i m-rr . ii i in n., n THURSDAY, M ASCII 22, 18G6. REPUBLICAN-UNION NOMINEE.- With malice toward none, with charity for nil. with firmnts3 in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive ou to finish the work we are in; to bind up thft nation's wounds ; to care for hini who shall have borne the buttle, and for his widow and his orphan ; o do all Which may achieve and cherish a just and a lasting peare among our selves and nil nations. Abraham Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address. FOR GOVERNOR : Maj.-Gen. J U UN W. G E A RY. Editorial Corrcs;ioiideiice. Washington, March 17, 1SG6. Wo propose to continue our notice of distinguished members of Congress this week; and bhall commence this letter with a short biography of lion. James G. Rlairte. Jlr. Blaine waa born in Wash ington' county, Penna., in 1830, and is therefore thirty-fix years of age. llis paternal grandfather, Col. Ephraim Blaice, of Carlisle, Pennsylvania, was a distin guished officer of the Kevolutionary War. It will be seen that he comes of a good stock, and light manfully does ho main tain the sterling patriotism of his distin guished ancestor. Mr. Blaine entered Vnshingtou College when but a lad, and gradualed in 1847. On leaving College, lie siudied law, but we believe he did not practice that profession long, as we soon find him in the editorial fraternity. On his removal from Pennsylvania to Maine, in" 1854, the same year, and we believe the same month that we removed from Maino to Pennsylvania, he became the loading editor of the Kennebec Journal, the editorial chair of which was once filled by that well known and able jour nalist, Luther Severance. Mr. Blaine afterwards edited the Portland Dady Ad vertiser. As a newspaper writer, he has not many equals, and but few superiors ; and had he continued in tho profession, he would soon have attained to the very fore most rank of political writers. lie was for some four or five years a member of the Maino Legislature, and was twice elected Speaker of that body. In this position he gave eminent satisfaction to all parties, always discharging the duties of the nffice with ability and impartiality. "Mr. Blaine made his first appearance in the National Legislature as a member of the Thirty-eighth Congress; and was re turned by even a larger majority to the Thirty-ninth, and should his life be spared, will continue to be returned, if he desire it, till his fellow citizens shall call him to other end higher poiitious. lie takes a high rank in the House, has a clear and a!nott perfect knowledge cf the rules and orderp, bd accurate appreciation and un derstanding of parliamentary laws, is a ready and able debater, and seemj to pos sess an almost intuitive perception of every question that comes before Con gress. Ilia knowledge of men, and of public measures both iu the past and the present, is truly wonderful ; and this use ful information, which is the result, doubtless, cf much study and reflection, tnves him great power. He has a clear, keen, analytical mind, which enables him at once to comprehend questions that to other minds require protracted examina tion and study. Mr. Blaine is in the prime of life, with a future before him of which any joung-man might well be proud. Great eminence, as a public man and statesman, he is sure to attain, if he move on in the orbit in which God and liis own exertions havo placed him. lie gives every indication that he is master of the situation. He is the author of the. amendment to the Constitution changing the basis of representation, kuown to the country as the "Blaine Amendment," which passed by moro than a two-thirds vote, and only lacked two votes of the requisite number in the Senate. Mr. Blaino resides in the beautiful city of Augusta, Maine, the capital of the State, where he'ia universally respected and esteemed. There is another member of this House, who, perhaps, ou account of his position, we should have noticed at first, and more at length than we can now do in this con nection. We mean Hon. Schuyler Col fax, the Speaker both of the Thirty-eighth and Thirty-ninth Congress. Of Mr. Col tax's early life, we know but little, but his public career is before' the country, and the world; and it is such as does honor tj himself, and is immensely valu able to his country and to mankind. He has always been found on the side of light, of liberty, and of justice. His fellow citizens all have confidence in him not only iu his ability, but in his in tegrity, his honesty, and hia steadfast ad herence to true principles. Whoever of pur public men or statesmen may fail U3 u tho trial's hour, it will uot be Schuyler Coila. As the Speaker of the National House of Representatives', he is thorough. Jv ut home. J J is uniform politeness, good nature and impartiality, as well as his in timate and accurate knowledge of parlia mentary law, make him one of the most prompt and useful Speakers that the na tion ever had. The Speaker's chair of the II case of Representatives may Jiave been graced by men of more brilliancy than Mr. Colfax, but in all respects, no one has filled it who could set up a just claim to be the superior of the present occupant. We should judge Mr. Colfax to be about forty-two years of ago. He is not, we believe, a graduate of any col lege, but received his early training in the Common aud Select Schools cf our country. Most people are of the opinion that Mr. Colfax is a lawyer, but he never practised that profession. He is familiar, however,- with all the elementary princi ples of law, having read Blackstone and other writers upon Common Law as much and , understandingly, perhaps, a? many who are" in the practice of the legal pro fession. v lie commenced when a mere boy, as we understand, to write for news papers, and may be set down as belonging to the editorial corps. In private and public life, he stands without a taint; in deed,, his character is abovo reproach or even suspicion. He has a brilliant career before him. The Voice oi" lle People. In precipitating upon Congress and the country the quarrel that lately threatened the disruption of the Union party, the President declared his intention of firmly adhering to his designated line of policy unless it should meet with the disappro bation of the people. A month has passed since then, and the people in various parts of the country have spoken, once by their own lipp, and on several occasions through their chosen representatives. Immedi ately after the disruption between the President and the Legislative branch of the government, the chief organ of the President, the N. Y. Times, as also all the minor keys used in sounding the Chief Magistrate's notes of reconstruction, 7 delighted m proclaiming that the majority of the people were against the majority i-n Congress, and that the two-thirds of the House and the nearly two-thirds in the Senate were a faction opposed to the pacification of the country, without the good thereof at heart, and intent on the disruption of that Union they had done so much to save. rsew Hampshire has been the first io speak through the immediate agency of the ballot box, and seeing that tho Gran ite State has never been overly anxious to sit at the feet of Massachusetts and accept her political teaching, and not altogether forgetting that the virulent Democratic conglomerate, itching from head to foot for victory, made the greatest possible use of the cry of "Johnson !" "Johnson V and the "President's policy," and a "restored and once more harmonious Union," the result in that State is gratifying in the highest degree, and should send a thrill of joy ecstatic to all who wish to have proper guarantees of good faith from those whose hands and skirts are red with the blood of the fallen. Five thousand major ity out of a total vote of seventy thousand will do for New Hampshire. The next voice is from Indiana. Two conventions met in that State, one com posed of men who?s valor saved the Uuion, the other of the Copperhead Democracy. The former gave its voice against the admission "of unwashed rebels into the Congressional Halls, to take part in leg islating for the country they sought to destroy, and the other for their immediate admission and against a prohibitory, or in other words, protective tariff. Indiana has spoken before, and she will speak again, but not for playing the crab and going backwards, hs some still say is the practice of that animal. Pennsylvania, through two conventions, has lifted up her voice. The one, the ' voice of the true Union men, headed by the gallant Gen. John W. Geary, and the other of the true anti-wav, Copperhead-Democratic men, headed by Heister Clymer, an opponent of the war, iis measures and results. The former says to Mr. Johnson: "In the past you have been a very patriotic man, a very true man ; you have done much and suf fered much for your country, and stood firm when all around you faltered. For this we admired you and made you Vico President, but if you intend now to use your influence in favor of rebels who hate us and you, we will work against you just as we havo hitherto labored for you." The other says : "Mr. Johnson, we do not like to endorse ycu, but we'll shout till our throats are sore for what you have recent ly done and say coining about your devo tion to the war for the Union, and if you still coutiuue to progrcs?, maybe wo will endorse you." Turning from Pennsylvania to Tennes see, Col. W, B. S okes, elected Representa tive to Congress, but kept froni his scat by the radical majority, said iu a speech made io Nashville : "I am again on my way to Washington, to help the Union men to restore law and order. I am regardless who deviates to the right pr to the left. If some men choose to go astray, even if they be high in authority, 1 hayc ta ken no oath to follow them. Your friends in Washington are the Union men in Congress. Sometimes they are termed Radicals. I don't care by what name you call them. I can be called a Radical as easily as I was called a Lincolnite and Abolitionist in .1801. The Radicals are your friends, I repeat. Some of them are a little extreme in some of their views, but still you remember that these Union men are the ones who saved our Gov ernment in, 18CI, when it .required all the energy and courage of man to meet the dread ful crisis. Are they not the men whom' you should trust now with the reins of Govern ment ?" In view of these voices, there is a changed tono among those who so lately styled the Congressional majority, fresh from the people, a faction bent on fanata cism, discord,- and disunion. We no longer have constantly rung in our . ears that "the country is with the President." The words meant, that (excluding the blacks of the South from the computation) the reconstructed and non-reconstructed rebels of the South, the sham Democracy of the North, plus the small minority of the Union party, made the majority of the country. The kisses of the Democracy seem to have proven too "wanton, and their bought smiles too suggestive of the indignant verdicts of the loyal North given during the past five years upon the paramours of Slavery, whoso illegitimate offspiing was gory treason. Things look better. The sky is clearer, and bodes no storm, nor scarcely a squall. Our llarrisbur? Letter: IIarrisburg, March 14, 1S0G. To the Editor of The Alleghanian : Owing to causes over which I had no control, I wa3 unable to furnish you a letter in time for its insertion in this week's issue. The only amende! can now make is to forward you a double ply for your next. sup- The Legislation of last week was on a meagre scale, having been interrupted by the convening of two State Conventions; tho Copperhead on the 5th ii.st., and the Republican Union on the 7th. The most important measure acted . upon finally in the Legislature was th passage of a bill in the Senate (it having previously passed the House) giving the privilege to the Philadelphia and Eric Railroad to extend branches from its main trunk, in any di rcctiou and in any number the company might think propor. ' This bill has since been vetoed by the Governor, on the ground that its provisions gave a monop oly to the company in the extending of branches into the undeveloped regions North and South of the P.- & E. lilt.. thereby shutting out individual enterprise In this connection, I should state that the passage of - the bill, in the Senate, was strenuously and eloqusntly opposed by your Senator,Hon. Harry White. There will, no doubt, be a bill proposed yet, before the cud of the Session, that will meet the approval of the Governor, aud which will place the company aud privatP enterprise on the same looting. Now for the Conventions. As I have already stated, the first in order was. that of the Democratic-Copperhead party, lu advance of its assembling, little or no ex citement was manifested, owing, as I sup pose, to the fact that it was considered, by the knowing ones, to be a contest .for martyrdom and not victory. Indeed, few of the enlightened of the Northern repre sentatives of the Sluvcocraey of the South have any idea of success in the coming Gubernatorial campaign. With what show of reason can it be urged, that the chances for them arc better now than they were three 'ears ago? Then, the war was un determined ; the people were told, that it never would, and moreover that it never could, be brought to a successful termina tion, as against secession, by the National Administration then in power. The fal sity of these declarations has since been proven to a demonstration. The war has been terminated, by a glorious and tri umphant vindication of the right by a victory over an unhallowed conspiracy to destroy a Government acknowledged to be a model, alter which all nations might copy to the benefit of maekind by a suV taining of the National Flag, which the Slaveocracy of the South sought to tram ple in the dust by crowning our veter ans, who so nobly fought, aud many of whom so nobly died, with a never-fading wreath for a heroic valor compared with which history presents no' comparison. Uuder these circumstances, who can con clude that Heister Clymer, the standard bearer of a party ignominiously defeated three years ago, cau now be chosen the Chief 'Magistrate of a State which was represented in the field, during the . war, by some three hundred thousand of her sons ? No ! No ! They may talk as they please, but tbey feel it in their heart of hearts, that the people of Pennsylvania are not going to reverso in I860, their decision ot 18G3. Two days after the dissolution cf the conclave of Northern representatives of the unterrified Southern feeling, we had a very different exhibition. The loyal men of the State sent up their agents to speak and act for them. The men who had stood by the Union for four long years of war and blood, exercised the right of publishing to the world how they felt on the momentous questions of the day, and i whom they desired to bo their leader in the 'coining political campaign. Never, since the organization of the State Gov- ! ernment, was so much interest manifested j at a State nominating convention. Not only was there a fu!l representation of delegates, but thousands of the citizens of the Old Keystone, who desired to witness the selecting of a candidate who would personify the loyal sentiment of Pennsyl vania, came with banners flying and music telling of triumph which will perch upon our standard. -The Union Convention was remarkable, not only as to numbers, but aa to intelli gence aud respectability. The names of several distinguished gentlemen were presented to the Convention, but the contest narrowed down to a choice between Maj. General John W. Geary and W. W. Ketchum. At a very early stage in the proceedings, it became apparent that it was Ihe determination of ths Convention to manifest its sympathy with and for those who had risked everything for the Flag and the Union. The kindliest feel ings were expressed for Mr. Ketchum, personally and politically. His devoted patriotism, his acknowledged intellectual ability, his purity of character, were gain said by none. It seemed to be a sponta neous outburst of all, to give utterance to their admiration for the man. Rut the loyal people of the State had spoken, in their primary meetings, that they wished to do honor to the soidier, who, when the tocsin of alarm was sounded, hastened to the rescue to the man of known practi cal ability and superior administrative qualities to one whose private character has never been sullied by a dishonorable act to him whose patriotism ha3 never been brought into question. The sound Democratic doctiine embraced in the motto, " the majority should rule," con trolled the action of the Convention and led to the nomination of Maj. General John W. Geary on the first ballot; he re ceiving eighty-one votes of the one hun dred and thirty-three cast. The marked compliment of such a nomination, made by a party that now controls all branches ot the National and State Governments, was most sensibly felt by General Geary. His speech addressed to tho Convention gives evidence of a kind and grateful heart, and is in good taste. The greatest enthusiasm prevailed in ana" out of the Convention an enthusiasm that gives positive assurance of success at the polls. Gen. Geary will be elected by an unpre cedented majority. His administration will be- an honest one, and fearless in maintaining the true principles ot repub lican government. Rut what need ot my writing more inflation to the candidate of the Union party, when I reflect that I am writing for the organ of that party, in a county in which a large majority of its citizens know him as well as myelf. He commanded her sons on the battle fields of Mexico, and many of them in the late war 'against rebellion. I feel confident Cambria will endorse him ou the second Tuesday of October next. Having written somewhat at length on the subject of the Conventions and the respective candidates placed in nomina tion, I have a few words to say, that might appropriately come .under the captiou, " PtrsonuU' I had the pleasure of meet ing several of your citizens In Ilarrisburg, during the week. Among the firnt, as Hon. A. A. Darker,- your representative iu Congress. He looked remarkablv well. and gave a most cordial crrcetin'r to hie many friends here, who sought tho oppor tunity of taking him by the hand. Of couise theje can be no doubt of his rc nomination, and just as little of his re election. I as most happy to "stumble upon" Major Jauie.' D. Hamilton, your Representative delegate in the Conven tion. AH acknowledge that Hamilton is one of the best hearted ot God's own no blemen. He having a habit of " attend ing to one thing at a time," we outsiders ?aw little of him during tho sitting of the Convention, but, after the adjourn ment sine die, we took possession ot him. When compelled to leave for hom2, we parted with regret. A. C. Mullin, Esq., the admired of all admirers of genial, true-hearted and up right gentleman, came up from the city of brotherly love to meet his friends and " tako them by the hand and look en dearment.'' We do not wish his visits to be " like angel's, few and far between." Yours, Truly. IIarrtsburo, March 19, 1SGG. To the Editor of The Alleghanian : The Hall of the IIou6 is quiet this morning, that boierous body, "the Rep resentatives, haviug adjourned over on Friday until half-past seven this evening. In consequence of this the members and borers haviug nearly al! gone home to en joy a short spell ot domestic feiicity, or to the city for special amusement the capital is dull, and very little occurs to mo oat of which to make up a letter in which either you or your readers can be particularly interested. However, I will do tho best I can, and with this you must, perforce, be satisfied ; or at least you must submit. Since the Gubernatorial candidates of the respective parties were put iu the field, tho public mind has calmed down very little is said on either fide but the leading men who are to have charge ot t lie operations of the campaign are quietly, but industriously, preparing facts, fiction, statistics, in short every engine necessary to' carry on n campaign of unusual vigor. I am afraid it will also be acrimonious ; for I never knew -a period and my knowledge cover nearly two score years when hostile feeling ran higher,, or more determination .to win success was evinced. My daily intercourse with the most iutelligent Republicans, member j of the Legislature and .visitors from almost every section of the State, enables me to state positively that no doubt is entertain ed of the election of Gen.- Geary, and that by a triumphant and unprecedented ma jority. Of this result ail are sanguine; but -.