WHKN KIOI1T, TO 1! K KKPT It 1 O H T, W H K N WRUNG, TO BE PUT U1UIIT. TIIUKSDAY::::::::::::::::::UCT()BEII 12. Tlie Ejection. The returns of Tueslay's election conic in slowly, but enough is known to rentier it certain that wc have carried the State by a majority ranging from 10,000 to 20, 000. 1 ho vote is bht, or the majority would have been still larger. PHILADELPHIA. McMichacl, Union, is elected Mayor of the city by 5,000 anijority. Our State ticket majority is larpjr ALLEGHANY t'OUNTY. V S Allegheny county will give about 5,000 Uuiuu majority. INDIANA COUNTY. Indiana goes Union by the usual token of 2,000 majority. WESTMORELAND COUNT Y. Westmoreland, of course, gives a heavy Dcuj. majority. YORK COUNTY. Union gain?. ERIE COUNTY. Large Union majority. WAKKEN COUNTY. The Union majority will be 550. IS LA III COUNTY (Jives an increased Union majority. CRAWFORD COUNTY Gives a Union majority of 1,700. FAYETTE COUNTY Reported to have gone Union. SOMERSET COUNTY". Heavy Union gains. XXI Id Senatorial District. We have achieved a most glorious vic (ory in our Senatorial district. The re turns indicate that Harry White is elected by a majority of about 1,000. A dispatch received here says that Indiana county, his home, gives him 2,100 majority. Jef ferson is not heard from, riut it would be a safe et-timate to allow Iilood 200 major ity in the county. TakiQg Cambria coun ty as giving SOO Democratic majority, the Senatorial "situation" would stand thus : Blood. While. Indiana 2,100 Cambria...'. 800 Jefferson.... 200 l,ouo 2,100 White's majority, 1,100. Cambria. County. The election here passed off quietly, though the vote is largo. The Dein. ma jority docs not materially vary from last fall's vole. We have held the foe level in his own chosen stronghold which is do ing all that could reasonably be expected of us. The deserters from the draft throughout the county all vocd, to the number, probably, cf five hundred. De duct this number from the Dem. majority, (for those men had no legal nor moral light to vote,) and you will have the real Dem. majority. . Wc subjoin the vote of Cambria coun ty. Camhkia Cocnty, UN-official. Aud. G. Xur. (J. Senate. cr i . c-J o O 2- DUtricts i Kbnbiirg, K. W... B2 H 82 12 fc2 11 . Do. V. W- G7 55- 07 57 GC Cambria Tp 143 39 147 33 117 :VJ Jackson Tp - 01 55 50 0G CI 55 Washington Tp 25 18i 29 181 32 160 Carroll Tp -52 2i3 42 244 42 21-1 (hirrolltown 5 C5 7 .' 5 CI Susquehanna Tp... 0 74 78 75 82 71 ("ajlits-iu 32 73 34 75 33 7(J WiJmore Z6 28 35 27 So- 27 Summerhill Ti 17 82 43 82 48 b'2 Chest Springs 34 23 33 23 33 24 Clearfield Tp.. 28 190 27 191 2T 101 Summit ... 13 m. 11 2G -Alleghany Tp 50 195 MunsKr Tp 10 D4 lll icklick Tp 02 27 Loretto 0 3J Cambria City 13 152 Cannangh Tp ?? Coiicninugh, 1st 2D 127 -: Do. 2d W. 31 iG Johnstown, IstAV-IPJ 45 Do. 2 1 W.. U3 34 Do. SJ V. 52 74 Do.- 4th W.. 81 38 Do. CthW-lUS. 57 Millville 105 74 KUIind Tp 120 115 Tat lor Tp. .. 30 in-- Yodcc Tp - CO Zl Crdjlfc Tp 50 m. ChfetTr,. 1C0 ra. White Tp. 22 in. l'i;oppct Uoro- 4 27 Probable Dem. majority in Cambria county, 800. -Majority last year, 800. hi ii Ohio. ilpxf Union, u reported elected Goer- 1,0X ,20,000 majority is causLdered sale. The Legislature JTotmtaiiiH of Wealth. Amonjr the many sources for congratu lation at the tide of returning prosperity which now rolls across the countrv, we must not forget that wonderful legacy of uaturc to which we leil heirs abouU the hegirmin of the war; vfo mean tla Pe troleum fields. The sensation which fol lowed their discovery and development has abated, but the oil still flows in undi minished stream, pouring into the Nation al lap presents far richer than the dia monds ot (lolouda, or the glitteriu met als of the Far West. The oil trade lias become a fixed institution, and i3 already making new currents aud new centers of trade. In December, 1752, Major George Washington, of the Virginia militia, wa cent by