V people you represent, T accept tho nomin ation." Yon don't believe anything of tho kind. Yon know better. The Northwest were all peace. So reads the platform. Five hundred delegates unanimously agree upon a platform. Here it is : Resolved, To please you, they have war. Resolved, To please Pendleton, they have peace. Resolved, To please all the outs, the war go on till tho peace ia signed. Remember that the Royal George, in Bristol Chaunel, went down with all on board, the result of trimming. Walter Savage "Lander wrote on the .Georges : 'George the First tv.as reckoned vile, Viler George the second, - Arid what mortal erer beard Any good of George the Third? When from earth the Fourth ascended, God be praised, the Georges ended." I condense your letter in two lines : "Gentlemen : 1 accept the nomination, but acknowledge myself totally unfit for the position." " I mean nothing unkind in this,General, but you know that now ou are a fair ; mark, not a large one, for all to shoot at GEO. FRANCIS TRAIN. TIIURSDAY:::::::::::::SEPTEMBER 22. XATIOXAL UXIOX TICKEtTJ FOB PBESIDENT t ABRAHAM LINCOLN, of Illinois. FOR VICE-PRESIDENT : ANDREW JOHNSON, ot Tennessee. XVJIth 'COxdRtiSSIOXAL DIST. cgsgbess : ;A. A. BARKER- ct Ebensburg. UXIOX COUXTY TICKET. ASSEMBLY : EVAN ROBERTS, of Johnstown. . 6HERIFF : F. M. FLANAGAN, of Clearfield tp. commissioner: ' f ABRAHAM. GOOD, of Taylor tp. POOR HOUSE director : GEO. SETTLEMOYER, of Summerhill. auditor: " THOMAS IIOLLEN, ot White tp Be Firm ! It would have been stranse indeed if " Abraham Lincoln could have taken the reins of government at a time when the couitry was substantially sold out to trai tor?, and then engaged in a war the most gigantic the world erer knew, and not cenmit some mistakes. - Let it be borne y mind that the President had no lights if the past to illuminate his pathway. . He was obliged to feel his way along to travel slowly and laboriously over untrav eled ground. Step by step he thus ad vanced, with the Union and Constitution ' as his Hole guiding-star, until now he has emerged from darkness into the sunshine. Under Mr. Lincoln's administration wc have recovered to the Union an area of territory larger than that now held by the rebels, and if there be any reliance in the eins of the times, before the snows of winter there will be scarcely enough of the "Confederacy" left fur a decent-sized grass-plot. The President has committed mistakes, but they were mistake! of the head and not of the heart. Thesecould .not have been serious mistakes, otherwise 'the cause of the Union were now a failure, instead of a grand success. The only remaining hope of the rebels consists in the defeat of Mr. Lincoln at the approaching election. They know, and feel, and acknowledge that his re election will be the final blow to their Lopes of "independence." Even the Richmond papers admit this. Now, the great question presents itself to the mind of every loyal mm will you sustain the President, or will , you join hands with the enemies of your country ? You may dislike some things the President has done, and you may regret other things he has not done, but you cannot make war upon his administration without at the came time making war upon the cause wc all love. If you forsake him, you.neces earily array yourself in hostile attitude to the government. "We have been wisely told there is and can be but two sides to this question. The people, if divided at all, must be divided into but two classes patriots and traitors". You must either work forr er against the goveVmnent. On the obc hand are a Union restored, and an; honorable peace which will last for all time to come ; on the other hand, an arcy, disruption, and unceasing strife and bloodshed. Cnoose ye t We all stand ia danger of allowing our like3 and dislikes to warp our better judg ment. ;It is an easy thing for the copper heads to cry peace, when there is no peace, and can be none except through stern and unrelenting war j but because we may not see things political in precisely the same light in which they are viewed by Mr. Lincoln ia no reason we should chime in with the demand, knowing it to be sense JkfB ' and, untimely , Peace cannot, ought 'pot, inust not be arrife.4 at except . thro' V..' the restoration of the Union, and the Union will never be restored until the rebels in aims shall have been humbled to the dust. If we fail to support Lincoln, we throw our influence in favor of the standard bearer of the very party which brought this war upon us the Buclanan-Floyd &-Co. party. Can we, as reasonable men be expected to endorse, at this late day the stupidity and the crimes of that par ty ? Or is it to be for a moment believed that an offshoot of that party is the agen foreordained of God to vouchsafe to the republic a new and better life ? Be not deceived. . Turn a deaf