Ml ? :JANUARY 4. fcpM PERSONAL I.CBO ND CBESSON RAILROAD. Let Monday, November 20, 1865, fter iS TO ad will run as follows nectingwlth Day Ex. ft? connecting with Altoona Ac- - vfet an i Mail East. . p M connecting with Mail Train '.rest. M or on ucu. v "y , or on departure of Mail .jaciiRSt'Supt.-fatti. ziv. yi vdemxed Murderers,. 33 user SB.-We paid a visit to the joDTictevl of the murder of Miss j! Daniel Baser and John B. couple of days ago. Buser was :gof a severe headache at the beyond this, both were in the (excellent health. The man is extremely loquacious, and h to us of the trial. He con- is ionoeeu as a babe unborn y in the murder, and avers ,ix Beaver county at the time Ruser is more reticent, and r nothing as to his whereabouts ifoy.. It is reported that he a written statement of his initiation or attempted doing ;he circumstances which so jniiect him with the foul deed ill probably be published when Both men bear themselves uadcr the awful doom which them a doorj 'the most awful be pronounced by man upon bich is only resorted toby out :e in extremest cases of crime. el are endeavoring to have a rlered by the Supreme Court, ' At trhiPh fhd nricrtnnra nn. i? a gleam of hope of escape v:;ju3 death, inis iailincr, ki certainty of such'a death 3 in the face, it remains to be :eir deportment and conversa- Tho finding of the jury has :J to Ilarmburg for appro iink it unlikely that action ;n on it until the return of Ilrtin from Cuba. The priso J jed in separate cells, and a fiance is kept over them oight II I . : i. . -1 - i - lnanimity of the Jury. Im iter the summing up by the ; case, the Jury retired to nom for deliberation. We :J authority, that upon reach- , I'.e twelve men upon whose : suspended the life or death i-neu remained ia solemn cull with his own soul for s telure the silence was bro-:-e word. A vote was then f.fn each jnror deposited his i"y folded to conceal its au ta hk neighbor, in a hat. ination ol .the Tote, it was h ind evert juror had recor- '-rl ii'it the vrisonera were kr in the first rfvjrce !" n btori.X paragraph is :1nls purporting to give the awonicriul identification of ' the murderers bv Mr3. of one of the victims. ! that on a certain nihi J ''dreamed a dream in tlin hiniKnfo'' ,i o !x urcam oi mur--l,unltertor. Ia the truast- t?ona which was prated to fje, slie plainly beheld her down in cold blood bv a lament of whose feature stamped on her inemorv by pencil of steel So r?S5 did the dream make 'rtorjgoc,, that she rlt the to see if 5l,ve alb the fiend of her Accordingly, she ' and tliesevnrol ; T Prober. A ...I.. p uuuu ao Clio .whowas ofthenum la mortal agony, "He "aid fainted away. So elave no obiection to f Hon item, neither A .j' Pointed to as proof of "dreams fi "vnujca A i . . uvi empnatically did- r BiapU creaited to - uvwet; is irequent to have only that w be accredited Z lhh is not ourdao. ,.. 'M whifTi fi-o At jj. --v... uioi U13COV- BQperoatural point i erer and we submit rat .Pv:ft t 4-A short time after the commission of the murder, & negro named Montz was taken into custo dy at Pittsburg by the proper authorities and brought hither and committed to jail, to be held as a witness. "We do not know what was expected to be proved by him ; but it is beyond dispute that he was kept carofully locked till last Court, a period of about five months, Ia course of time the case came on witness after witness was called and examined the lawyers made their pleas, and the jury arrived at their verdict; but during the entire six days proceedings, not once was the ne gro's presence' ia Court required, and at the end of the trial his prison-door was thrown open and he told to walk forth. 'tie walked forth, rejoiced that be was onco more a freo man, at liberty to come and go as he. might, choose, but borne down to the earth by the consciousness that his long and tedious confinement had not furthered in the slightest degree the ends of justice. To add still further to his load of misfortune, upon presenting his claiui for witne93-fees to the County Commissioners, that board refused pay ment of the same unless it was allowed that they should first deduct therefrom a certain amount to be charged to the ac count of subsistence! The poor fellow took the view that the subsistence with which he was sought to be charged was not of his own seeking that he was a boarder by compulsion in the Hotel de Lock-up, and that those who placed him in the position which he occupied should of right foot the bill. Which strikes us as being