Gov. Dinwiddio to the French commander of that day, who was estab lishing a, lino of military ports between hake Frio and the Ohio Kiver. In his route he passed up the Valley of the Al legheny and across the county o! Venango, then the habitation of Indiau3 and wild animals. A hundred years later, and all that could bs seen among those barreu hills was a couple of sleepy Dutch towns, with very little to sell to tho euter world and stili less to buy from it. Within the past five ye;irs tho diseojifcw iol an ilUimif nating oil beneath tho surfi&c of the eirth has transformed the face -of nature with magical rapidity. The whole country for mucs is tiottca with derricks, steam cn giues,and shanties ; new cities havo sprung up, with tlieir hotels, stores, tanks, and theaters. In a circuit ot JO miles around Oil City are over 200,000 inhabitants. Mcadville the neck of the oil rcuions, through which is poured the oil outgoing and the thousand supplies iniroiotr. has risen from a population of 3,000 in 18G0 to 15,000. Flaces like Franklin, Titus villc, Oil City, l'ithole, which scarcely existed, now boast of their daily new.pa- pcrs, their hotels, banks, stores, and thea ters. In the circuit of 30 mi!es around Franklia there are not less than 200,000 energetic people. The l'itholo discoveries have lately giv- eu another impetus to the excitement, and visitors to that interesting spot relate marvelous stories of it3 wonderful yield of oil. There are, it appears, on tho two or three farms known as l'itholo City, tome 200 wells sunk or in process. Wo have the record ot 30 of these wells which yield from 30 barrels (pumping) to 1,500 barrels (flowing) a day. The total yield of 40 of the wells now reaehes nearly 10.- 000 gallons per day. The oil is worth S10 a barrel at the wells, but costs from to to 0 more to haul to the railroad. Tho Government imposes an internal rev enue tax of 1 a barrel on the crude, and 20 cenU per gallon upon the refined oil, so that with the least margin of cost for labor or machinery we have a steady con tribution of $200,000 a day or 70,000,- 000 a year lrom this vicinity alone. lho ne.d of the whole of the Pennsyl vania oil regious is three times that of the Pithole region, so that without counting the product in West Virginia, Kentucky, or Ohio, we have a sum of over 5200,000,- 000 annually as a direct gilt from nature, or sulhcient to discharge the iSational Debt in fifteen years. Not only so, but we aro furnished with a portable econom ical light superior to any other in use. The principal difficulty experienced at present is the transportation to market. it is estimated that there are upward of 30,000 barrels of oil awaiting shipment, and the railroads are daily refusing freight in both directions. Oil wells are notoriously uncertain ven tures, and many curious facts are related ot narrow Jiits aud misses of fortune. On the whole, the yield seems to be as great or greater than ever, though brought from many more chauncls, the current some times setting from one to another. Leas es are now felling at premiums of from 83,000 to 65,000, and halt the oil. The territory has risen in places to prices so fabulous as to bo out of tho market. .Most of the famous flowing wells have- a regular pulsation iu their flow, an interval of from 15 to 30 seconds, in which gas es capes, again followed by oil. Speculation seems to be vague iu reference to the ex tent or origin ot the source. The retorts i Q W h ich tho interual fires have been dis tilling this precious fluid may have been at work for thousands of years, or may be still. The supply may be, so far as iiu mac demands are concerned, cxhaustless may, indeed, be the liquid side by side with the fluid rcsiduin of the side real heat which originally permeated the mass we inhabit. ArniENTiCEs. An interesting decis ion was lately made, in relation to an s.p prcntice, by Judge Ludlow, of Philadel phia. The