heard of, but only another evidence of the intense and -bitter malignity and the devilish spirit that have alike initiated this wanton and wicked rebellion, and characterized it throughout. If anything could have softened these hell hounds, it would have been the uniform, but, as we think, ill judged clemency and even ten derness of the President, in his dealings with men who are so utterly barbarized by slavery, as to have scarcely a human instinct left. He ought to have learned by this time that there is but on way of reaching them, and that is through their fears, by making a few terrible examples which shall teach them that we are as dreadfully in earnest as themselvee. Ten derness to these tigers is cruelty to the innoceut. Nobody will ever know how many loyal citizens have fallen by the hands of the bloody wretches who have been allowed to prowl at large over the Border States, after committing atrocities that should have consigned them atince to the gallows. The blood of many a helpless family is upon the hands of the unpunished guerillas, who have been al lowed to loiter in the rear of our armies, and dismissed on oaths of allegiance, and promises of good behavior, which were no sooner made than violated. Slajor White and the State Sen ate. Our well posted readers generally know that the next Senate of Pennsylvania stands 17 Union to 1G Democratic. They may not so generally know that one of the Union Senators was a Major of a cavalry regiment, and taken prisoner last June at Winchester, and has been for eoine months in Libby prison. The rebels at Richmond and their allies in Pennsylvania, are said to be acting in concert, and the rebeli, by holding on to Senator White, hope to aid their triends at Ilarrisburg in embarrass ing Got. Curtin'a Administration. It is certain that all proffers of exchange have been refused, and these reasons lead to the conviction that these parties are in correspondence. The rebels have refused to even pass Senator Whito's resignation. Unless Speaker Penny receives this with in a few days, in time to order a special election in Armstrong and Indiana coun ties, the Senate will be a tic'when it meets, and until his release or resignation. If things continue in this condition, ?e have no doubt Speaker Penny and all the old organization will hold on to their re ppective posts until displaced by a positive majority. Ths Senate never dies of course all the officers once elected mnst hold on until a positive majority elect somebody eke to fill these stations. This Union organization of the Senate is of course a matter of some local impor- ance to our friends there but will not enable them to pass any bill. .To do that requires a postive majority, a tie rote be ing the defeat of every measure. We do not believe the Copperhead element can defeat any measures necessary to carry on the war. The Senate contains two or three Democratic members that would not fancy taking such a responsibility. But during the coming winter there may be a number of party questions arising in the Senate, on all which the Union men may fail of a postive majority for want of Senator White's vote. We think a fair and hon orable course would be to encourage his exchange. The friends of Gov. Curtin having carried the State after an earnest and active canvass, are entitled to the legitimate fruits of their victory. Let them have the responsibility for good or for evil, of a majority in both Houses.- T2xg Conscr3i5tioia Act. Minorities are always right, it is said, and while the assertion cannot be accepted in view of the recent Union majorities, R' finds some support in the different opinions rendered by tho judges of the Supreme Court upon the Conscription net. The Chief Justices, Mr. Justice Woodward, and Mr. --Justice Thompson, in declaring .that aot unconstitutional, arc doubly wrong, not only in the question of law, but in ruing the law as an instrument to embarrass the Government. It is not, however, their opinions or purposes that wo shall now discuss ; it is the very clear and able op inion delivered by Mr. Justice Strong, affirming the constitutionality of tho aot, sustained by an argument which evades no difficulty and loaves none unsettled. Whoever reads the Constitution with the object of finding in its letter proof that it does not authorise Congress to draft into th military scrvioo of the United St at as tho general militia, is oonfrouted by this express provision, "Congress shall have power to rai.se and suppoit armies' accompanied by co restriction, excepting this, that "no appropriations of money to that use shall be for a longer term' than two years." He will be forced to find elsewhere provisions which, by implication restrict the power thus formally without restriction granted, or to abaudou all thoughts of proving that the Constitution is violated by the draft. And where will he find these provisions 7 ilow will he make, good his assertion that tho Consti tution limits the power of Congress to raise armies in spite of this unlimited authorization