ear to the voice of treason. Banish the idea o forsaking your government in this dark hour of her necessity. Amid the radios: elements of political strife, be firm and decided. Stand like a rock against the surging waves, for the storm will soon be over, when the rainbow of promise and prosperity will re-appear,And sweet and gratifying will be your reward. ' m m m Dlutual Congratulation. Ihe Dem. & Sent., in its last week's issue, remarks : "We may thank Divine Providence we (the Democracy) had not to send to the State of Maine for a candi date for Congress, as the Abolitionists did." The Union nominee for Congress in this district has been called upon to undergo considerable personal abuse ow ing to the circumstance of his birth in an Eastevn State. If the foregoing extract be intended as a slur upon the State o Maine, he would beg to say that, seeing the Eastern States were the cradie of lib erty and the birth-place of American In dependence, and that they now constitute the wealthiest, most populous anil most powerful section of the Union, ho is not ashamed of his earliest home. If it b.e meant as a denunciation of tho practice o taking for candidates for office in one State one-time residents of other States, he would offer the parallel case of lion. Jas G. Blaine, a Pennsylvaniau born lately settled in Maine, who has just been re elected to Congress from the latter State for a second term. Saying and offering thus much, he takes it upon himself to go further and congratulate the Union par ty of Cambria county that, through the goodness of God, they have not been obli ged to send off to Ballymuckinfilth, Ire land, for an editor lor either of their party organs. Their own men those to the manor born those who, of all others, must be allowed to possess the deepest and most abiding interest in the welfare of the country, are their monitors and in structors. He docs not dispute the right of any one fleeing from foreign oppression to make this "laud of the free and home of the brave" his abiding-place, neither does he deny the privilege of a former resident of Ballymuckiufilth, Ireland, to become editor here, if he can, but, if one Hasson, surnamed 3Iichacl, be an ac cepted representative of these fleers-from- opprcssion and these men cf Ballyrauckin filth, Ireland, then he repeats the Union men of Cambria county are happy in the possesion of none such as editors, lie furthermore deposes and says that if by some mishap one of these Michael Has sons were now or at any future period .should chance to become the controlling ageut in a Union paper in Cambria coun ty, and in such capacity made it his busi ness to reproach and malign a man in that he was born outside of Cambria county, or even outside of Pennsylvania, he would 1 1 T 1 1 " T consider sucn jiicnaei nasson an unjusti fiable, inconsistent, impertinent, and most ungracious fool and fiat-head, and would insist ou his immediate and unconditional banishment to the shades of very private life for the balance of his natural exis tence. 'The campaign (for Congress ) is now fairly opened all the inventive geni us of the Abo lition editors and managers will-be called into requisition to bolster up their sinking cause misrepresentation, falsehood and fraud will no doubt be resorted to in order to de feat our nominee and secure the eleetiou of their favorite, and it therefore behooves our friends to be on Che alert and guard against deception." lloll. Standard. If the "Abolitionists" are indeed and in truth the unscrupulous and dishonest fellows hinted at above, would it not, on the principle of "setting a rogue to catch a rogue," be a happy idea to put the edi tor of the Standard on their track, to nose-out and counteract their .machina tions t We commend the suggestion to the consideration of the Democratic nom inee. . m m m E- All letters for the Chairman of the Union State Central Committee, instead of being directed to Gen. Cameron atllar rlsburg, should be addressed to him at the rooms of the Committee, 1108 Chestnut street, Philadelphia. Organize 1 Avery few days only remain between now and election-day, when the people will be called upon to decide great and momentous issues. Not an hour should be lost in organizing thoroughly for the campaign. Our enemies are up and do ing. They are holding meetings, distrib uting documents, and spending money with lavish hand? Every known device will be exhausted by them in their wild effort to secure possession of. the "loaves and fishes." - Shall we, who fiirht for the noblestcause ever entrusted to man, be less enthusiastic than theso mercenaries? Forbid 9, patriotism! We must to work. Clubs cjpght to be organized at once in every township in Cambria county. Call meetings, and. let men of ability explain to the people the importance of the con test. Circulate speeches, and