boy, being bound as an ap prentice .for three years, left his employer without Ins consent, lie wa3 arrested and brought before the Judge, who, on cxaiuiuing the articles cf indenture, and finding that it embraced no provision for the boy's education, ordered tho inden tures to be annulled and the boy to be dis charged. The large number cf apprentices at va rious trades in this country make3 this declsiou important. Uuless in the articles by which boys, and girls, too, arc bound to service, cither iu shops or houses, there is provision made for their rcccivingsome education, it is almost certain that the greatest number of them will get none, and thus a large number of persons will be brought to mauhood and womanhood without that amount of education which is necessary for their own advantage, and for making them good citizens of the repub lic. Apprentices are not, wc spprehend, quite as well cared for in this respect as they should be. No parent should, in his anxiety to have his boy learn a . trade, overlook the importance of his having something else with it. Judye CiUiiiugliani, of Dearer, ij dai. A larsoM C'ross-KxauiSned. The Rev. Gov. Drowrilow, in his annual message to ths Legislature of Tcuucsscc. said : . "I am convinced that the white an 1 colored people cannot live together politically c so cially as etjudls. S "Emigration shall be fostered and enfUir aged, and a commission stationed at theEat to secure a numerous foreign emigration of skilled labor." . - We should prefer, says the New. York J ibunc, to have the Governor in the wit ness-box, and touch him up viva voce but 1C IS 111 (nniVv!fP nnil . ra -,r,fn mo must DrOffi-fl no ic ikivi m o:i,.l. oooj, 1... J iii,uiv,iaiv, c i - - ... hllinir written ihterro"-atr!rir' nq fnll v.ra- 10J10W3 1. Are you aware that banishment, ex cept as a punishment for crime, is itself a cuaie oi me strong against the weak f 2. Will you t-tate the crime which the .blacks of your State have committed which renders them deserving of banish ment i How much do you estimate the Gov ernment, or the Governor ot your State to be worth, it it or ho is incapable of pro tcctiug the weak against the cruelty and the injustice of the strong ? 4. If Dlack3 aud Whites cannot live to- cr polaicuKy as equals, why, then, do you .support that Government which has declared them to 1-9? J be equals beforc,the 'a., . . T O. It liacks and Y hitea cannot live to- gether socially a? equals, is it not trua that - 71 . . .1.1 Whites and Whites also cannot live to gether 't G. Why do you "not, therefore, having established a standard, propose to banish all NY lutes who fall below it : 7. Are there not many people in your State who think the best public interest would be promoted by banishing you? 8. Did they not, in fact, banish you on a certain occasion r 9. How did you like it ? 1 A I . .1 l iu. vau ycu, wune preserving jrour sen-respect and consistency, live upon terms of political and social equality with many thousands of Whites whom you see around you f 11. Do you propso to banish them or to permit them to bauish you ? 1 n m - xs. ouppose a black man declines to emigrate according to your notion, what authority do you find in the Constitution lor compelling him to go r 13. If you cannot compel him constitu tioually, what right havo you to compel him morally by partial and one-sided laws ? 14. What surety can you ofl'er that those 7. 1 1 A A. -L 11.11 r, wuum, ,irea' (ine Por U1K orers UVi aUUlcl3 15. Do you considered it Christian to inveigle poor but houest white men aiid women into such a trap ? 