t The difficulty is obvious. If the frumers of the Constitution had intended to limit this very important pow er, they would have done so in detect and formal expression ; they would not have left the limitation in inference. Mr. Justice Woodward a2irus3 the un constitutionality of the act upon a forced construction of the clause declaring that "Cocgrc-ss shall have power to provide for calling forth the militia" for certain pur pose?, and adroitly implies, without foi rally asserting, that this clause is a full definition of the only manner in which armic can constitutionally be raised. This is purely an assumption It is justi fied by no reference in the one clause to anything in the other. The clauses are absolutely distinet : one authorizes Con gress to raise armies, without any restric tion as to their number or size j the other authorizes Congress to call out the militia with definition cf the purposes for which it shall be called out. Congress may act by authority of either clause, or by both clauses. If they are intended to apply to the same necessities and embody the same principles, one is clearly superfluous, and the f ranters of the Constitution were igno rant of the use of words. Mr. Justice Strong is wholly right when he says : ''Had any limitation upon the . mode , of raising armies been intended it must have been expressed. It would hot have been left to be gathered from doubtful conjec ture." Yet it is upon oonjecture entirely that Mr. Justice Woodward has based hb argument, and entirely upon hypothesis that he argues that the power to raise armies, conferred by one clause, means no more than the power to call out the militia conferred by another. Mr. Justice Strong, by an argument which exhausts the question, proves that a State has no power over its militia that i3 superior to the power of Congress to raise armies from the general population of the country. This is very near the root of the whole matter. Ho shows that, upon the Eame ground by which the constitu tionality of the draft is denied, the consti tutional authority of Congress to raise armies by voluntary enlistment mav be denied ; lor, if a State has the right to forbid Congress to take the militia into the Isational service by one way, it has the right to foibid Congress to take the mili tia in any way. It the authority of the States separately is superior to that of the States collectively, then the method of raising armies is not the matter in dispute ; it is the right of Congress to recruit or draft in any State without the consent of the State government, tnat is denied. In deed, the whole question is of State rights and the authority of the Constitution, and Mr. Justice Woodward and hi3 concurrent colleagues are advancing the dangerous doctrine that State rights are above National authorities. This is the doctrine used by traitors to destroy the Republic ; the doctrine bv which South Carolina justified secession ; the doctrine which, if true, makes our nationality worthless, and the American people guilty of lawless tyranny in their resolution to preserve the Union by lorce. Jt is not a doctrine which thoughtful and loyal men can hold, and we thank Mr. Justice Strong for his masterly analysis of its sophistry. 1'hila. Press. Gov. Curtin at Home. Oar friends in other parts of the State, are sometimes at a loss to understand how it comes that Gov. Curtin, who is admitted to be person ally popular at home, was beaten in this county 344 votes in the recent election, although ho carried it in 18G0 by 341.- The reason is obvious, and is at once creditable both to Gov. Curtin and his friends. The townships which gave ma jorities for him in 1860, have 1583 soldiers under arms, while those which went against him have sent but 403, although they poll more than half the Democratic vote of the county. Our ranks are decimated at home only because they aro so full in the field, and we point with pride and triumph to the record. "We should have blushed if C'ato's house had stood serene and flour, ished in a civil war." Bclkfonte Press. Al'owerful Appeal to the Rebels t Mr. E. W. Gantt, a prominent citizen of Little Ro?k, has published a pamphlet, addressed to the people of Arkansas, jid vising them to submit to the laws and make peace with the Government at Washington. Mr. Gantt admits that his sympathies are with the South, that he was a secessionist, but he thinks the cause ia lost, the rebel armies are melting away, the country overrun, and every day their resources becoming less, while anarchy and ruin, disappointment and discontent lower over all the land. He says it is for the South to make tho first offer of peace, and it ought to knov when it has got enough of war. Mr. Gantt cays in concluding his ad dress : "Why trust Davis longer ? Had he twice our present resources ho would still fail With sucoe&a he would be a despot. But tho whole thing is tumbling to pieces. Soldiers are leaving, disgusted and dis heartened; and whole States have gone back to their home in the national galaxy. Maryland and Delaware will never again be shaken- Kentucky has intrenched herself in tho Union behind a wall of bayonets in tho hands of her own & toady sond. Missouri is as firmly set ; in the national galaxy as Massachusetts. Ten nessee, ttmipesoosed and bclt-iiven, under the guidaucc of her great pilot, steers for her old mooring, and will be safely anchored before the loaves fall ; while the rays of light from the old North Star, flashing out fitfully from her dark ness across the troubled waves, shows that she stirs, is not lost, but is struggling to rejoin her sisters. "None of these states will ever join the South again. Then, with crippled armies with devasted fields, with desolate cities, with disheartened soldiers, and, worse than all, with weak and corrupt leaders, what hope is leit to the fow remaining States, but especially to poor, oppressed, and down trodden Arkansas t None! Better get our brothers home while they are left to us. Opeu the way for the return of husbands, fathers and souh, and bind up the broken links of the Union. The peo ple niu'it act to do this. I tell you now, in grief and pain, that the leaders do not care for your blood. Your sufferings move them not. The tears and wails of your anguished bereaved ones fall on hearts of flint. While they can make one dollar or wear an epaulette they are content." Ulasoa and IUxon's Line. ' This once famous line, because it marked the separation of the free and slave States, will soon cease to mark any such' barrier. The western portion of that line, separating Western Virginia from Pennsylvania, has already lost its interest in this respect. Western Virginia is practically as free as any of the Northern States, though it may take twenty years for the mass of our emigrating population to understand it. At the extreme eastern end of the line is little Delaware j she holds her election next week and the question of Emancipa tion is the leadiug element of the contest. The number of her slaves is only about 2,000, mostly in the Southern county of the State. Her people sympathize with Maryland and Pennsylvania., and there is no possible danger -that she will decide differently from wht they have recently done. In the recent election in Maryland the emancipationists had it all their own way. The Legislature in both . brunches are overwhelmingly in favor of the emancipa tion of her slaves. The strong mechanic interests ot Balti more have for years been in favor of free and against slave labor. These sentiments have heretofore been kept under by the slave aristocracy, who claimed a sort of divine right to rule" "my Maryland." But the events of the last two years have dissipated that dream. The leading ele ment in Maryland is to-day more radical than we are in the old Keystone State. They have felt the iron rule of a slave holding oligarchy, and are more fully prepared than the mass at least of our so called Democratic citizens to realize the advantages of a free State. No candidate in Maryland at tho late election appeared on a platform one-fourth so pro-slavery as were the Democratic platforms in Pennsylvania and Ohio. We doubt if any leading public men in this State made speeches so postively anti slavery as those of Henry Winter Davis and Col. Matthews. The time, therefore, when this famous line was to mark con tinuous free and slave States is a thing of the past. WThere slavery in the future shall find a resting place is not for us to say. Certainly it requires no prophet to foretell that it will not much longer be bounded, by Mason and Dixon's line. SQy Farmers who butcher their own stock that is, the stock they have raised or fattened on their farms and in that way sell it, must make a return under oath to the assistant Assessor of all stock thus slaughtered and sold. They do not need a license unless they sell 1,000 worth j but they are bound to pay 20 cents per head for all cattle over 18 months old, G cents for each hog and 3 cents for each sheep. J8- Confederate currency has jo depreciated that the Richmond people say, "If you go to the market you have to take your money in the basket and carry your beef in the pocket book." S?To-dav. 19th. i the dav set nnnrt for the dedication of the Soldiers' National fVmeterv. at Gettvabur ww - J I -- O 1 ITre JtZarylanel. Another State is free! Maryland, by her vote on Wednesday last declared ti at Slavery should ccaso to paralyze her energies and cat like a cancer at her vital. It may not be th"i3 year nor next year ; but the fiat ha3gone forth, and the present generation will sec Maryland side by side with Pennsylvania and the great North with the greatblot of human bondage wip ed from he escutchcou. Thus steadily has Freedom grown into life, hastened and strengthened bythe madness of its wicked supporters, and soon, with the crowning triumph of theUnion arms, will the migh tiest Nation of the world rise up regenera ted, disenthralled and free ! The Baltimore American, the leading journal of the State, thus welcomes the dawn of Freedom in Maryland : "Finally, it is for all to rejoice, now or ultimately, : in the splendid future that opens before us. Never yet tested in its vast capacity lor mining, manufacturing aud agricultural purposes by the magic of free labor, we look, and the world looks confidently for change and improvement hardly "ever "yet witnessed. When we consider that the mere event of the war have made the great advantages of our position aud soil familiar to hundreds of thousands of skillful artiznns, of hardy and enterprising agriculturists, who but for the fact that tho road to the Capitol lay across our State would never hwe beon here all must consider the certainty that these advantages, appreciated, must tell mightily upon the settlement of our surplus lands and upon - our future pros perity. We have before this indicated some of the steps reoently taken by the people of Delaware to reap the advantages of their position; and now, able to pro claim Maryland a prospective free State, shall we not work to the surae tend ? Let us hope and trust that this will be the case lot us hope that the mighty vent of yesterday has not been over estimated in its bearings upon the future." . The llulnii of the JUebelllon. The very best arguments or proofs that the ptupendous conspiracy against the most indulgent Government upon earth must soon fail to pieces of it own inherent corruption and of the failure of all its boasted resources, are to be found in the pages of the sick ly newspapers sent forward into the Union lines. Columns miht be written upon the texts extracted from these journa's. Although they try to be costive and cautious in their utterances, the agony of the people and the despon dency of the seiutihU men who have bon dragooned into submission to tvrannioal leaders, break out iu almost every lies and paragraph, and glare upon the reader in the advertisements. The sufferings of the Union prisoners in Iiichmond, so terrible and so beyond descriptions almost to recall the romantio detail of Beilly's narrative, whether inten tional or not, are only faithful copies or echoes of the sufferings of the gallant Union men of Arkansas, Louisiana and East Tennessee. The privations of the richer classes, felt th more keenly because heretofore they have revelled iu luxury, have become so common that the haugh tiest, who long unmurmuringly supported the conspirators, at last give indignant tongue to their complaints, and opetily arraign the betrayers. We do not ask how long the rebellion, with such a canker in its heart, surround ed by a contentious people, bluaed every -moment like a leaking ship without masts and sails in a tempestuous, ragiugea, can last, i he only question is, why a free people, opposed to such a despotism, con stantly convinced that God is as surely with them as He is against this despotism, should not rally closer to the Government of their fathers, give mora aud more of their substance to their public servants, and call upon their countrymen to hasten to complete the overthrow of the enemies of the American Republic. tT" Some explanation is given by The Jkjjitreal Commercial Advertiser, a secess ion newspaper, of the thwarted Rebel conspiracy iu Canada, It admits of the failure of the liebel plot, and says the Confederate Government fittod out the steamer R. E. Lee, from Wilmington to Halifax, with a cargo to furnish funds. Thirty-six officers and three hundred men were to come overland in small parties, and Ineet at a general rendezvous. - It was their intention to surprise the . Federal garrison on Johnson's Island, liberate the prisoners, and convey them into Canada. &3r As per appointment, Gov. Sprague, of Ithode Island, was married to Miss Kate Chase, daughter of Secretary Chase, in Washington, on Thursday last. Five hundred invited guests were present, in cluding President Lincoln and nearly all his Cabinet, Lord Lyons, Count Mercier, Generals Halleck, M'Dowell, &c, &c. It was the event of the season. "Strikes" are the order of the day at present. In New York, laborers of all classes, almost, have united to force an increase of wages from their employers, and with uniform good success. The en hanced cost of living will probably cause the plan to be adopted in all . the largo towns and cities. "Within a few days past five large steamers have been captured by our blockaders off Washington, by which wo have not only obtained valuable cargoes and considerable quantities of arms and munitions of war but also some valuable correspondence from the" Rebel agents in Europe. Kiif--e7 auucuiry irom the renc-llion which seems to be conGrmed,has threa'.caeij the Government from the mosi uncxec ed quarter. A plot to burn the .mL eippi steamers is succeeded by a conspira, to release the rebel prisoners fiv Chase, and this gives place to cnoibe rebel enterprise, invading the America lake3 from Canada. A number of suspicions vessels on Lake Erie warned the authorities there to prepare .for defence, in vievr of the fact that thcra are now over tiro thousaud rebel officers cu Johnson's Island Sandusky Bay. A despatch received from' the Canadian Government by Lord Lyom gives information of a contemplated more, ment to invade the North from Canada free the rebel prisoners in Lake Erie, tui burn the city cf Buffalo. This tevrs U published over the signature of the Secre tary cf War. Every effort will be m9 by our own and the Canadian Govern, ment to arrest and-punish any attempt of the kind. - ' JSTTto radical Emancipationists, p. Gratz Brown for the short term and John B. Henderson for the , long term, wer elected to the United States Senate It the Missouri Legislature on Friday. STRAY COW. Came to the plantation of the subscriber some time last fall, a black cow eight or ttn years oldv with a wbite spot on her face, and a notch in her right ear. The owner is re quested to come forward, prove property, pT charges and take her away, otherwise she will be disposed of according to law. JOHN IICGIIES, Farmer Nov. 12, 1863. DMIXISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Letters of Administration on the estate of John Humphreys, late of Cambria township Cambria couuty, deceased, having been fram ed to the subscribers, all persons indebted to said estate are requested to come forwarj and pay their respective accounts, and those having claims Against the estate will present them, properlv axihenticated for settlement MH?. ELEANOR HUMPHREYS " ROWLAND J. HUMPHREYS Nov. 12, 18C3-6t. 1ST OF LETTERS " Remaining in the Post Office, Ebem burg, Pa., up to November 1st, 1J3 : Daniel Cogan, Rev Simon II Mason, 3ir3 Maria Crage, . Miss Teresa M'Coy, R W Davis, Mrs Ca'harine Peison, Richard Davis, . Charles F Powell, Kliaabeth Davis, k Salli Powell. R K Davis, Tavid Powell, 2, R S Davis, Miss Maria Sawyer, Mollie C Dickey, James Y Shirtson, R TSdelbute, Levi Severance, 2, Miss Annie Hvans, . E M Town, Benj Joues, F P Terney. XIchal Lattemer, Messrs TTo'lf i Welch Miss 54 M'Mullin, an, bark deule.-j. Mrs Hannah Mahan, Persons calling for the above letters will please say they are dvertisd JOHN THOMPSON, P. 3L EGISTER'S NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the follow ing Accounts have been passed and file-din the Register's Olfiee, at Ebensburg, and will be presented to the Orphans' Court of Cam bria county, for-conSrmatiou and allowanct, on Wednesday, the 9tL day of December net:, to wit : The i first final account of Will iau Slid, lidtratOT of Rachel Slick, deceased; admini Th second partial account of George Sct tlemeyer, one of the executors of Godfrej Settlemeyer, deceased. Th second and final account of Sarah H. Maclay, administratrix of William I. Mad;, deceased. The account of Jacob Sharbaagh, guardian of JacoW iftube, a minor child of Andre Stube, deceased. The first and final account of William VT. Paul, administrator pf Moses Paul, deceased. Th account of William A. Glass, adminis trator of Catharine Miller, deceased. The second and final account of Wi!'im Kittell, Esq., executor of Jacob Belie, Jec'd. The first and final account of E. J. Water, administrator of Ann Evans, deceased. The first and final account of E. J. Water, executor of Ellis Rowland, deceased. The account of George Litziner, adminii trator of Elizabeth Litringer, deceased. E. F. LYTLE, Register. Register's Office, Ebensburg, Nov. 12, 1853. ri "UMBER LANDS FOR SALE. JL Th lands of Morgan Hale & Co., Irirj on or near Clearfield Creek and Muddy Bun, are now open to purchasers. Apply to V. W. Hale, Aarent, Pbilipsburg, Centre co. September 24, 1863-2m. TW"EW TAILOR SIIOP. -L The undersigned having opened out Tailoring Establishment over the storeroom formerly occupied by Evans k Son, respect fully informs the public that the businesj will there be carried on in all its brnchm All work will be done in the latest style, with neatness and dispatch, and on the most reasonable terras. . D.J.EVANS. Ebensburg, Nov. 5, l8G3t STRAY HEIFER. Came to the residence of the subscriber, in Carroll township, Cambria county, in June, atwo-yeaj-oldheifTer, white, with black spots on her sides; No other marks visible. The owner is requested to come forward, nJ prove property, pay charges, and take ber away, otherwise she will be disposed of aor ding to law. JOSEPH DAVIS. Nov. 5, 1863. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE Whereas letters of Administration oa the la6t will and testament of Evan J. Jone.i late ot Cambria township, Cambria conntjj deceased, having been granted by the Rf' ter of said county, to the undersigned, (rc ding in the township aforesaid,) notice hereby given to all persons who have clu against said deceased, to present them, FrP" erly authenticated for settlement, aud thoi indebted are requested to make payn1 without delay. , JONATHAN JONES, Adm r. Oct. 22, 18C3.61. HUGH A.M cCOY, Saddle and Harnett Manttfaelurr EBENSBURG, PA Office one door cast of Davis, Jones s Store. j A large stock of ready-made Harness, o dies, Bridles, &c, constantly on hand o ' 6ale cheap. Dec. 25, ioi-- .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers