The Alleghanian. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1859-1865, February 11, 1864, Image 2

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    Protestant and the Catholic, the German,
and the sons of the Emerald Isle, have
commingled their blood for the defense of
common rights and a common country.
Fince the battle of Bull Run, when Ban
ker's Brijrade covered the panic fetriekeu
rout, and gathered up abandoned cannon,
ad the day when Missouri was saved by
the German under the gallant Gen. Lyon,
my countrymen have never faltered in
their devotion to the Republic. Amidst
defeats and disasters', through good and
evil report, despite, the slanders of the
1'ress, and the official neglect of their
beloved Generals, they have followed the
fortunes of the flag with German fidelity.
And history will show that while the
rebels, have not in their ranks a single
German" volunteer, the self-sacrificing
spirit of! my countrymen has not been
excelled by those to the manor born.
As oa the battle field so in the council,
their patriotism is undoubted. They
form the very vanguard of progress, and
will rally around every" American States
man, who is tru ft the spirit of liberty.
They seek no special privileges they have
uo separate interests they wish tosecure
only that influence in public affairs to
which they are justly entitled by their
intelligence aud numbere. Separated
though they may be, by language and
literature, this pledge I can give, that.th.eir
labors are for national advancement, and
their aspiration to attain the highest state
of political and social life. And never
will the American nation regret having
extended to them the hand of a common
brotherhood. I am utterly opposed to all
movements, tending to separate political
action, and the movement. inaugurated in
the Clevelaud Convention, if persisted in,
and carried out as designed by its prune
instigators, will lead to the reorganization
in self-defense of a native American party,
and ultimately to civil war. v
PERSEVERE TO THE ES'D.
! There is in the Capitol a great national
painting, illustrative of the idea :
The Star of Empire westward takes its way."
You stand amid the gorges of the Rocky
Mountains, that great back bone of the
American Continent. On the right
ftretch the broad and illimitable prairies,
while in the distance, illumined by the
getting sun, you have glimpses of the
golden plains of the Pacific. An emigrant
train is approaching the summit, and you
pee the weary cattle, the jaded teams and
the well woru harness. You see the
Btalwart pioneer and his devoted wife
thu hard j youth, buoyant of step and
vigorous with hope meeting the earnest
gaze of his beloved. One more adventur
ous, who has already reached the heights,
waves in the balmy breeze the flag of fhe
free, and calls upon his companions to
summon their strength and follow his
footstep?, that they might share with liiui
the glories of a vision unsurpassed in
splendor. They have reached the summit,
and eager expectation lights up each
countenance. Many days of toil, and
nights of vigil, many dangers, hardships
aud privations will yet be theirs, and yet
they turn not back to the homes they left
behind them. Should they return they
could not gather up the "household gods"
now scattered, but failure, poverty and
disgrao would be their lot. They think
i.ot ot" the past, but only of the bright
future. They pres3 forward tor that golden
land of promise, trusting in Provideuce
and their own strocg arms.
Thus it is with us as a Nation. Our
eagles are planted in the heart of the
rebellion, at Chattanooga, overlooking the
plains of the States of' the Gulf. Shall
wo return ? Can we return ? Can we
restore the precious lives ? Can we
gather up our wasted treasure? Shall we
confess failure and stamp ourselves with
disgrace ? God forbid ! We must press
o:t into those plains, , where permanent
peace welcomes our advent. Strong in
the justice of onr cause, relying upon the
succor of Providence aud the devotion of
our people, we cannot fail. How long
this war may last, and how many sacrifices
are yet in store, I know not but this I
know, aud it is the conviction of my in
most soul come weal or woe we must
persevere to the end.
..
Petitions are in extensive circula
tion in Lancaster couuty, praying the
Legislature to pass an act authorizing the
construction of a railroad, to start at some
poiut on the Susqeuhanna river, between
the mouth? of the Conestoga and Conewa
ga creeki, acd theDce to run westwaruly by
ihe most practicable route to the Broad
Top and Allegheny Coal Fields, to be
called the Susquehanna aud Allegheny
railroad.
& Some, bold burglar broke into the
banking establishment of Jame3 Gardner,
Hollidaysburg, a few nights ago, and
relieved it ohrevenue stamps and postage
currency of the value of 8300. Au at
tempt to force open the .ufe, in which was
locked up a "pile" of greenbacks, proved
unsuccessful.
The following banks in Pennsylva
x have been desiguated as depositoiies
of public money :
Pir.st Natioual Bauks of Carlisle, Erie,
Meadville, Philadelphia, Scranton, and
Towanda.
Jtsa?" An application for the erection of
a new county, to be called Tionesta, out
tf parts of Venango, Clarion and Warren,
will bo presented to the Legislature at its
present session.
Congressman M'Allister and Leg
islator Perching will please accept the
thanks of The Alleghanian for favors con
ferred, in the shape of valuable public
documents. ,
jura The snccial election in the Indiana
district lor u successor to Senator" Harry ;
White, takes placo ou the 19th jnst.
Tlio Allegltiaiiiaii.
fcjiiW f-.V JtZy .JS--'"M-,?
RIGHT on WKOXG.
WHEN BIGHT, TO BE KEPT K I G n T,
WHES WRONG, TO BE PUT RIGHT.
TIIURSD Al :::::::::::::::FEBRUARY 11.
FOB PBESIDENT :
AB RATI AM LINCOLN, of Illinois.
JIaj. Gen. George B.' M'Clellan.
ma
Our highly esteemed coteraporary, the
Dem. & Sent., affects to believe that The
Alleghanian, the administration, and "ab
olitionists" generally, are absolutely "qua
king in their boots" or shoes, as the
case may be by reason of the possibility
of the nomination of General M'Clellan
by the Copperheads for the next Presiden
cy. The Dem. & Sent, is a journal of
presumed worth and reliability, one
which would no sooner tell a wilful untruth
than eat its supper, therefore this must
be the case. We, in common with fully
two thirds of the people of this great and
enlightened Union which the rebels are
trying to smash, must be at the present
moment shaking and quaking, shivering
and quivering with awful dread lest this
avenging Nemesis this Damocles with
suspended sword this terrible caller of
the people to account and the rulers to
judgment this General M'Clellan may
make the landing next Fourth of July and
become the Copperhead candidate for the
highest office in the gift of the people.
Let us see how this i3 :
General 31'Clellai?, we know, at one
time was quite popular. Some days since
the masses swore by him, and called all
their new babies and fast horses after him.
Many considered themselves uncommonly
lucky if they could touch only so much as
the hem of his garment. They placed
the most implicit confidence in his military
ability, and took it for granted be was
loyal and patriotic. As before remarked,
this was some days since the order of
things is changed now. In July, 18G2,
the President even may have thought
him the man for the crises, lie don't
latterly, nor does anybody else. General
M'Clellan, by his own incompetency, or
else incompetency and disloyalty combined,
has forever' Jost to himself the splendid
name and fame vjth which he . was once
invested. Ilia military ability proving a
nonentity, and his loyalty not above
reproach, his reputation rested upon an
unsubstantial foundation. The foundation,
in the providence ot God, wasted away,
and with it disappeared the spuriou3
reputation. I2equiescat in pace! No
amount of blathering or systematic puffin
and blowing will be able to resurrectionize
it. -
. Starting out witbj?an army the most
magnificent the continent ever sawjGcneral
M'Clellan's path to the topmost niche in
the temple of Fame seemed plain and easy
of ascent. He did not tread thereiu. He
went in another direction downward.
To say nothing of Ids eternal and incessant
whining for "more men," when reinforce
ments could not be got to send him, and
his gratuitous advice to the President and
the nation touching the slavery issue, the
General's blunders and dilly-dallying be
fore the wooden guns of Centreville ; his
temporizing and time-serving policy on
the Peninsula, where his army was only
saved from utter destruction by its own
magnificent fighting, and not through any
especial merit of its commander ; his
failure to reach out and take Richmond
alter the battle of Malvern II Ml, when the
avenues of approach to that city lay
invitingly open before him ; his apparent
unwillingness to pursue a defeated and
demoralized foe subsequent to Antietam,
when a few vigorous strokes must have
closed the war all these episodes, which
are matters of history, with others, tended
not only to shake the confidence of the
loyal men of the North in this very ' Little
Napoleon," but also to muke him an object
of mingled pity and execration. Tried in
the balance, neither once, twice nor tbrice,
but a multitude of times, he was fouod
icanling in every attribute constituting a
great General. No other military man of
the age was ever afforded such splendid
opportunities to distinguish himself as he,
and none more signally failed to lake
advantage of the same. Cast a retrospec
tive glance over his entire career, and
then say do we judge him harshly?
Oiher Generals, we kuow; have failed to
do what was expected or required of them,
but, then, it has not been attempted to
make martyrized Presidential candidates
out of them.
So "augers that won't bore" not being
wanted, he was laid on the shelf to make
room for somebody else.
This wasjGrcneral M'Clellan as a soldier.
As a politician we have him in his Artful
Dodger role of last fall. Against what
must have been every honest emotion of
his heart j in opposition to his reiterated
professions of enlarged patriotism j in diiect
antagouism to the genius of the free insti
tutions in behalf of which he had
unsheathed his sword j like a paltry,
contemptible thing, at the eleveath hour
he came out in a card favoring the elec
tion ot J udge "Woodward, a professed
secessionist, over Governor Curtin, a loyal
man, aud always his patron and friend.
Aud net only did he take side with
Woodward and his partisans, but he also
endorsed per se their odious and pernicious
political doctrines, lie admitted that
Slavery was, "a divine institution' to
think against which was a sin, and to talk
against which was a crime. He agreed
that the war was a causeless and unholy
war, and that it ought to be estopped by
some sort of submission on our part. He
tacitly endorsed the lie that the North i3
WTOng and the South right in this contest.
His record, although brief, is equal in
blackness and darkness to that of the most
blatant and broad mouthed Secession Cop
perhead in the laud. The lamented
Douglas said there eouldbe but two sides
in this war patriots and traitors. General
M'Clellan evidently is not a patriot.
It may be interesting to here note that
the General's celebrated Woodward card
proved to bo tremendous papers. Where,
in 1SG2, the Democratic majority for State
officers was 3,715, in 18G3, thanks to the
aforesaid card, the Union majority reached
15,000 and over. Such is the power
sometimes concentrated in a single name!
In view of the fact that General M'Clel
lan's military career was a most egregious
failure, and 6ce:ng that his political career
is a horse cf precisely the same color, that
retired hero and statesman is certainly a
"dead cock in the pit." Should he be
nominated by the Copperheads, however,
for the Presidency, which to our mind is
an event scarcely possible, he will rurf
the most magnificentlv small vote it is
possible to conceive. Father Abraham
can and will beat him to the tunc of
hundreds of thousands. In fact, nobody
will vote for the former at all excepting
that insignificant handful of demagogues
who dot) on egotism and incompetency,
and consider disloyalty a shining virtue.
The Dem. & Sent, inust be right we
are "quaking in pur boots" muchly !
Tlie Bouniy Question.
In view of the fact that volunteers for
the military service of the United States
have not come forward in any great num.
-ber in Cambria county since the late calls,
and remembering that wo have a large
quota of men to furnish on or before 'the
10th day of March next, all of whom
viust be forthcoming at the' appointed
time, would it not be well in our Coun
ty Commissioners to attempt the experi
ment of stimulating enlistments in our
midst by offering, in addition to the
Government bounty, a local bounty of
say One or Two Hundred Dollars per
man ? This amount may readily be
realized by loan, and a tax levied for the
reimbursement of the same. No true
patriot would object to this. To be ?ure,
the proposed tax must fall not' only upon
those who are liable to draft, but also
upon those who &re exempt ; but when it is
taken into consideration that the latter
have the same interest in the preservation
of the Government which protects them
that the former have, their right to assist
in it3 maintenance will not be denied.
The Government bounty ceases to be
paid the first of March. After that date
there will be little or no volunteering.
We have only a trifle over two weeks'
grace left us. If the Commissioners take
action now, and pledge themselves for the
payment of One or Two Hundred Dollars
bounty to each man enlisting this, with
the Government bounty and any addition
al bounty that may be offered by the sev
eral sub-districts throughout the county,
we have no doubt, would have tho effect
of securing our.'quota within the specified
time, andjhu3 do away entirely with the
necessity of a draft within our limits.
We make this suggestion for what it is
worth, hoping the Commissioners may
give it at least due consideration.
;
EsgP" Read Mr. Meyer's speech on the out
side of to-day's paper. It is an able and
instructive document, and will rpay an
attentive perusal.
We had intended writing a biographical
sketch of the subject of this notice, whose
sudden death on Saturday last will cause
many a tear and heartfelt sigh of grief
throughout the State, but the following
tribute, from th pen of a gentleman inti
mately acquainted with the deceased, is
infinitely superior iu every respect to any
we could have prepared, and spares us
the sad alternative :
C0MMt7XICATEI. ' ;
Mr. Editor: Michael Dan Magehan, Esq.,
the oldest member of the Ebensburg Bar, is
no more! lie died at his residence, in this
borough, on Saturday rooming, tbe Gth inst.,
at 9 o'clock, after an illness of only four days,
lie was born in Allegheny Township, in ibis
county, in August, 1805,-nnd at the time of
his death was about 58 years and G mouths
old. When he was about twenty years of age,
he entered the law oflice of Gen. VVm. R.
Smith, (now a resident of Wisconsin.) who
was then a prominent and leading member of
the Huntingdon Bar, and after having qualiQed
liiinself for the active duties of his profession,
he was admitted as a practising attorney of
the several Courts of this counts in October,
1827. He soon rose to a high eminence in
his profession, especially as a. criminal advo
cate, and took rank with the foremost mem
bers of the Ear, in this and the surrounding
counties. In a year or two afterwards, during
the administration of Gov. Wolfe, he was
appointed by the Attorney General of the
Commonwealth hi? deputy for Cambria coun
ty, and was continued in the same office for
several years. In 1844, the people of his
native county elected him as their Represen
tative to the lower branch of the Legislature,
and re-elected him to the same responsible
position in October, 1 843. As a ready and
fluent debater ou the floor of the House,
which then numbered amongst its members
many able aud experienced men, he acquired
a reputation of which his constituents (his
"frosty sons of thunder," as he delighted to
call them,) felt a just and manly pride. That
the subject of this brief notice was gifted with
more than ordinary ability, will be conceded
by all who enjoyed his acquaintance. He had
a strong hold on the affections of the people
of Cambria county, and this was to be attrib
uted to the -warm impulses ot his kind and
generous heart, more than to any ether cause.
From a long and intimate persOnal acquaint
ance with the deceased, the writer of this
imperfect tribute to bis memory is well satis
fled that he never cherished in his heart a
fixed feeling of resentment against a single
human being. If he had his enemies, and
who hns not, like angels' visits, they were few
and far between. That he had none in this
community, in which he spent the best portion
cf his life, and where he was best known, was
fully attested by the vast concourse of people,
of all ages, who sadly followed his remains to
tlreir final resting place on last Sunday after
noon. Living, he was respected; dead, let his
memory be cherished ; and whilst his untimely
los3 to his bereaved family is irreparable, let
them, as well as his legion of friends and
acquaintances, indulge ia the pleasing , and
Christian hope, that when his immortal spirit
winged its flight to another world, it might
with truth be said: lO Death! tcherc is thy
stinj I O Grate ! where is thy victory !"
Amicus.
M. O. Magellan, Eq., Dec'd. j TSie Danlsli Question Stated.
The Danish question, which ha3 lately
caused so much agitation in Europe, really
lies in a nutshell. Formerly Schleswig-
Holstein, a part of Germany forming tbe
southern portion of the Kingdcra of Den
mark, was one Duchy.' In 1818 , and
18-19, its inhabitants, backed by Prussia,
revolted against the Danish rule, and very
nearly succeeded in casting it off. In
1S50 aud 1851, Austria and Prussia
assented to the severance of Schleswi
from llolsteio, both to be retained by
Denmark. SchleswigNlIolstcin geograph
ically belonging to Oeimany, it was .pro
mised by Frederic VII. , of Denmark, that
they should retain their rational privileges,
and not be united to Denmark by any act,
which, incorporating them with that
Kingdom, would take from them their
own independent Legislature.
In like manner, in the hunured and
twenty-three years (1714 1837; which
elapsed from the accession of the Guelph
dynasty, to the Dritish- throne, to the
death of William IV., the last male
sovereign of that line, Hanover, a German
Klectorate originally belonging to the
Guelphs (made a Kingdom in 131.-,) was
governed by or in the name of the Uritish
Sovereign, but had its own laws, its own
Legislature, its own nobility, wholly inde
pendent of En'ghnd, and belonged to the
German Diet, precise! v as Schleswig-IIul-
stein does now. The Hanoverians would
have revolted, with the sympathy of Ger
many to aid, had the King of England
issued a Proclamation or the British
Parliament made a law, by which Hanover,
losing its individual nationality, would be
declared united to England, with permis
sion to send a few members to the British
Legislature, its ownjecal Parliament bcipg
abolished.
In 1852, Austria and Prussia, with
England, France, and other Powers, agreed
to appoint a successor to the reigning
King of Denmark, who was childless,
passed over the Duke ot Augustenbourg,
the King's nearest male relation, and
head of the first ducal line of llolsteiu
Sonderboarg, to elect Priuce Christian, a
younger son ot the Duke of Sonderbciurg
Glucksbourg, which is a junior branch of
the Danish family. The Augustenbourg
line wa3 pissed by because it had fought
against Denmark, on the pidcj of the
Schleswig-IIuisteincrs, in 1848 '49. and
the Glucksbourg". branch was selected
because it had taken part with Denmark.
The Augustcnbourg family claim Sehles-wig-Holtein
by hereditary descent a3 next
male heirs to the late King of Denmark.
But t his claim might not have been allow
ed had other circumstances not helped it.
When, in May, 1S52, tho succession to
Denmark wa3 diverted into the Glacks-
bourg family, an arrangement from which
the lUnish Parliament withheld as2nt
until the last day of July, 1853, the King
of Denmark solemnly promised to respect
the rights of Schleswig-IIol.steiu. Bat
Frederic VH., broke this promise by
issuing the Patent of a new Constitution,
incorporating these Daehies with Den
mark. His successor, the Glueksbourg
cadet, withdrew that Constitution, but, in
November, immediately after his accession,
as Christian IX., issued a new Constitu
tion, which, if carried out, will swamp
Schleswig-IIolstein, as much as the incor
poration of Hanover, with England would
have swamped Hanover. Christian IX.,
will not see that if he is independent, as
King of Denmark, he is a member of the
German Confederation, as Dukeof llolstein.
He refuses to withdraw his act depriving
Schleswig-IIolstein of their nationality,
and Austria and Prussia have consequent
ly ceased to hold diplomatic relations
with him, thereby surrendering him to his
fate.
England proposes tosubmit the question
to a Conference, but France holds back,
remembering how recently and how
incivilly Lord Busstll declined attending
the Concrresi. The feeling in the Duchies
is in favor of Prince Frederic, of Augus
tcnbourg, and unless England send an
army and a fleet to a?sist the lather of the
Princess of Walo his Majesty may find
himself minus Schleswig and Holstcin
some fine morning in the spring. Den
mark, with the Duchies", contains 1,307
scruare miles (exactly one mile more than
the area of our little Rhode Island) and
2,G05,024 inhabitants. Take away
Schleswig-IIolstein, and the Kingdom of
Denmark will consist of only 715 square
miles, with a population of 1,G50,798.
This is a petty sovereignty, but its affairs
may make Europe drift into a general
war. The Press.
LIduculiu:iaI.
Criltcal The other week, our neigh
bor of the Dcrti. t? Sent, spoke, in an
article credited to the Philadelphia Age,
of a certain proposition being as plain as
that "two and two make four," as being
as easily "demonstrated,", and equally
"axiomatic." Now, we have no wish to
be hypercritical, but we would like our
good neighbor, or any person who is so
inclined, to prove that two and two mako
four, or reduce that universally accepted
assertion to a demonstration, or show
wherein it is axiomatic. For our humble
part,-we incline to think that it cannot
b? proved, nor demonstrated, nor shown
to be axiomatic. All you who doubt our
worCs may take down, dust off, and ransack
ycur neglected geometry to your hearts'
content".
Light Wanted. It U a shame that, of
all the counties in tho State,. Cambria
alone should figure without a report in
tho annual one of the State Superinten
dent. It is singular if that worthy and
capable Superintendent, W. A. Scott, left
no statistics when he resigned to take his
place in the array from which might have
been gathered sufficient dOa to form a
repoit of what had been done. But
laying this aside, why is it that there is
no account of what was done during the
nine months in which the position was
held by W. A. Scott's successor?
mi
E&News from Washington up to the
8th inst., says: The late reconnoissance in
force, by three corps of the Army of the
Potomic, of which the military authorities
requested that no mention be made until
fully completed.has been accomplished.
The object in view was ascertained, viz :
the finding of Lee and his army, in full
force, a few miles scuth of the Kapidan
river.
When our troops pushed across at Ger-J
mania lord on Inday, they iound the
rebel rifle pits in the immediate vicinity
occupied by but twenty-five pickets, who
threw down their arms and surrendered,
stating that there was no rebel force
within ten miles of their position. Our
forces pushed ahead in the direction of
Orange Court House, but had hardly gone
two miles when they were opened on by
twelve rebel guns. Attacking tho rebel
Torce, we drove them from' their position,
with considerable loss, our loss amounting
iu the whole affair to between 200 and 300
men killed, wounded and missing. A
considerable portion of our army, which
had recrosscd to this side of the Kapidan,
was in line of battle last night, to meet an at
tack fraui Lee, reported crossing tho river.
JJOUSEKEEPERS, ATTENTION I!
: " If?? . "; l;
5 v r
A Washington dispatch of Friday
says : Tbe rumors recently put forth of
real or apprehended difficulties between
the United State? and France arc without
foundation.
E3ilThe American Exchange and Tie
view: a miscellany of useful knowledge and
general literature. Especially devoted to
Finance, Insurance, Manufactures, Patents,
Trade, Commerce, Mining and Hailway Intel
ligence, Art, Joint Stock Corporation Inter
ests, Physics, Social and Economic Science."
Whiting Co., Publishers, 521 Chestnut St.,
Philadelphia. Terms, $3.00 per annum.
Postage, 21 cents per annum.
B3uThe way to prosper in business is
to sell good articles, sell them at reasonable
prices, tell the truth about them, and adver
tise. This is precisely the course adopted by
Janies M. Thompson, proprietor of the new
store in the P. O. building, Ebensburg, Give
him a call and be convinced.
B&-The Continental Monthly . t
. The Knickerbocker Magazine
Codec's Lady's Book -
'Peterson's Magazine '"", '
for February, have been received. They are
all first-class publications.
See Geo. Huntley's advertiscmeut
of the "Atuidon Wringer.''
' 1 AMlilON S';
r
You nil want a Clothes Wringer, ia ordn
to fctrt through your-wa3hing earlier, Epnrt
your strength, pud at the same time eav
enough in the wear of clothes by using 4
wring'-r, to pny for it in six mouths, at tl
present price of'ftt'on.
THE AMIDOX WRIXGEH
has beeu phiced iu competition with aJl jg
principal Wringers in the market, "and h&i ia
every case come off victorious.
It is easily and firmly attached to any tlj
of tub, without tbe turning of screws.
It has no cog wheel?, galvanized frame, 6f
iron scrc-TV3 to rust and break.
Plesse call ur.d examine an Amidoa
Wringer before you purchase any other.
For sale bv . - GEO. UUXTLEY,
Ebensburg", Feb. 11, lSC3.-tf
ITOll HE NT. :
The property belonging to the heirt tt
Evan Lloyd, dee'd., situate about 2J mile
south of Ebensburg, will be rented lcr one or
more year?.
Said property consists of two detachrd
firms, No. 1 Laving a duelling bouse, bank
barn, and other necessary out buildings, ia
good order, a grod bearing orchard, and about
70 acres of cleared land, and No. 2, about on
half mile distant from the former, with about
50 acres-cleared. Said farms, are well suited
for tilling or grazing purposes. , Possession
given immediately if desired. -
For terms apoly to the subscriber, in F.beni
burg. ELIZABETH LLOYD.
Ebensburg, Feb. 11, 1S03.
X CENTS REWARD'!
) R;ih away from the subscribers, on th
1st of February, inst , WILLIAM T. BEXDE.Y,
an indentured apprentice to the Farming
business. lie is about five feet one inch high,
dark complexion, "blue eyes, and black curlj
hair. All perious are cautioned agaiDst har
boring or trusting him on oj: account, as ire
will pav do debts of his contractir.e.
J. &'W; DEXDEX.
Feb. 11, 1SC4-3L .