1G. The material interest of the Stati considered, is it probable that raw hands will perform yaur labor as skillfully ad as profitably as those which arc accustom ed to it 7 17. How happens it that every blood .Stained oppressor who has been thirsting lor your life will asseut to your proposi tion, aud drink your health in bad whis ky, for making it ' IS. Do you believe it to bo vour duty to do unto others a3 you would havo them do unto you i 19. J udging from your own experience, it the strong and weak cannot live to gcther, is it probably the fault of the strong or the weak r 20. How would you like it if those who do not ieol for you the highest personal admiration, should insist upon packin jou off, with Mrs. D. and all the little R.'s, to make-a homo in a howling wilderness, and preach the gospel to wild beasts and birds : O, Lrownlow ! lirownlow ! you have rcau your iiuie a "oou ueal read it a 1 "l-!! 1 1 t . little more ! You have prayed often and long for others why not pray a little for' yourself? lirownlow, you can step down? The Sate of l'ii!iolc City. A correspondent of tho New York World writing lrom Pithole city refers to the sale of the great Holmden farm as fol lows : "The celebrated Holmden farm, which gave Pithole it3 reputation, and di- reetiv or lnuircctty nas wrought such a revolution in oiidom, on the 14th instaut passed from the bauds of Messrs. Thomas G. Duncan and George C. Prathcr, the original purchasers from lhoinas Holm- 1 111T r- lieu, ana is now owneu oy iuessrs. ueorire 11. Chittenden, of Chicago, Illinois, and b. G. right, of Lockhavcn, Pennsylva nia. The .lousidcration is S2.000.000, of ..Ii;a V'C f(t : . :.i .1 i i, u. lance to be paid in monthly payments of ow.j.uuv cacii. i nis inciuucs me wnoie filet AA' i fni- i i Ii i j interest of Duncan & Prathcr in tho oil producing portion of the farm, as well as in the Pithole City lots, which are only leased lo their present holders. Wc learn that it is the intention of the new firm t sell theae lots ia fee simple a step whicji will do mucu toward inspir ing a spirit of improvement ; for what in ducement have men to lay cut anything lor permanent improvement upon proper ty which they have uo assurance of hold ing beyond three years? This farm was originally purchased by Duncan & Prath cr for twenty-five thousand dollars. These gentlemen wero in Philadelphia, about closing a sale of the farm for fifty thousand dollars, when a dispatch was placed into their hands, announcing tho striking of the United States well, then of two hun dred barrels. The sale was not closed. llcturning homo they made Mr. Holmden a present of fccventy-five thousand dollars, in addition to the purchase price, and havo since been receiving a revenue from one-fourth the land interest of all the oil obtained from the farm', besides over thirty thousand dollars yearly rental from tho "city lots." Tho farm, it will be re- membered, was leased by tho United iUtcs Petroleum Company, who havo sub- J leased to other parties, retaining one- fourth of the oil." Wiaat 52r. I2ucp3ii's I'oIIcy Would Have iiXcea. General Duff Green has written a let ter iu which he says: "After the fall of Richmond I saw President Lincoln there. lie told me that he came to Washington resolved to carry out, in good faith, the pledges that he gave to me at Springfield, viz :t that, as President, he would favor uo measure of w"hich the South would havo caue to complain and that it was upon his recom mendation that the constitutional amend- I ii nwinr rirnrnonri hn A 1 r 'nrnm nan sub- I ... . - - - - . . stitute lor the one ollercd by Mr. Adams, .i m . - .1 ,J . , . friends in Congress, os follows: "That no amendment shall be made to the constitution which will authorize or give Congress power to abolish, or inter fere, withiu any State, with the domestic institutions thereof, including persons held to labor or servitude by the laws ot said State." In reply to an appeal which I made tr him for peace, President Lincoln's words were, in substance, as follows : "If you want peace, come back into the Union. If you wish to keep your slaves, come in and vote, as States, against the ennsf.i fntinnal amend mnnt. nlinlishinnr cla. very j cannot Teean my proclamations. It will be for the courts to decide whether I mill a fri- nnnrfa tn iIro!1o tt- Vi o t n I H,mr i- nnt- (if tv..,f J juugo. Lut I have the pardoning power, aod will u?e it frcclv." 'This conversation was in the presence of Gen. Weitzel, Judge Campbell, late of the bupreme Court, one of Gen. Weitzel s aids, and several others, and I wa3 told and believe, that in consequence of the conversation hold with Judge Campbel and myself, and the pledges then given to us, President Lincoln, in a letter ad dressed to Gen. Weitzel, authorized the meeting or me v lrginia Jjegisiature, ac cording to the notice subsequently issue, iu the Richmond papers." M O Cut His Hobbles. Tho other day says th Altoona Tribune, as a down-east police ouicer was bringing a prisoner over the mountains, the latter managed to es cape from the cars at Cressoh, leaving his captor to feel somewhat chagrined when he nude the discovery that his bird had flown. The prisoner succeeded in break ing the chain attached to his hobble, and then by some means stuffed the latter in his boot-legs, lie then got on a freight train aud came to Altoona. On arrivinar hero he Wt t0 tbe Ra:lroad Sho and conversed very pleasantly for awhile with some of the employees, and finally asked them to spare him a cold-chisel and ham mer for but a moment. Of course ho was iceommodated, and stepped into a recess, ousljr for a few Inomeilts whcn ha 8mi, where he was heard to hammer industri ingly returned the hammer, made some more very pleasaut remarks, and then gracefully moved away. Some one being curious to know what ho was cutting, went into the recess and found a neatly cloven pair ot "handcuffs for the feet," of which iJio had so. cleverly divested himself, and tnen made good his escape. -o m m A Fast Place. Spruce Creek, Hun tingdon county, must bo a rather interes ting town. An exchauge says of it : "Spruce Creek, the locality of which is no doubt known to your readers, is be coming a fast place for its fjzc. During the past two months, there have six or more marriages from that place, three of whica have been runaway matches. The parties would certainly have done better t - . . oy waiting a lew years, as they were mostly quite young. Madame Humor says that one young lady who left there some time airo lor ilamsbunr. never readied her destination, and was not heard JVom ti-l recently : it now appears that she ran away with a married man of Al toon a. Another report is that a married man, formerly a resident of Spruce Creek, has left his wife and family and is to be married to a lady whose husband "nas de serted her. lho peoplo seem determined to make a stir, and draw attention to the place." Cut to Pieces. A human body was found, cui to pieces, near Mineral Point station, Cambria county, on Sunday mor ning last, 8th in?t. The victim, c be lieve, was a stranger, aud wc were unable to asccrtaiu tn what way he came to his death, or whether anything was found upon his person to indicate his name or where he was from. He was doubtless killed by one ef the passing trains of the Lr 4..i . K . -A ui "ia jiaviiii: inti nun iuui iicaiiiiL'iik auu been afterwards laid iu the position in which he was found. So says tho AUoma Tribune. J5S? James L. Orr, candidate for Gov ernor or the I'almelto otate, has been brought by the logic of events to sav : "I am tired of South Carolina as she was. f court for her the material prosperity of New England. I would have her acres tocm w'nh life, and vigor, and intelligence, as do those of Massachusetts." Just think of that utterance in Columbia, and con trast with the denunciations of other days ! New England 13 not out in the cold yet, neither has its fanatical example ceased to be influential. XKa In a short speech at Lawrenceburg, Ohio, th-e other day, Gen. Sherman said : "The war was inevitable, and wo could never do without it. I hope this fact is now realized by the wholo mass of the people. . You have fought and finished it yourselves, and have left nothing for your children to do. There will never bs an other war between the North and South." He predicted that our future would be greater than our past '5SGcn. Howard estimates that 10,000 frecdmen have learned to read aud write since the war. South Carolina Aulillonlzeri. The soul of John Drown is "marching on." Last week the constitutional con vention of South Carolina adopted an amendment to the constitution of that State, by the decisive vote of eighty-uiuc to eight, wherein it is declared that sla very nor involuntary servitude, except in the punishment of crime, shall never be re-established in that State. Who would have thought, even "twelve mouths ago, that the rebellious and haughty Palmetto State could, by -the application of any amount of compulsion, have been led or driven into the adoption of such a meas ure ? Yet even sho seems to be in a fair way of becoming radicalized. Another important advance made by the conven tion was an amendment to the constitu tion giving the election of Governor and Presidential electors to the people. Hith erto the people of that State have been de prived of this privilege, all power being concentrated in the Legislature, a body notchosen oy a majority even of the white population, but by the landed aristocracy. The State election will be held on the 18th of October, and the Legislature will meet on the 25th cf the same month, fo that before Congress meets, the State can have ratified the amendment to tho national constitution, adopted a code fur the pro tection of the rights ot freedom, and in fact have satisfied most, if not all, of the demands of tho President. As most of the reorganized Southern legislature.-! will meet early in order to elect Senators, they will have the same opportunities, and we truat will not hesitate to profit by them. Let U3 have all these exciting matters re moved from p)litici by the prompt action of these bodies. The Dodies of Deceased Soldiers. The following information relative to the procurement of the bodies of deceased soldiers buried in Government cemeteries, will undoubtedly prove of great benefit' to the thousands bereaved by the war. Any person desiring to obtain the body of ade ceased friend or a relative, must be pre pared to make an affidavit before a justice of the peace or a notary public to the ef fect that he is duly authorized to receive said body, and at the same time ftatothe company and regiment to which he form erly belonged. All applications should be made at the office of James M. Mocre, Assistant Quartermaster, where a record is kept cf the deaths of a large proportion of those who have fallen during the war, their company, regiment and rank, to gether with their conjugal condition, resi denco of widow or re'ative, cause of death and exact locality of their ' grave-. The affidavit must be left at Captain Moore's office, where he will receive an order for exhuming tho body. The Government makes no charge for furnishing all infor mation relative to the interment cf deceas ed soldiers, but after it has granted the necessary permission to exhume their bod ies, relinquishes all care and fupcrvision, and the corpse must bo taken from the cemetery by private conveyance, and pre pared for, shipment to its destination '-by tho same means. It is essential that a boly be so prepared as to prevent any un pleasant odor, which can be done by means of disinfecting powder, or by sealing it iu a metallic or airtight deodorizing case. JCp An eclipse of the sun will take place on the morning of the 19th inst. Partial ia the Uuited States. c 1 UltING DIPHTHERIA. Diphtheria is an alarming disorder, whether it afflict a child or an a lulf, and yet it can be cured .it ence by the application of Iladway's Ready Relief. Try it and you will be convinced, however skeptical. Diphthe ria is a malignant sore throat, with some ad ditional and really fatal features. Besides the anguish occasioned by the rapid ulcera tion of such a delicate part of the syUom, the membrane which so speedily gro-.vs over the throat, threatens a speedy death from suffo cation. There is no time for trifling in such a crisis, The ablest medical men stand ap palled. They know not what to do with a feeling of certainty, and yet the patient mu.t have instant relief, or expire. Then stops in Iladway's Ready Relief, like a protecting an gel, and Mds the sufferer live. It is applied to the throat, externally, with freedom. A little of it mixed with water is administered internally. The patient revives. He wreathes with more cas. He feels the marvelous medicine inspiring hi entire frame wi'h new vigor. He rapidly improves under such ap propriate treatment, and, in a short time walks forth, despite nil predictions to the contrarv, rescued from the grave. Could anvthing ! more sure or more pimple ? Vet Radway's Ready Relief cost3 onlv fifty cents a bottle about half the sum you would have to expend for the first prescription written ouf for you by your medical attendant. This is saying a great deal for the virtues of Radwav's Ready Relief, but not a word more than it conscientiously deserves. It will promptly euro Diphtheria; will anything else ? As an evidence of the remarkable powers of Radway's Ready Relief in the treatment of Diphtheria, Hore Throat, Hoarseness, Influen za, Coughs, and Colds, the reader is request ed to read the following letter. Let this im portant fact be borne in mind Radwav's Ready Relief never fails in withdrawing the in flammation to the surface. Let it be applied to the throat a6 directed, the patient will sure ly recover. The tdlow:ng case is one out of tnanv that we received in the winter of 1838-0, during the prevfiler.ee of this disease at Albany, N. Y. Mr. (lambrill of Albany, writes : " l nree ot my children were seized with a peculiar sore throat, which has prevailed to a serious extent in this city, of which a great many children have dird. It commenced in my family with a sore, throat, headache, hoarseness, sore lips, sore eyes, thcji fever would set in, and the skin turn to a ycllow tint. I knew how good your Ready Rel'ef and Pills were for the general run of com plaints, and determined to risk the lives of iny chilJren on their merits. My trust was well founded. I gavA each of them four pills, and rubbed their bodies from head to foot with the Relief, ily children were ns well a3 ever in ' twenty-four hours after taking your medicine. . 1 believe, had my neighbors used the same means, they would have saved the live3 of their children." Radway's Read- Relief is sold by all Drug gists and country merchants, ana at Dr. Radway's office, 87 Maiden lane. New York. L. Roberts, Agent, hbeusbur. 2w. rjX TIIE PEOPi.rv.- , JL . "REMEMBER. NUMBER OYp Inng your Greenbacks alonc an 1 Horses shod fnr S? r,o. v naSl' oilggT or Rgon ironed or repaired atV s shop, near Tsaar Rvm3i n & ' - KM V . . V . J Mincer Kbensbuqr, Oct. 12, 1863-31. Cr pS ETTERS remaining UNcrrrr fl A i v Tup 7to.M -'a! tun uruiR At ElensLury, State of Pennslvan- Uctobe 1, 18C5 J. Vt. Brown, J. V. Van D u ran, J. J. Biller, Joseph Conway, Abraham Crum, H. J. Campbell, U. Cooper, k Bro. Richd. Davis, E. J. Davis T. B. Davis, Mrs. M. M. Evan3, Miss J. M. Evans, John Fulinir. ouir.uel tiougnanour Geo. Gislcy, C. K. Hughes, Mrs. Ana Walker. I Hoover, Sarah Hastor, f- V . Jones Miss Jane A. j0v Jvl. Jone3, A . H . Jones Philip Keart! Dennis Murr.-r' U- C5. Noiler,'-' Mrs. Mary MyPr5 V . R. Morgan ' S. T. Nicholson Mrs. Don ha jj'j Miss Jane Robcr' Henry Tucks, I. Wilson 2 1 o obtain any of tl tain any of theie lette-s t'ic ins I.?t; and pay one cc,l cant mus date of th tising. I not called for within on month ? will be sent to the Dead Letter Office ' I free dc-livery of letters bv carrierl tt,t residences of owners in eities and large t'Vl secured In- n .r.rv;n,. r , . '' luit 1. Direct letters plainly to the street " neraber, as well as the pot 0fIice and J Head Otters with the writer's and Soared and m,mifr, s:n xUJn 1 V with C.'l . - , " . v iia-ue, ana request thai nriSf. lift ir. ..! o. 1 ' 3. Letters to strangers or transient vii'. in a town or city. wIiosp ptmW-;! n.i.i ' " be uiuvnown, should bc marked, in the hi left-hand corner, with the tv. . j iace tne postage stamp on the righl-hand corner, and leave space Letn" the stamp and direction fur post-marking 'l out interfering with the writing. f N.IJ. A reuuest for the return rf n T..4. I ...... luinimi, t to the writer, if unclaimed within ?0 days J less, written or printed with the writer's ni pusi oyer, ana across the left-hand t ' of the envelope, on the face side, will be coi plied with at the usual prepaid rate of i10i ; age, payable when the letter is delivered ;' the writer. Sec. 2H. Law of 18U3. ' JOHN THOMPSON, P.M. Oct. i, :s:-. P I OT U R E fcs ! PICT U It 7 PHOTOGRAPHS ! AMBROTVPKS t CASEo! PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS Lorge-aizc Photograph ' taken from Small A mhrotypt g, - Photograph?, and Dagtierreolypef, lor rrau.es. Everybody should go and have their Pictures taken Ht STILES'. ktot n Rooms : Half Sqnnro North of the Diamond, sept. -20. ERENSBUIW?, l XTEW" TOWN. " X. The subscriber would inform thA pnh lie that he has laid out a TOWN" in Carroll township. G mifes from Carrolltown, 12 nrilef from Ebensburg, 20 miles from Indiana, and C, iniles from (.'.mi nhell's Bottoir.. called ST NICHOLAS. A Lirge number of lots bavcp'LlJa been sold therein, and several more can jel tven be bought. The location is good gronci trr-st productive, good water, kc. A new Catholic Allej: Church will be built insido iU limits dciI summc-r. Any person desiring to invest in this new Town will please call on or address NICHOLAS LAMBOI7R. Currolltown, 18G3-.1t. Oct. ADM INISTHATOll'S NOTICK. Notice is hereby given that LcUtn of Administration on the Estate of Henry Harri son Duncan, late of Bl.u-.klick tp., Cnmf'' co., dec-ased, have been granted to tin dersigned, ly the Register of Cambria to All persons knowing themselves indi-Mn VJ said est ale are r-j nested to n.ake im medial paymvnt, and those having claims ngxi"1?1 said estate to present them properly aulbfn ticatea fir settlement, to RRBECCA ANN DUNCAN, .-11111. hlk 11'.' IilU'II.SIllI. " c OAL! COAL! COAli The public are iiercoy noiineo inai nui i;iii li nriler a vinter's supply of jtr.c i Cn:il. ('ars on the Railroad are plenty, ar.a liansportatiou sure. Later in the season, this may not be case. Send on your onleri nmr. Coal furnished at reduced raffs from Ui fair pric-s. WM- TILLY. Ik in lock, Cambria co., Aug. '24, lbt:.. XS Notice is hereby given to those per sons that have unsettled accounts with th late firm of Tl'DOR k JONES to come for ward immediately and Fettle with R. H- u" dor, the surviving partner of the firm pre sent their claims, or pay their indebtedness R. II. TUDOK- Ebensburg, July 13, i860. OST. ... Strayed away from the premises of Hie subscriber, in Carroll tp., Cambria cooij. some time during the month ot Juue. atnre year old BULL, bnndle color, mixed wnn whito spots. The ear mark is a round hole na slit in each car. A reasonable reward will paid for his recovery. JOHN FRtSH- Sei.t. It, 18G5.-3t. - lLDEUSllIDyE ACADEMY Will opfu its Thirty-Eighth Session on WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11th. For partic ulars, aeldress . ALEX". DONALDSON, Trin. Sept. 23, 18G3. tra Li hf jOi Kill ha va brt hu crc a i reli Mill :ibs mo! An. the is. qui Sta Vcl uuri W i I oin oci Ohe lent bor, ! If Oil i iv dung ijiou ruin Ivi son "Jboil llotis al Je cj-es e, riiD tv'cs at n kfigl fjchi i e l ffsor tie s ftife pi tr P t th ckl i I Irs f vijile -ail t JUi on itfch SI !'4 fol M si by- l ' (3 I" I f II. iludf H loteL 1 H ji fill oi. h '.J 11. i- i- R Sera h ' t r. ' ;C0 t!.