an eminently practical and common-sense view. The board continued inexorable on the point; so the negro, not caring to take the half-loaf extended him in lieu of the whole loaf due him, placed his bill in the hands of a lawyer for collection, and - then unceremoniously departed, doubtless with respect for the law, especially as it is made to apply to witnesses in Cambria county, considerably toned down. Book Notice. "The Valley of the Conemaugh" is the title of a new book just brought out by Thomas J. Chapman. It is a neat little volume of 202 pages. Its scope, as we gather from the preface, is to give "an historical and descriptive account of the Valley of th9 Conemaugh, which embraces the county of Cambria and a portion of the counties of Somerset, Indiana and Westmoreland." The sub ject matter may be eaid to bo a collation and condensation of the moat interesting facts, figures and traditions going to make up the history of the Valley. After a ge ographical and general description there of, we have a condensed yet very minute history of tho various Indian troubles having a bearing on the subject; the rise andprogress of the different towns, villa ges and settlements, with the names of those who pioneered the footsteps of civ ilization into these' western wilds; the history, among other public thorough fares, of those two monuments of the en terprise and energy of our fathers, the Alleghany Portage Railroad and the Pennsylvania Canal; the magnitude of our manufacturing and industrial inter ests, with brief descriptions of the most prominent producing enterprises; togeth er with other sketches historical, descrip tive, statistical and biographical. On every page are evidences to be found of deep research amongthe musty records of the past, while the whole 13 skillfully inked together so as to form a connected narrative or history, which cannot fail to prove interesting to such as are lovers of antique remembrances, and to those fond of contrasting our present greatness with our one-time weakness and insignificance. There are but few, we venture to say, that have not at one time or another felt the want of a clear and correct'eondensation, in form convenient for reference, of im portant facts and statistics having bear ing on our earlier history as & community. This want is experienced in the course of common conversation as it is experienced in attempted local' historical writiug. If it served no other good- end, the book would be valuable in that it embodies in concise form these very facts and statis tics collects and preserves them that they may readily be found when wanted. But it is valuable beyond this,. for it will introduce the people of the Valley one to the other, make plain the tie3 which con nect them as brothers, and so show the mutual relations which should exist be tween them. Its mission will thus be eminently beneficent and humanizing; and when we remember that the world at large, through it, will see and take knowl edge of the fact that the natural advanta ges of the Valley are infinitely greater than those of most other sections, we are led to expect that the purely practical re sults which it will achieve will not bo of small importance. We notice a few er rors of fact in the book. -To instance : On page 72, it is stated that a newspaper was established in Kbensburg about the year 1816, which was ealled the Cambria Gazette whereas the paper was called the Olive Branch, the Gazette not being established till 1824. And on the same page, the population of Ebensburg ia set down at l;000whereas her population was greater than the figure given five years ago, and must surely be in the neigh borhood of 1,500 now. But in the main, the statements mad e and figures given are believed to be correct. The book is for sale by James Murray, Ebensburg. Price $1.25. Etchings. As our subscribers doubt less took notice, no paper was issued from thi3 office last week. The cause of the omission is to be found in the fact that the holidays happened to pay us a visit last week, on which occasion no printer can work. The holidays, by the way, passed off pleasantly hereabout, though no special festivities marked either their incoming or outgoing.. ..We direct atten tion to the prospectus of the New York Tribune for 1866, on the opposite page. The Tribune is acknowledgedly the best paper in the United States, and those that subscribe for it will get the full worth of their money.... Sec a variety of other new advertisemeais in this paper.... We expec ted to be able to print this weak hi3 honor Judge Taylor's charge to the jury in the Buser-IIowser murder case, but up to date the manuscript copy has not been receiv ed. ...Notice that the election of a Presi dent and twelve Directors for the Ebens burg & Cre3son Railroad Company, to serve the ensuing year, will be held next Monday, 8th inst. The annual election of officers for the Protection Mutual Fire Insurance Company of Cambria county will be held the same day. See adver tisements elsewhere. w. The Hollidaysburg Wiig has made its promised re-appearance, looking none the worse of the pro tracted breathing-spell it has been indul ging in latterly A new paper has just been established in Tyrone, called the Western Hemisphere, with Messrs. J. W. Scott and Cyrus Jeffreys a3 editors. -It presents a quite creditable appearance in a mechanical point of view, while its contents give evidence of talent and fit ness in those who prepare the intellectual feast. Success !. . .The report of Dn Roth rock, Surgeon of the Board of Enrollment of the 17th Pa. District, to the War De partment, herewith published, will be found worthy of perusal. We copy it from the Lewistown Gazette.... Th Ma sonic fraternity of Ebensburg and vicinity gave a grand" supper at Ilerr Foster's, Ebensburg, on St John's eve, 27th ult. Between forty and fifty "brethren of the mystic tie," with a like number of fe male lovers and supporters of Masonry, were present and participated in the fes tivities. The reunion was a most pleasant one. Died On the 11th December, 18G5, at sea, William B. Smith, aged 22 years. Tho deceased had been in the Government employ at New Orleans, and was returning home on board a-ship, when he took sick and died off Charleston, S. C. 'He will be remembered as the el dest eon of Dr. Wm. A. Smith, formerly a-prominent resident of Ebensburg, but at present of Philadelphia. The report that Artemas Ward was smothered to death, lately, by inhaling coal gas, is untrue. So is the report un true that J. M. Thompson, at tho P. O. building, does not sell the cheapest and best winter goods in Ebensburg. Died In Chest Springs, Cambria county, on the 17th December, 1865, Hallie, daughter of Jefferson and Mary Varney, aged 2 years, one month, and 14 days. A Card to Invalids. A Clergyman, while residing in South America as a Missionary, discovered a safe and simple remedy for the cure of Nervous Weakness, Early Decay, Dis eases of the Urinary and Seminal Organs, and the whole train of disorders brought on by baleful and vicious habits. Great numbers have already been cured by this noble remedy. Prompted by a desire to benefit the afflicted and unfortunate, I will Bend the recipe for preparing and using this medicine, in a sealed envelope, to any one who needs it, -Free of Charge. Please inclose a post-paid envelope, ad dressed to yourself. Address, JOSEPH T. INMAN, Station D, Bible House, New York. January 4, lS64-6m. STRAY STEER. Came to the residence of the subscriber in Jackson township, Cambria county, on Monday, the 27th day of November last, a roan steer, supposed to be about three years old. The owner will come forward, prove property, pay charges and take him away, otherwise he will be disposed of according to law. GEORGE LISTER. December 14, 1865-3t OTICE. Notice is hereby given to those per sons that have unsettled accounts with the late firm of TUDOR & JONES to come for ward immediately and settle with R. H. Tu dor, the surviving partner of the firm pre sent their claims, or pay their indebtedness. ft. H.TUDOR. Ebensburg, July 13, 1865. JUFF'S COLLEGE I , IRON BUILDINGS, NO. 31 FIFTH STREET, PITTSBURG, PA. TUITION FEE NEVER CHANGED. FORTT.DOLLARS PAYS FOR ; ; THE FULL GRADUATING COURSE Time unlimited in . ' ' ; , Book Keepikq,' " . 1 Business Penmanship, : - Commercial Calculations, ' Lectures veox Law, Ethics, Detecting Counterfeit SIoney, c. -' Other Colleges have either advanced their tuition fee to 50, or charge $10 to $15 extra for. Penmanship. Their Books : and Stationery, also, costing from $12 to 20 ours cost but $5. - ' ' - ' 1 DUFF'S ORIGINAL PLAN OF BUSINESS EDUCATION, astanghtin this city for about twenty-five years, from his own systems of Book Keeping, which are sanctioned by the American Institute and Chamber of Com merce, and other competent authorities of New York, as the most perfect system in use, with T. H. DUFF'S FIRST PREMIUM BUS INESS AND ORNAMENTAL PENMANSHIP taught in Day and Evening classes. It will be found by proper inquiry that this is the only College of the kind in the Union conducted by an experienced Merchant, and whose Penman is a trained accountant. 2? Merchants, steamers and Bankers can always obtain thoroughly educated accoun tants on application at our office. t" Those desiring our elegant new Cir cular, pp. 15, containing an outline of our Course of Study and Practice, with samples of our Penman's Business and Ornamental Writing, must enclose Twenty-five Cents to P, DUFF tt SON, ' Pittsburg, Pa. tleS We will mail any person enclosing ns $2, a copy of either our Mercantile or Steam boat Book Keeping, post-paid. Nov. 30, 1865-4m ICTURES1 PICTURES! PHOTOGRAPHS ! AM BROTYPES I CASES I PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS ! Large-eize Photographs taken from Email Ambrotypes, Photographs, and Daguerreotypes, for Frames. Everybody Bhould and hare their Pictures taken at STILES'. Rooms : naif Square North of the Diamond, sept. 20. , EBENSBURG, PA. TAYLOR & CREMER, AT THE HUNTINGDON NURSERIES, Huntingdon, Pa. Sell Fruit & Ornamental Tres3. Vines &c. of better growth, larger size, and atlower prices than any of the Northern or Eastern Nurseries and warrant them true to name. Standard Apple trees at l8i cents each $16 per 100. Peach trees. 15 to 20 cts each S12.50 to $15 per 10 " " - ' Standard Pettr'treef, 50 to 75 cts each. -Dwarf Pear trees, 50$ to$l each 20 to $60 per 100 Dwarf Apple tre3, 50 to 75 cts eacn Standard Cherry trees 37 to 75 cts Dwarf Cherry trees 50 to 75 cts. Plum trees 50 cts. Apricot trees 40 to 50 cts. Nectarine trees 25 cts each. , Grape Vines 25 cts to $1. Silver Maple trees 62 to $1. European Ash, 75 to 1. European Larch, 75 cts to 1.50 Norway'Spruce, 50 cts to $1. American Balsam Pine, 75 cts to $1.50 American & Chinese Arbo Vitse, 50 ct $1.50 Strawberry Plants, $1 per 100, &c. &c Huntington, Jan. 1b 1860 -tf.. IRST NATIONAL BANK OF ALTOONA, Corner of Virginia and Annie Streets, oppo site Superintendent's Office Penn.a, RR., Blair county, Penna. U. S DEPOSITORT- FINANCIAL AGENCY. Monies received on deposit. Interest al lowed on time, deposits'. Gold and Silver Bought and Sold. Frattional Currency and Mutilated United States Notes Redeemed. Drafts on the principal Citie3 for sale. Cen tral Depot for the sale of United States Inter nal Revenue Stamps. This Bank keeps on.barid for sale the 7 3-10 If. S. Treasury Notes, and takes subscrip tions for the same. This is the Popukir Loan, the only Government Loan now in market at par, giving those who have money a safe and desirable opportunity for invest ment Two Cents a Day for each $100. These Notes, at Maturity, can be exchanged for 5-20 Six per cent. Gold bearing bonds. WM. M. LLOYD, rrett. D. T. Caldwell, Cashier. Feb. 9, 1865.-tf. GLEN CONNEL STORE ron SALE I The subscriber will sell, at cost, his stock of merchandise, together with Store house and dwelling, and lot planted with choice Fruit Trees. The location is one of Dm hont in Cambria countr. beincr in the (center of e thriving country, seven miles from any Other store. Terms will be made to suit purchasers. For further particulars, call on or address JOSEPH GILL, Glenn Connel, Cambria Co., Pa. Dec. 14, 1865-tf. " M. LLOYD & Go., BANKERS, ALTOONA, PA. Drafts on the principal, cities, and Silver and Gold for sale. Collections made. Mon eys received on deposit, payable on demand, without interest, or upon time, with interest j at fair rates. (hov3, 1859.tr &2 TOHNSON'S RHEUMATIC COM-- O POUND AND BLOOD PURIFIER. THE SOLDIER'S FRIEND! cu ;C r -r-j i. . ORE AT INTERNAL REMEDY? Hear the Testimony of a Soldier. Provost Marshal's Office," t , Pittsburg, December 17, 1864.- Mr. Andrew Johnson ! Dear Sir In No vember last I had a severe attack of Rheu matism, to which I have not been subject for nearly three years. The attack was s se vere that I could cot move my head nor-raise my arm After trying different medicines in vain, I was induced to use your rheumatio compound and blood pchifier, and before I had taken three bottles I was so completely, cured that I could psrform any duty to which my country might call me. I can gladly and confidently recommend it to my fellow-' soldiers as the quickest and surest remedy I ever used. Your true friend, , 7 NORRIS PATTERSON- - Reference J. T. Patterson . and William Duncan, 77 Wood Street, '7 . " Let the Suffering Read, and Cease to Despair. ' Mr. Johnson Dear Sir: This is' to eerti-f. fy that by using three-fourths of a bottle of : your RHEUMATIC COMPOUND axi? BLOOD PURIFIER, I vu completely cured of Chronic . Rheumatism, alter; taving suffered for more; than eighteen years. It has been over tour yeaxe since I was cured, .and I have hot felt the slightest eymptoniB of its return. 1 ; - ' ' I remain yourg tuly,' ' . ANDREW ARMSTRONG. 7 No. 19 James street Allegheny Citt, May 3, 1SG4. , lit Mr. A. Johnson : Dear Sir "Sly wife wi.3 taken bad with Inflammatory Rheumatism in March Jast. She was very much swollen and the "pain she suffered was severe ; she was'. confined to her bed. -I was advised to try your Rheumatic Fluid and Blood Purifier, so I got a betfle 'of it, and before the half of it was used she was entirely well. The cute is a perfect one ; I never saw such medicine.- . She had only taken three doses of it when the swelling and paia began to abate. All your medicince wants is to be known in or der to give it success, Yoar3 affectionately, JAMES M'ALLISTER. My residence "is No. 128 Cherry Alley, whera my wife can be seen- by any person -doubting the truth of the above. Pittsburs, April 19th, IS64. prepared bt K. 15. SELLERS & CO., Sole Proprietors, ' PITTSBURGH, PA. To whom all orders must be addressed. Price one dollar per bott'e. gELLERS' LIVER PILLS! ILAIN AND SUGAR COATED. ' (The "Original, only True and Genuine.) Have stood for thirty years a Staple Rem edy, unejnaled by any medicine known for the cure oT Liver Complaint, Costiveness, Sick Headache and Bilious Disorders, ana indeed for the whole class of diseases origin n&ting in biliary derangements. Great Cube of Liver Complain " Ly live Original, Only True and 'Genuint LIVER PILLS. SiLVETt CreE-e:, X)hlo Co., Va., Mar. to, '45. Mr. R. E. Sellers: Dear Sir I tbiaic it a duty I owe to you and the public generally, to state that I have been afflicted with Liver complaint for a long time, and so badlyt that an abscess formed and broke, which left ma in a very low state. Having heard of your celebrated Liver Pills being for sale by A. R. Sharp, fcWest Liberty, and recommended, to me by my physician, Dr. F. Smith, I con cluded to give them a fair trial. I purchased one box, and found them to be just what they are recosimended the best Liver Pills ever used ; and after taking four boxes, I find tha disease nas entirely left me, and I am now perfectly welL Respcctfullv vours. D. II. COLE1TAN. I certify that I am personally acquainted withMr. Coleman, and I can bear testimony to the tjyth of the above certificate. A. R. SHARP. GENERAL SATISFACTION." Greenville, Floyd Co., Ind, Oct. 27, 1859. Mr. R. 12. Sill-crs : Sir? T om nf Liver Villa, and should be glad to receive a "fiVj iney give general satisfaction. Please send me some soon. CYRUS BRADFORD. TO THE PUBLIC Owing to the increased demand through out the country for sugar coated pills, the Proprietor has commenced the operation of SUGAR COATING the CELEBRATED LIVfTR PILL, thereby placing them before the public both plain and SUGAR COATED. prepared by R. E. SELLERS & CO., Proprietor, Pittsburg, FAi. - . w , . . 1 ,r SELLER'S- IMPERIAL COUGII SYRUP, . Pronounced to be the Pleasantest. and most Efficacious remedy now in uie. For the Cure of Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, In fluenza, Tickling Sensation of the Throat, Whooping Cough, e.,yc. Seller's Imperial Cough Syrup has given relief to hundreds who have usedIt,' and the proprietor is persuaded that it has the power to impart benefit that cannot be claimed for the Cough Mixtures in general use. - Most of the mixtures sold for coughs are composed of spirituous and inflammatory ar ticles, which, while they give little relief, really do harm. The Imperial Cough Syrup contains no spirituous ingredient whatever, and may be used in all case3 not requiring an active medical treatment. Seller's Cough Syrup Wtfiout a Rival. . Pittsburg Fifth Ward, Feb. 2G, 1856. Mr. R. E. Sellers :-Qn the lEth ult., I caught a very severe cold. The night fol lowing I went to bed earlier than usual. yet notwithstanding I had slept none tho night before my cough was so severe that I could not sleep, neither could those in the room with me. The person sleeping with me was so much annoyed by my coughing that he got up and went to a drug store, and ought a bottle of your Cough Syrup, one dose Of which to my great astonishment, stopped my cough as if by magic. I went to work ia the morning, and am now quite well. " Yours, &c, JOHN DEAN ' I hereby certify that I am well acquainted with the above circumstance, and the state ment given is true. A. JOHNSON. R. E. SELLERS & CO., Sole Proprietory PITTS3URG, Pa, - li