X ITTLE & ADAMSON,
I J SILKS AND DRESS GOODS,
Shawls, ribbons,' Gloves, Dress Trimmings,
. White Goods, &c.
No. 323 Market Street, Philidelpbia.
AarilCR v.". LITTLE. - ' , 05KPH ADAXSCS.
.Peb. 11. 183i-tf. : . ;
i i , r-
T C. CALDWELL.
k UPORTKK AND WHOLESALE DIALER IX
UOSIERY, GLOVES AND FANCY GOODS,
434 Market St.-& 423 .Merchant st,
PHILADELPHIA.
Feb. 11, ISoJ-tf. . .
VTSOX & JA NNEV.
IMPORTERS AX I JOTtBERR Of
: SILKS AND FANCY. I?PE3 GOODS,
..-...SHAWLS, ic, &c.
323 Market St., Puiladsl tdia.
Feb. II, lsoi-tf.
T 1ST OF LETTERS 1
Li Remaining in the Post (Office, Ebens
burg, Pa., up to February 1, 18C4i
David J Jones,
John C Jones, 2
Win J Jones, t
David P Jon ;s,
Wm D James, .
Benjamin James,
CaJLnrine Jone3,
Wm Lariwor, .
Michael Mnrry,
. P.av.hel Morrison, 3
Kin Sfach,'
C'hurle Murray, -Wm
Nicholas,
Ames M O'Neal, -Sarah
Powell,
John A Plowman,
David Rowland,
Isaac Rowland,
Owen Rowland, .
llary E Smith,.
Eliza Simmons,
Mari; Shaffer,
Margaret Sh-irar,
George Sharar,
Mrs Joha Sharp,
i'.ra C Strattoa,
Ellen Will.
In os W Williaci.
Jacob Adams, ' '
Rachel Burk, 2
Sarah Cowers,
Clara Cartlet,
Lizzie A Brady,
Chas Brad If,
Susan Bigler,
Wra A Bagley,
John Bel n,
Robert Boggs,
Mary Clements,
Rosann.v Caice,
T-sac Caine, - '
Catharine Donarm,
Rachel Evans,
Gabriel J England,
Thomas J Evans,
D E Evans, (weaver)
Daniel Evan.?.
Elizabeth D Evans,
John Farrcil.
Barbara Gates,
Theodore Gobert,
Helen J. George,
Mary Hughes,
Wra Hancock,
Wm II Hoover,
S W Jones,
Owen Jones,
Persons calling for the above letters will
please say thev are advertised
JOHN THOMPSON, P. M.
February 4, 1SC4.
17011 SALE
X A Fabcr ENGINE, 8 inch cylindrr. 5
inch stroke, nearly new, in complete orler,
2 pumps, one cistern holding 30 bbls. water,
boiler 2G inches, 20 feet long, fire front, a.l
complete. Price Will . take Lumber
at cash prices in paymest cf same.
II. F. LUD vTICK.
Manor Station, Pa. RR., 24 miles'!
east Pittsburg, Dec. 8, 1SG3.
1 EXECUTOR'S NOTICE.
Ji Letters testamentary on the estate or
Elizabeth Pringie, late of Suunncrbill town
ship, Cambria county, deceased, bavins been
granted' to the subscriber by the Register
said couuty, all per.-ons indebted to '
estate are hereby aoiified to make imniei'st
payment, and those having claims agaiot l
same are icqucsted to present theur to
undersigned, properly authenticated far s
tlement, at the lute residence of deceasee,
Mr. John Priugle's, neir Wilmore-fUtion- .
WASHINGTON GKEK, hr
Jan. 7, lS64.Ct . - .
HUGH A.MoCOW -
Saddle and Hornets Mnufactrr
EBENSBURG, A.
Office one door cast of 'Davhs Jone? .
Store. c j.
A large stock of readv-m&de Harness, o
uies, unities, c, cousiaauj ,r
sale cheap. r Dec. 23, 18ol-
TNSU11ANCE AGENCY.' . f
JL James Purse, agent for the Blair eon .
and Lyeomiug Mutual Fire Insurance w
panics, Johnstown, i'a.
tar
ranee
application bV letter or IrfTpM-wK
Kbenbhursr March 12th. M'3.tf.
Will attend promptly to maW -in'
any part of Cambria county up
EaySee new advertisements.