platforms, and appeals. The Unio party has noth ing to fear from a full discussion of the issues of the day. It is only the men who have been recreant to their God and their country that' dare not refer to the past and its record. Let us show these men what we can do when engaged in such a cause as the cause of the Union "With the proper effort, Cambria can be redeemed from the thralldom of copper hcadism Let us redeem her ! mmm We cannot too urgently impress upon our friends the importance of attending to the assessments in the different, elec tion districts. The men who are now in the field, giving their time and perillin their lives in defence of the Government, must not loee their votes by any neglect of their friends at home to have them assessed. Have your son, brother or neighbor assessed without delay, pay his county tax of tax cents, and send the evi dence thereof at once to him by mail together with the Union ticket, or a list of the Union nominations. Careful atten tion to this matter will give us hundreds of votes in Cambria county that will oth erwise be lost. Union men! do at least this much for the brave men who are tightfhg the battles of the Government. "This-nomination (the nomination of R. L. Johnston, Esq., for Congress in this district) was notour first choice, for the simple reason that tee knew it would not give entire tatisfaction in this (Mifflin) county. Cut Mr. Johcston 1s now toe candidate, and, as is our lonnden duty, we hoist his name," &c, &c. Leicistown JJemocrat. All of which indicates a severe contest between prejudice and principle on the part of the editors of the Democrat, wherein principle seems to Lave barely come off the victor. "Have you heard the news . from Maine!" Governor Cony re-elected by about 1G,000 majority; a full delegation of Jive Union representatives chosen to Congress copperhead bss of one; the State Senate unanimously Union, and th'e House five-sixths Union; aui the Union county ticket elected in every county in the State ! "As goes Maine ia Sep- lember, s How are so goes the.Union in November." you, peace platform I Read the "Address of the Union State Central Committee," on the outside of to-day'i paper. It discusses the "peace" question in such a manner as to bring it within the scope pf the humblest under standing that the pretensions of the De mocracy that the Union can be restored except through the instrumentality of vigorous and unceasing war are hollow and uumeaninsr. Twenty-0-e Hundred and Forty- Three Democrats, or the entire availa ble strength of that party, voted in Cam bria county at the special election, in Au gust, to DISFRANCHISE Pennsylvania soldiers. Men of the knansack and mus ket ! rebuke these political tricksters and derrAgogues at the polls in October. Tiil3 far, elections have this year been baidin the States of New Hampshire, Connecticut, Rhode Isla'nd, Oregon, Ver mont and Maine, each of which has been carried by the Union party by an aggre gate increase ou the majority of the pre ceding year. Do you see the handwriting on the wall, "Little Mac ?" ft- On the 10th of September, 18G1, M'Clellan niade the following speech to his soldiers : "Soldiers: We have had our last retreat. You stand by me and I will stand by you, and henceforth victory will'crown our eti"ort3." M'Clellan made a dozen retreats after that speech. The soldiers stood by him. ie has basely violated the promise by deserting them. He now stands upon a peace platform. 4 Jt? The inconsistency of the copperr beads is exhibited when they proclaim their opposition to the draft, and yet hurrah, tor the man , who has urued draft, more strongly than anybody else. . . ' . '; . Lincoln Johnson. Abraham- Lincoln and Andrew Johnson are both natives of Slave States. They were born in the class of Poor Whites which Slavery creates and preserves for its own convenience. Their early educa tion was such as it accords to the child ren of this class. Hence, Lincoln obtain ed most of his scanty schooling not only long after his removal into a Free State, but after he had reached the full stature of manhood, and was enabled to earn and plan for himself ; while Johnson never had any schooling at all, and learned to read froni his, wife after his removal from his native North Carolina into almost free East Tennessee.' Neither of them could ever have. been chosen" even to the Legislature in an es sentially slaveholding community, no mat ter how-thorough their subserviency . to "the institution." The. brand of Poverty and Labor on their brows would hav fixed them forever . in the humble station of their progenitors. They surmounted the influence of Slavery by taking position outside of its more palpable domain. To maintain that such men lack ability or force of character is to hold that repub lics are ruled by idiots. Abraham Lincoln entered Illiuois a portionless, illiterate boy, earning the livelihood of his widowed mother's family by the rudest and hardest manual labor, and, within twenty years thereafter, had become one of her foremost lawyers and the acknowledged leader of the more intellectual ot her two great po litical parties conspicuous in her Legis lature, her only Whig Member of Con gress, Whig candidate for Senatorial Elector, U. S. Senator, Yico President, and ultimately for President. All these positions were accorded to him without contest or hesitation. Wrhen the greac political struggles of 1840 and 1844 were made, none other than he was suggested to lead in the canvass. When, for the first time, his political friends had a ma jority in the Illinois Legislature, no other was thought of by the mass of them for U. b. oenator, though it was finally found necessary, in order to secure the requisite anti-Nebraska Democratic votes, to with draw him and substitute another. At Philadelphia, in 1836, his name, and only his, was presented for Vice President by thp delegation from Illinois ; and whtn a candidate was to be pitted against Doug las for the Senatorial canvas of 1858, no other name was even suggested than that of Abraham Lincoln. So in ISjOO, there was abundant competition as to which State should furnish the Republican nom inee for President ; but no one ever sug gested that among the eminent and hon ored Republicans of Illinois there was an other possible candidate than Lincoln. Andrew Johnson entered Tennessee an illiterate tailor youjh, poor as Lazarus in all but hope-and ambition, without a rela tive or friend who could help him to a corporalship in the smallest company of "noodwood mihfia. A few years later he was a Member to Assembly ; next we hear from him ic Congress; then Govern or of his closely balanced State after a spirited canvass ; for Tennessee was then preponderently a A lug State, and her Whigs always ran for Governor one of their ablest and cleverest debaters. John son had always been a very ardent acd ac tive Democrat, and had made himself wide ly obnoxious to his political adversaries. 11 is birth and breeding were matters of common notoriety, and the cultivated ar istocracy of Nashville and the surrounding region were nt at all inclined to be ruled by the ex-journeyman tailor of Jonesbor ough. They could not help themselves, however: aud . Johnson,- after serviusr his term as Governor, was chosen to the United States Senate, where he made good his position against the ablest and proudest iu the land. Probably no other Senator had enjoyed so scant opportunities for intellectual culture ; but the debates, in which he freely mingled, give no sign of this. In the absence of that education of the schools, which he would gladly have enjoyed and improved, he had his full share of the rugged discipline ot poverty and privation, and was thoroughly trained m the keen encounters of an active, ardu- ous public career. JJoubtiess, he leeis and regrets the deficiencies of his early eulture ; but who will say that he has nut nobly supplied them ? Mr. Johnson, as a leading Southern Democrat, and a supporter of Breckin ridge for the Presidency, saw the "Slaveholders'- Rebellion take form and bodv under his immediate observation. He knows it "egg and bird" its impulses, ideas and aspirations. Nearly every other prominent Democrat of his State and sec tion was driven into its toils; he never countenanced it for a moment nor regard ed it with the least allowance. He knew it to be as hostile to the class from which he sprung in the South as to the "mud sills" at the North, and he "stood by his order" like any British Peer. lie ex posed the hollowness of its pretexts, the wickedness of its aims, in the presence of iw uuumvera, ueior iney naa miorueu their hands in blood. He warned the simple against their machinations, and warned them of their inevitable failure and ruin. ' Had other Southern Unionists been as faithful and fearless as he, the madness of Secession would have been stayed at the Northern limit of thc"Cotton Region, and our country would not now be reeking with human blood. - It is a common pro-Slavery cavil that "You Abolitionists talk of, what you do not understand." This cannot be said of Lincoln and Johnston, who wero bom in Slave States, and have been familiar with Slavery since they first opened their eyes. jut.- juiQcoin never was an Ahohhnniat. till Slavery declared war on the Union ; yet he says he never regarded Slavery in itself otherwise than as he bow does. "If Slavery is not wrong, then nothing is wrong' ' says he in his letter to the Hodges Mr. Johnson was a tacit sup porter of Slavery until Slavery struck at the life of his country ; but he now holds with Lincoln that Union and Peace are only possible through the final, complete overthrow of their assailants. Are these men fanatics? If there were an easier or shorter way to Peace, would they not choose it? What possible mo tive can they ,havc for preferring the wrong way to the right one 1 1 Consider ana judge 1 lX. Y, Tribune. Tlic Terms of Peace Proposed. The following terms of peace were pro posed by the rebels through the .Rich mond Examiner, on the 18th of August, more than ten days Lefore the Chicago Convention met : "Save on our own terms we can accept no peace whatever, and must fight till doomsday rather than yield an iota of them, and our terms are: "Recognition by the enemy of the independence of the Confederate States. "Withdrawal of the Yankee forces from every foot of Confederate ground, inclu ding Kentucky and Missouri. : "Withdrawal of the Yankee soldiers from Maryland until that State shall de cide by a free vote whether she shall remain in the old Union or ak admission into the Confederacy. "Consent on the part of the Federal Government to give up to the Confederacy its proportion of the Navy as it sto,od at the time of secession, or to pay for the same. "Yieldinsr up all pretension on the part of the Federal Government to that portion of the old Territories which' lie west of the Confederate States. "An equitable settlement on the basis of our absolute independence and equal rights of all accounts of the public debt and public lands, and the advantage ac cruing from foreign treaties." The Chicago Convention declared in favgr of an "immediate cessation of hos tilities'.' as a preliminary step to peaec. The tmly logical presumption in the prem ises is, that the Convention, when it did this, had direct reference to the terms here laid down, repeated, as they had been, by Jeff. Davis' himself, and officially pro claimed by Secretary Benjamin, as the only basis of negotiation and settlement. It would be doing violence to any fair mode ot reasoning to draw any other con clusion. The framcrs of the platform cer tainly so understood it, -and this was the temper of the Convention itself. Were the party, with 31'Clellan as President, in power o-day, separation would be the ground on which they would open negoti ations with the rebels. In this connection we would draw at tention to the fact that, in England, where the plots and schemes of the rebels, North and South, are better understood than here, this is the view taken of the subject. In the best informed circles abroad it is not doubted that the success of the Dem ocracy would be followed by peace, the first condition of which would be separa tion.' This belief is not denied by the Yallandighams, the Woods, or the open mouthed brawlers for peace, nor by the Seymours, the Belmonts, and the Pierces men who can speak as by authority. So it comes down to this: whoever thinks this Government a failure, and believes it best to stop the war by divi ding the country, will, as he ought to, support M'Clellan aud Pendletou. But whoever thinks the reverse, and is every where and at all times opposed ato the above term?, must, of necessity, support Lincoln and Johnson. ' - What M'Clkllan Says Privately. Gen. M'Clellan privately ' asserts that he is in favor of an immediate armistice, while his letter publicly proclaims that he is for t,he war and the Union. This has been the theme of the New York Daily Xews for a week past. Gen. M'Clellan Iras pretended to repudiate the Chicago platform. If he will now .make it appa rent that he will repudiate his own letter of acceptance, tho Daily Xcics, 31 r. Wood and all the rest who mean what they say, and say. disunion, will support him. 17- dtlicel, the Daily Xetcs of Wednesday : "There are those who would make the Daily iYeirs responsible for division in the Democratic ranks. We can briefly and effectively disprove the charge, and fix the responsibility where it belongs. Let Gen. M'Clellan assert publicly, as he does pri vately, that ho will favor an immediate cessation of hostilities and a Convention of all the States, and tho Daily Xsics, and TFe believe the entire Peace party, will admit that he stands upou the Chicago platform, and will give him their earnest support." Private dispatches from reliable parties in New York positively statethat John C. Fremont has written a letter, which will shortly bo published, with drawing his name from the Presidential contest. He gives as1 a reason for this step the paramount importance of harmo nizing all the loyal elements in order to secure the success of the Gov ernment in the coming Presidential con testand appeahr-to his friends in the name of Union, Liberty and Peace io support the election of-Lincoln and Johnson. BQ&,Hon. John Cessna, of Bedford, two years ago Democratic Speaker of the House of Representatives of Pennsylva nia, is stumping the State for Lincoln and Johnson ; j , . Democratic Propnesie." Mr. Harris, of Maryland, said of V' Clellan in the Chicago Convention: "Ue tcill le leaten everyichere j teas at Antietam." ' at The Freeman's Journal and f'j Iieguter, of New York, in an warning against the nomination of M'cu lan, says: Llel " If you seeTc disaster, nominate Jfl' Clel the old Democracy won't vote for 7am ,an; That is prophetic, and from Democrat!, oracles iU0 Hear what Douglas said f The Ch" Convention hypocritically kfJected 2 regard for the lamented Dougla3. Dut presiding officer gave the lielo the ntte? ance of the man slaughtered at CherW0r! bv Jeff. Davis and his prow v i 0 iyuL-iaa icu ui is empnatic declaration oa 1 CCUI U i . "The slave question is a cere excuse The election of Lincoln i3 a mpro r,rQt Ine present secession movement is the icsuit au eayrmous conspiracy, formed more than a vear since formal i. in the Southern Confederacy more than lwl .uivuiua ago. Ane cotjspirary i3 now known, armies have been raised "war onlv two sides to the rmfirm r ' man must be for the United States, 'tj against them. There can be no neutraLia tins war; only patriots or traitors." The Detroit Advertiser relates ft following : "We were amused the other night at the attempts of one ot the un washed, whose toojrue had become n lmu thiclc from the effects of his favorit W . . . -. . . . . '""5 erage, to pronounce the naoies of the Democratic candidates. "Hurra for. M'. Clel'n and Pen'ton ! I mean for M'Kcl- lan and'Plenton? No. that ain't t- Hurra, I say, forM'Kennel andPfel'tonr The poor fellow got furtherfrom the mark every attempt, until he finally gave it up in despair, exclaiming, "O ! d n such a mixed up mess I Hurrah for Jeil. Davis !'' . BfSi. Does it ever occur to a War T)pm. cm that in voting for M'Clellan he aaj possiblv curse the nation with such traitor as Pendleton for President ? Our past history teaches U3 the lesson that Presidents, and especially military one, are not immortal, and in case of the death ot the President the ice President tal- his place. .Who can imagine -such a ca- lanmy as would be "the placing of George II. Pendleton, Vallandihatn's ,nnm friend, into the Presidential chair, without a snuader : TZQ- Gen. M'Clellan occupies one of two positions: it he accepts the nomination for the Presidencv on the Chicago Dlatforra. then he is the Peace candidate. If lie accepts the nomination, and does nr,t intend to carrv out the Drincides of the party tendering it,'as enunciated ia the Chicago resolutions, then he is a dishonest candidate. Either he is a candidate who believes that "immediate efforts should be made for a cessation of hostilities," or candidate not to be trusted. ' K5-The M'Clellan-Pendleton ticket reminds us of the unfortunate dog ia 3Iunchausen's story, who, while running at full speed, came against a tree with such force as to split himself from snout ro tan. .Munchausen says he clapped the two naives together and they united, bat inad VCrtentlv twfl Inrra irira r?rw tvn lens were down. The runniu;??earof the Lhicugo ticket wa3 similarly botched, and now the Copperheads insist on taking tho dog apart. - tF M'Clellan's "change cf base" in Union Square, on Thursday night, wiil not save him. Anticipating this (hi single strategy), the lion'. John A. Peter?, in a speech at Portland, Maine, "brought down the house" with the remark: 4'li M'Clellan couldn't take Richmond, wA'mz Vashington his base, you may safely swear he tcill never take ti'asJiinjlon, malcinj Richmond 7i is Lase I" - tQ. Hon. Horatio Seymour has leen re-nominated for Governor of New .Y oik by the Democrats. I" OST. ' i At Harrisburpr, durinir last month. PROMISSORY NOTE for 550.00, drawn favjr of Daniel Lodr by Win. Bcrfcsiresstr. All persons are cautioned against purcbasir? this note as payment has been stopped on tli same. DANIEL L0M. Sept. 22, 1864-it. rpO SCHOOL TEACHERS. JL An examination of teachers for the va rious schools in Cambria township, Camrn county, will be held in Ebeosbnrg, on &Ai" URDAY, SEPTEMBER 24th, iost., commen cing at 9 o'clock, A. M. The County Supc iatendent will be present. , BEES J. LLOTP, Secy. Sept. 22, 1864. ELDERSRIDGE ACADEM1, Will open its thirty-sixth sl0nTu. WEDNESDAY, 12th of OCTOBER neit. i ition fees for session of fire months, io sica or Mathematics, $15; Higher fc" branches, $12; Common School branches Extras French or Gerrain, $5; Mns'CjT' cal, $4; Instrumental, $15; Dmtrins. 3- ALEX. DONALDSON, PrinclPa EBEN CALDWELL, A. A. W. M'CDLLOUGH, . Assistant. Eldersridge, Sept. 15, 1864-31.. ADMINISTRATOR'S 01Li Letters of Administration on tne ..T - tate of Mrs. Elizabeth. J. B. Jones, ' Pittsburg. Allegheny county, ce91e:rloBi indebted to said estate are hereby do rarA .rf nettle their reip" accounts, and those having claims ag will present them for j EVAK Cumbria tp.) Aug. U. 18S4-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers