The Alleghanian. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1859-1865, March 03, 1864, Image 2

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UIGIIT OR WROXC.
WHEN BIGHT, TO B K KEPT B I G II T,
WHEN WRONG, TO BE PUT RIGHT.
-EBI2XSDURG:
THURSPAY::::::::::::::::::::::::?IARCI3.
FOR PRESIDENT
ABRAHAM LINCOLN, of Illinois.
" WEiIcIi IVar or I'cacc ?
The Dcm. & Sent, still continues its
maniacal ravings against the Administra
tion. It seeni3 to view every tiling through
colored glasses, and to adopt the sentiment
"What good thing can come out of Naza
reth ?" Its fiery indignation bursts forth
in a red-hot flame in a recent article with
the caption "Why the Abolitionists don't
want the war to stop." One would think
in perusing this article, and others in the
same paper, he was reading some blatant
rebel sheet "away down South in Dixis."
We can see no difference in the sentiments
and the revengeful way it belabors the
Government and the war.
The article in question deals, as usual,
in hard names and false allegations. The
first one made is that the "Abolitionists
are growing rich in affluence on the blood
of honest men." Who are these "Aboli
tionists," and who are the "honest men"
referred to? If by "Abolitionists" are
meant all who support the Administration
and the Union, the crowd i3 rather a
respectable ODe quite a majority, neigh
bor ! If it is meant all who are opposed
to Slavery, the number increases again.
Besides all this, we have a decided plural
ity of this same class in the army. Even
those who enter the service with pro
slavery proclivities soon get their eyes
open to tho enormity of Slavery. Who
were those who first responded to their
country's call? Who arc now enlisting
by the thousand?, Copperheads, or those
who are driven to the slaughter pen ? No,
ho; it has been an uprising of the noble
brave who willingly offered their livc3 on
the altar ot their country. Are not these
game loyal thousands lavishly distributing
treasure as well as blood for the suppression
of this unholy rebellion? Where is the
propriety of bearing false witness against
their honesty by branding them with
"speculation and rapine ?" That there .is
some speculation in the war, we shall not
attempt to deny, but we have every reason
to believe that many of these cormorants
are found in the Copperhead ranks old
political hacks who under false pretences
have wormed themselves into the employ
of the Government, in order to carry out
the jascality they learned in their own
party.
"Old Ben Butler" comes in for his
share of anathema. What has he done to
merit such a castigation from the secession
organs North and South? Or.ce he was
the right hand man of Jeff. Davis. Once
he had the confidence of the faithful
"'now none so poor as to do him rever
es ence." 3ut because he was an honest
man, and refused to bow the knee to Baal,
because he has given his entire energies
to the support of the Government, because
he has dealt Secessia many a hard -and
effective blow, his former ardent friends
now repay him by calling him a "beast,"
and Northern journals with Southern
principles re-echo the vile epithet, the
Deni. & Scut, joining in the howl. O
consistency, thou art a jewel !
Who is meant, in the article referred
to, by "mercenary minions of old Lincoln,"
and by "Yankee hirelings ?" Is it
meant the brave soldiers who are jeopard
izing their lives for our defence? Or is
it meant those who are under the civil
employ of the Administration ? In either
case, we have no hesitation in saying it is
a base slander on the integrity and
patriotism of these men, which deserves
instant rebuke. . When, in the history of
this nation, has any administration award
ed place3 of honor and trust with such
impartial hand ? Men of all parties have
been appointed to poits of honor and
distinction, and uo other guarauty has
been required than a pledge of 103'alty and
capability. And yet all these hih
minded men must com under the name
of "sanguinary beasts '."
New England seems to be a great
evesoro to the Dthi. 0 Sent. Hear it
prate ! "Since the lauding of these
hypocritical fathers (the Pilgrim Fathers)
on Plymouth rock, they have engaged in
every species of insanity ; New England is
the hot-bed of fanaticism and has been
the fountain source of all our National
evils." " Oh ! ypg; if New England, hated
New England, coald only be "left out in
the cold," what a satisfaction it would be
to all southern sympathizers ! But, pray,
of what kind of "fanaticism" has New
England been guilty ? Is it her 'schools,
academies, and colleges ; her loom and
anvil; her ingenuity and witerprise; her
commerce and manufactures; her indus
try and thrift by land and by sea is it
these whieh constitute her "fanaticism ?"
Impartial history, we trow, will locate the
"source of all our National evils" in the
fountain head of Slavery. From this
dark and fetid pool has flowed all the evil
and distress whieh now overwhelm the
land. So says a Dickinson, a Butler, a
Johnson, a Gantt, a Maynard, a Holt
all good Democrats, and so says every honest-minded
man, whether Democrat or
Republican.
This war costs New England nothing,
echoes the Pern. & Sent. False! every
word of it false ! It is a base lie, and the
eiitor of the Dem. & Sent, knows it. Has
she not in common offered of the best
blood that flows in her veins ? Were not
her sons among the first to answer at the
roll call of the nation? And are they
Dot among the last to "rally round the
flag," and "rally ouco again?" Who but
sons of New Eugland first spilt their blood
in the streets of Baltimore, as they first
spilt their blood at Lexington in the day
of the Revolution. "Cost New England
nothing !" Has she not freely contributed
of her means which have been earned by
her own honest toil ? And is not every
cent's worth of her property pledged for
the support of the Government ?
Talk not te us about her eon3 stealing
negroes, when tho whole slave system is
founded on theft, and when every sympa
thizer with Slavery at the North is
encouraging theft. They who bring the
thief to justice must not be confounded
with the thief. Xet not our neighbor cry
too lustily "stop, thief," lest he might be
set on and dogged down in the chase.
It is not the "Abolitionists" who are
prolonging the war, but the miserable,
whining lick spittles of the North, who
are cowardly seeking the overthrow of the
Union. These are the sycophants who
are forever crying "'peace on any terms,"
that arc lending "aid and comfort" to
their "erring brethren of the South." The
marshaling thousands who are now rallying
from the hillside and the plain will soon
hunt the demon Rebellion to his death.
And when the la3t battle is fought, and
the last victory won, these Copperhead
vipers will become a hissing and a by
word through all tho generations to come.
It is not enough for the Copperhead
press to vilify the Administration, to
weaken the public faith, and to discourage
enlistments, but it must needs givethe Fi
nances astab. The Dem. & Sent gives vent
to a characteristic phillipic against our
"National Prosperity." It says that "our
money lias no real value. It is a mere
promise to pay, based upon nothing".
Wonderful acumen! No real valae, has
it? Then we are already bankrupt, and
in as bad a condition as, if not worse than,
the so called Southern Confederacy. Not
so fast, neighbor; your logic is all bosh.
It is a well known fact that our credit is
good North and- South, at home and
abroad. Through all this dreadful strug
gle, we have never asked a foreign loan of
a single dollar. Our Secretary of the
Treasury i3 accredited upon all hands to
bo an able financier, and it is generally
agreed he has managed the financial affairs
of the nation beyond the most sanguine
expectation of the people.
But "our money has no real value." Is
it not a fact that "Greenbacks" are the
most eagerly sought and most carefully
preserved of all paper currency? Is it
not a fact that every man will pay out all
the rags in his pocket before he will gie
one of these same Greenbacks? And yet
our money 'has no real value. Strange
inconsistency ! "Promises to pay, based
on nothing." The "United States prom
ises to pay ;" therefore the United States
is nothing! What an exalted opinion our
neighbor must have of his Government!
Away with such captiousness; put your
shoulder to the wheel, instead of placing
obstructions on tho track to cripple the
motion of the ship of State, and push on
the column.
Ed, The dead lock in our State Senate
has at last been happily broken, Dr. Thomas
St Clair, the newly elected Senator from the
Indiana district, having taken lu3 seat in
that body. The people have spoken, and the
wheeU of the government again revolve.
Dr. St Clair's oflicial majority in I113 district
was 1,091, Armstrong counfy giving .him n
small majority.
Call Tor a Republican national
Convention. I
The National Union Committee', met at
the residence ot Hon. Edward D. Morgan,
in Washington, Feb. 22d, at noon, and
was called to order by that gentleman as
its chairman. Hon. Edward M'Pher3on,
of Pennsylvania, was elected secretary of
the committee in place of Hon. George G.
Fogg, of New Hampshire, who is absent
from the country.
Upon consultation, a call was unani
mously adopted for a national convention
in the following terms :
'The undersigned, vho, by original ap
pointment, or subsequent designation to fill
vacancies, constitute the executive committee
created by the National Convention held at
Chicago, on the 16th day of May, 1860, do
hereby call upon all qualified voters, who de
sire the unconditional maintenance of the
Union, the supremacy of the Constitution and
the complete suppression of the rebellion,
with the cause thereof, by vigorous war and
all apt and efficient means, to send delegates
to a Convention to assemble at Baltimore on
Tuesday, the 7th day of June, 18G4, at 12
o'clock, noon, for the purpose ot presenting
candidates for the offices of President and
Vice President of the United States. Each
State having a representation in Congress
will be entitled to as many delegates as shall
be equal to twice the number of electors to
which such State is entitled in the Electoral
College of the United States."
A resolution was also adopted, inviting
the territories and the District of Columbia
to send delegates, subject to the -determination
by the Convention of their right to
vote.
The committee was entirely harmonious
in its proceedings, and adjourned in the
best possible spirits.
Last week's Cambria Tribune critici
zes severely the failure of our Represen
tative in Congress, Hon. A. M'AlIister, to
vote either aye or nay on the final passage
of the Enrollment bill, andclasses him
with -that contemptible set known as
"dodders." Wc think our honorable
Representative must have been away
from Washington city at the time of the
passage of the bill. ' Had he been present,
we are convinced he would not only have
voted, but voted arijlit. Our impression
is, that Ue is neither ashamed nor afraid
to go down on record as a true friend of
the Union. -
.lnco2a-c:iase.
Elsewhere we publish the celebrated
Chase Circular, concerning which eo much
has been said and "written of late. The
Circular is now chimed to be a forgery,
gotten up by some one simply for " the
purpose cf obtaining an expression of the
sentimeut of the country on the Presiden
tial .juration. If this latter was' its
mission, it wa3 successful, for a very
general expression of opinion has followed
its publication ; if it is a genuine. document,
then the following strictures from the
Tittsburg Gazette become eminently ap
propriate, embodying as they do our
convictions in the matter to the dotting
ot an i, or the crossing of a t :
We have net one word to say against
the fitness of Mr. Chase for the high office
of President of I he United States. He is
a statesman and a patriot. He is anti
slavery to the backbone. He is certainlv
honest. If ho should receive the nomina
tion for the Presidency by a convention
of our party, we would work for him up to
the day of the election with all the ability
we possess." If elected, as we believe he
would be if fairly nominated, we feel sure
that he would make a good President.
Having said thi3 much by way of in
dorsement of Mr. Chase's fitness, we feel
that we have some right to criticise the
means by which his nomination aud elec
tion are sought to be secured. Mr. Chase
and his interests are not in good hands.
We might almost say that Mr. Chase is
not in good company. For weeks the
country has known that there was a move
ment on foot to make him President upon
tho conclusion of Mr. Lincoln's term.
The nature of that movement the fingers
with which it was manipulated the oil
which lubricated it were not so well
known. Its secrets, however, have been
at last disclosed.
The telegraph yesterday morning bro't
us two items of important intelligence
one to the effect that the National Repub
lican Committee, of which Senator Morgan
is Chairman, had adopted a call for a
national convention to meet at Baltimore
on the 7th day of June next; another
consisting of the Chase circular, which
advocates the nomination of Mr. Chase by
the convention just called. Both .docu
ments the call and the circular were
evidently the result of concerted, as they
were of simultaneous action. Tho "Chase
movement" produced them.
We object to both. If there were no
other reason, we object to the call for the
convention because it has been hitched on
to the movement in favor of Mr. Chase.
But we object to it for other reasons.. It
is premature. The Union party of the
country had not called for it. Tho puplic
mind was not prepared for it. The mili
tary situation forbade it. The action of
the Opposition party in .calling their
convention to meet ti.inonth later, viz : on
the 4th of July, absolutely prohibited it
as a matter of common sense. We hope
we earnestly hope that the Committee
may bo induced to reconsider their action
and postpone the holding ot the conven
tion until August or September.
Touching the circular, we do not hesi
tate to say that we do not like its tone.
More than this, we do not like its assertions.
It is not manly. It is not truthful. It is
mean. This base attack upon Mr. Lincoln
and his Administration will not make any
friends for Mr. ChaEe among honorable
men.
Proclamation by llie Governor.
Governor Curtin has issued the follow
ing proclamation, cautioning the citizens
of Pennsylvania and Pennsylvania veter
ans against volunteering from other
States:
Whereas, For some time past it has
been known'that persons, professing to be
agents of other States, have been busily
tampering with our citizens at home and
in the army, endeavoring, by false repre
sentations, to induce individuals to enter
or re-enter the service as from those
States, and remonstranees have been in
vain made against tho continuance of this
paltry system of seduction ;
And Whereas, Information baa now
been received that one of the regiments
of Pennsylvania (the "Bucktails" Ed.)
has enlisted almost bodily as from another
State ; and it appears to be necessary to
take some public means to rait our citizens
on their guard against the arts by which
results so disastrous to the men and their
families may be effected in others of her
regiments which Pennsylvania has de
lighted to honor :
. Now, therefore I, Andrew G. Curtin,
Governor of the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania, do issue this, my proclama
tion, addressed to all citizens of the
Commonwealth, but especially and emphat
ically to her veterans in the army,
cautioning them against allowing them
selves to be seduced from her service.
By enlisting in regiments cf other States
they deprive their families at home of
that generous and liberal aid which our
law has provided for them as a right, and
not as a charity ; they will not enjoy the
right of suffrage which an approaching
amendment of the Constitution will give
to our absent volunteers ; they cut them-,
selves loose from the ties which bind
them to their hemes, and which bind
Pennsylvania to give them constant care
and assistance in the field, an obligation
which our State has never neglected. If
wounded or sick, they will no longer be
fostered '07 our agents, and received with
applause and consideration, as men who
have done honor to Pennsylvania; they
bring the history of their regiments to an
abrupt close ; their names will no longer
be entered oa our rolls: all the dorious
recollections of their valor and sullerings
will be sickened by the fact that they
have abandoned their native State ;
deserted the great Commonwealth under
whose banner they have earned for them
selves end for bcr the highest reputation
for courage and all the martial virtues,
and that they have done this under
inducements which are in fact unfounded,
and at the very time when their friends
and neighbors at home were preparing
for them bounties probably larger than
those offered by other States, and certainly
much larger, if the support afforded to
their families be taken into account.
I therefore appeal to our noble volun
teers not to abaudou .the Commou wealth.
She has been proud of the glory which
their course hitherto has shed, abundantly
on her. As a mother she has a right to
the honors to be won iu future by her
children. Stand by her, and she will
stand by you, and you will have the
richest reward in the grateful affections
and sympathies of your families, your
friends, your neighbors and your fellow,
citizens. .
But if you leave her for the service of
other States, you throw away all these, for
their people will regard you merely as
mercenaries, and when they have fulfilled
their bargains, will leave you and your
families to shift for yourselves. Recollect
your homes and your families anl your
friends and the banners which the Com
monwealth first bestowed upon you, which
you have carried so gloriously upon many
a bloody field, and which, defaced by shot
and shell, but still bearing the names of
the battles hi which you have been dis
tinguished, she has provided for receiving
at the close of the war, aud preserving, a3
holy relics of your patriotism and devo
tion to the cause of our common country.
These things are worth more to you and
to your children than money. Do not
grieve and disappoint your friends by
abandoning them all.
I take this occasion to enjoin upon all
Magistrates, District Attorneys and other
officers, a strict vigilance in enforcing the
laws of this Commonwealth against all
persona who shall within this State at
tempt to recruit volunteers for other
States. A. G. CURTIN.
Owing to the fact that tremendous
accessions are now being daily made to
our armies, through volunteering, Con.
gress has extended tho time for the
payment of bounties until the 1st of April.
This is understood to be equivalent to the
postponement of tho draft until that
date.
JCy The Johnstown 1 ribune hoists the
names of Abraham Lincoln for the Presi
dency, and Andrew Johnson for the Vice
Presidency.
r&-Mrs. Gen. Wm. II. Harrison died
on Friday last, at North Bend, at the
advanced age of over 88 years.
rST" The President having signed the
new Enrollment bill, it is now a law. '
We will publish it m full next week.
Tue Cliase Circular.
strictly private.
"Washington, (D. C.) February, 18G4.
Sir : The movements recently made
throughout the country to secure the re
nomination of President Lincoln render
necessary some counteraction on the part
of those unconditional friends of the
Union who differ from the policy of his
Administration.
So long as no efforts were made to
forestall the political action of the people
it was both wise aud patriotic for all true
friends of the Government to devote their
influence to the suppression of the rebell
ion. But when it becomes evident that
party machinery and official influence are
being used to secure the perpetuation of
tho present Administration, those who
conscientiously believe that the interests
of the country and of freedom demand a
change in favor of vigor and purity and
nationality have no choice but to appeal
at once to the Jioople, before it shall be
too late to secure a fair discussion of
principles.
Those in behalf of whom this commu
nication is made have thoughtfully pur
veyed the political field, and have arrived
at the following conclusions :
1. That, even were the re-election of
Mr. Lincoln desirable, it is practically
impO'sYiyle against the union of influences
which will oppose him.
2. That should he be re-elected his
manifest-tendency towards compromises
and temporary expedients of policy will
become stronger during a second term
than it has been in the first, and the
cause of human liberty and the dignity
and honor of the nation suffer proportion
ately ; while the war may continue to
languish during his whole Administration,
till the public debt shall become a burden
too great to be borne.
ST That the patronage of the Govern
ment, through the rfecefsitics of the war,
has been so rapidly increased, and to such
an enormous extent, and so loosely placed,
as to render the application of the "one
term principle" absolutely essential to the
certain safety of our republican institu
tions. 4. That we find united in the Hon.
Salmon I. Chase more cf the qualities
needed in a President during the next
four years than are combined ia any
other" available candidate; his record,
clear and unimpeachable, showing him to
be a statesman cf rare ability, and an
administrator of the very highest order,
while Ids private character furnishes the
surest obtafning guaranty of economy and
purity in tho .management of public
affairs.
. 5. That the discussion cf the Presiden
tial question, already commenced by the
friends of Mr. Lincy'.n, has developed a
popularity and strength in Mr. Chase
unexpected even to his warmest admirers ;
and while we are aware that this strength
is at present unorganizecLand iu no con
dition to manifest its real magnitude, we
are satisfied that it only needs systematic
aud faithful effort to develop it to an
extent suScient to overcome all opposing
obstacles.
For these reasons, the friends of Mr.
Chase have determined on measures which
shall present his claims fairly and at once
to the country. A central organization
has been effected, which already has its
connections in all the States, and the
object cf which i3 to enablo his friends
everywhere most effectually to promote
hi3 elevation to the Presidency. We wish
the hearty co-operation of all those in favor
of the speedy restoration of the Union upon
the basis of universal freedom, and who de
sire an administration of the Government,
during the first period of its new life,
which shall, to" the fullest extent, develop
the capacity of free institutions, enlarge
the resources of the country, diminish the
burdens of taxation, elevate the stamlard
of public and private morality, vindicate
the honor of the Republic before the
world, and in all things make our Ameri
can nationality the fairest example for
imitation which human progress has ever
achieved.
If these objects meet your approval,
you can render efficient aid by exerting
yourself at once to organize your section
of the country, and by corresponding with
the Chairman of the National Executive
Committee, for the purpose of either re
ceiving or imparting information.
Very Respectfully,
S. C. POUEROY,
Chairman National Executive Committee.
EnThc Conference committee having
agreed, Congress on 2Gth ult., passed the
bill creating the rank of lieutenant general.
It was duly engrossed and signed by the
President, who was at the Capitol at the
time of its passage. The same night the
President issued the commission of lieut,
enant general to Ulysses S. Grant, of
Illinois, who thus holds the only position
ever conferred on any person in this
country except George Washington, Gen.
Scott's rank of lieutenant general being
merely that of brevet. The new law is
so worded that the lieutenanent general is
only ex-ofiicio commander-in-chief of all
tho armies and therefore it does not
disturb Halleck unles3 the President
requests him to retire.
At a caucus of Union men at
Columbus , Ohio, on Friday night last,
the following resolution was adopted :
"Resolved, That in the opinion of this
Convention the people of Ohio, and her
soldiers iu the army, demand the rcnom
ination of Abraham Lincoln to the
Presidency of the United States."
The members spontaneously arose to
their feet, and gave cheer upon cheer at
the commencement of the passage of the
resolution.
TTnW TO TT? VAT T.Tnr-nTTvi- i
"uuuii.ii,o. War
widow tricked a libertine out in Alle
gheny county, New York, by taking h;3
five hundred dollars to get ready f0r 4
proposed elopement, and then sending
him the following "billydux :"
"Mr. : I have to inform you that
circumstances beyond my control will
prevent me from fulfilling my engage,
nyjnt to elope with you to night. I gx
pect my husband home on furloujh sooa
to spend Christmas and New Year's ycV
111- 1 . 1 UU
we shall enjoy a hearty laugh
discomfiture. Meanwhile I
will kepn
your money as a Christmas present for
him, and when this cruel war is over it
will come handy to assist him to start ia
business. Yours, tenderly,
0. T. X.
"P. S. When next you undertake 4o
play the libertine, you would do well to
select your victim outside of Old Alle
gheny county; and, above all, beware of a
soldier's wife.''
- Upon the above, the Harrisbur Tth
graph in allusion to the Johnstown trage
dy, says :
"If the fw.ar widow whose transactions
in a sister county ia this State, have
produced such terrible results, had been
as true a woman as the wife above referr
ed to, she would not have made a wreck
of herself, a widow of an innocent woman,
orphans of nine children, a murderer of
her husband, an outcast of an only eoq,
and sent a soul unprepared into the
presence of it3 Go J. Where true women
exist where the strong wife lovea and
lives libertines do not flourish, and
husbands do not become murderers frota
jealousy."
3-IIon. Geo. A. Coffey, U. S. District
Attorney for the eastern district of thia
State, died suddenly in Philadelphia oa
Saturday week last of paralysis. He vis
a native of Indiana county, a cousin of
Maj. White, late Senator and now a
prisoner in Richmond, and a brother of
Hon. Titian J. Coffey, Assistant Attorney
General. He was a graduate of Dickin
son College, and at an early age entcrel
the Methodist ministry, where he rose to
great distinction having filled the lead
ing stations of that church, at Washington
and Baltimore. About 1S53 he was
admitted to the bar, and has since devoted
himself to the practice of the law. Ua
was an earnest and active politician aDd a
brilliant man.
-
T)n. Tolas' Venetian House Li.ni-
xir.T. Pint boitle?, at f.fty cents, for tLa
cure of lameness, scratches, wind gal!?,
sprains, bruises, splints, euti, colic, slipping
stifle, over heating, sore throat, nail in t'ie
foot, etc. It is warranted cheaper and better
than any other article ever offered to tho
public. Thousands of animal hare been
cured cf the colie and OTer-beating by th'u
Liniment; ami hundreds that were crippled
and lame havu been rcstored to their former
rigor. It is used ly all the first horsemen
throufrhont the States. Orders areronstantly
received from the Kacirrcr StaWes- of England
for fresh snpples ot this invaluable article.
Over 2,500 tesdmonialt hare leen received.
Remember, 50 cents laid out in time may save
the life of your horse. Sold by I1 druggie's;
Office j Cortlaait Street, New York.
Feb. 11,
JKt? Since the dead lock on the wheels
cf our State Senate has been removed by tho
election of Dr. Thomas St Clair as Senator
from the. Indiana district, the most important
question, beside which all other questions,
the "goose question" included, sir.k into com
parative insignificance, is Will Pennsylvania
escape the draft ? Without attempting to de
termine it, we would advise our readers topo
to James M. Thompson's store, Ebenshurg,
when they want to buy cheap Winter Goods
of all descriptions.
MAMMOTH UNION
PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY!
N. F. Ames would respectfully inform the
citizens of Ebeusburg and vicinity that te
has opened a Photograph Gallery on Centre
street, one square north of High street, Ebecs
burg, where he holds himself prepared to ex
ecute ia the highest style of art all manner
of pictures, such as
PHOTOGRAPHS,
AMCROTYPES, and
MELAIXOT1TES,
at the very lowest possible prices. Metallic
pictures for 35 cerfls, which can be enclosed
in an envelope and sent any distance without
extra postage. Pictures inserted in lockets,
breastpins, finger-rings, &c, in a neat and
durable manner. Oil Paintings, Daguerreo
types, Ac, copied. Out-door views aud min
iatures of deceased persons taken on short
notice.
tfrm Pictures taken equally well in clear
or cloudy weather.
He cordially invites one and all to call w&
examine specimens, whether thev want pic
tures or not. X. F. AMES, -Artist.
March 3, 1863-3t
XTOTICE. "
JL 1 Ran away from his father, a Jad aloat
14 years old, named J. C. R. COBLE. Any
person harboring hiiA over night, or trusting
him to anything, or hiring him to work, cr
giving him anything whatever, shall be fined
$30 for the first ofleuce, and $25 for every
subsequent offence. S. LTOBLE.
Newman's Mills, March 3, lSGSfi
G
KEEN & BROTHERS.
Lumber Jlcreham,
PLANING MILL,
SASH AND BOOR FACTOHT,
CHESS SPRINGS, CAMBRIA CO., Fa.
Flooring Boards, Sash, Doors, Frames, LfttfcJ
YenPiaii aud Panel Shutters, made to order
and constantly on hand. .
In connection with the mill is a pateni
Grist Mill, where corn, chop. Ac., can t
procured at short notice.
Sept. 3, 1SG3-Iy.
T?OR SALE. -6
JJ A Faber ENGINE, 8 inch cylinder,
inch stroke, nearly new, in complete ora ,
2 pumps, one cistern holding 30 bbhs. waie .
boiler 26 inches, 20 feet long, fire front.
complete. Price $G50. Will take Lumoe
at cash prices in payment of j.pyTCK
Manor Station, Pa. RIl.,-24 miles
cast Pittsburg, Dec. 3, I3C3. J