-vertheless all intelligent Republi cans perceive the necessity of perfect or ganization ad unceasing activity and vigilance. Many a battle has been lost by that overweening confidence which besets carelessness and negligence ; dud j" an army possessing all the elements ut strength, numbers, arms, zeal and cour age lias boeu surprised by a fo3 inferior in all these, but vigilant and strictly dis ciplined, and routed at the very moment officers and troops felt most confident; of easy victory. Such a misfortune as this the Republican leaders should, and I have no doubt will guard against ; for, however confident we may feel of success, it cannot be denied that the Democracy are, appa rently, equally so; and we know them well enough to bo certain that not a sol dier'on that side will be caught sleeping at his post, nor an officer negligent of his duty. They are going to fight a battle for life. They know well enough if they lose, now that they appesr to have the silent approbation, if'not the active influ ence, ot President Johnson with them, that their prestige will be iott for years, if not forever; and, therefore, you will find them moving forward in the contest shoulder to shoulder, solid and firm as the Macedonian phalanx, and as deter mined to conquer us Alexander himself. Such an enemy, so bold, so united, so active and so unscrupulous, is hoc to be despised ; and I warn our Republican frieuds everywhere throughout the State to buckle ou their armor in time to watch, and act, and never, from this time forward, to feel sanguiue of success until it is icon by the overthrow of " Heister Cly mer and his disloyal legions at the polls. What a pity that Andy Johnson has made a goose of himself. He may talk to u maudlin crowd about "dead duoks," but it he dgn't prove to be a defunct gan der nt the cud of his presidential term, then I will confess myself to he neither a prophet nor the son of - a prophet. O, what a golden opportunity to make his name gloriously immortal he threw away when he deserted the party of freedom, and threw himself into the arms of men who, one year ago, would have nailed him to che cross and mocked his dying agonies. I can scarcely yet realize his treason and yet "'tis true, aud pity 'tis 'tis true." We : must accept the fact as he haschjsen to declare it ; aud while we cannot but wonder at the perversity of mind and lack of moral stamina which caused his pluuge into the gulf from which for him there is no egress, we may congratulate ourselves that his defection is uot fatal to those wloiu he has betrayed; that the Republi can party is founded on a base of livin" principles; that it possesses tho confidence and heart of the country; and that, in spite of defection and disloyalty, it will stand like a wall of adamant, proof against every assault, and will continue to triumph to go on "conquering and to conquer," as long as freedom is the battle cry of the country and liberty is cherished by the people as an inestimable blessdng. This is our consolation, and it is one ot "which we canuot be deprived by the hollow hearted shouts of Democratic demagogues, who love the treason but despite the man. There was quite an interesting exhibi tion in the hall of the House ou Friday afternoon an exhibition touching to tho heart and pleasing to the eye. I allude to the exhibition of some two or three hundred pupils from tho schools recently established for ti e instruction and train ing of orphans of the soldiers and sailors who fell in the recent rebellion. They made quite a creditable appearance, and, considering the-short time they have beeu under instruction, acquitted themselves in a very creditable manner. May this good work, and all of a similar character, flour ish as they should in our good old, patri otic Commonwealth. Snow commenced falling early this morning, and there is a fine prospect of good sleighing before evening, if it con tinues to come down as thick and fast as it now does, 12 m. Tours, Truly. Pen Portrait oi'Ge.v. Gkarv The annexed extract, "from pajre 09 of "The Story of the Great March," by Major Nicholls, of Gen. Sherman's staff, is a faithful pen portrait of Pennsylvania's next Governor : 'Gen. Geary, commanding a'division in the 10th Corps, is r.ow the Military Gov ernor of Savannah, lie is a tall, stalwart, soIdierljT man, with a full black: beard and an open and inviting face. -lie has a hearty, hospitable manner, which pleases everybody ; is sensible, discreet and firm ; understands precisely the nature of his duties, and executes them noiselessly but effectively. The citizens are delighted with him, and they may well be so, for no city was ever kept in better order. Clean streets, careful and welf-instructed guards, perfect protection of property, and a general sense of comfort and security, indicate the executive capacity and tbe good judgment of theGcneral.', fig? One ot the men injured by the Fort Anderson explosion has just died, and the verdict of the Coroner's jury gives it that ho "came to his death from burns caused by the accidental explosion of a Confederate magazine." The "Con federacy" again ! A Card to Invalids. A Clergyman, while residing in South America as a Missionary, discovered a safe and Biraple 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 baneful a.nd vicious habit3. Great numbers have already been cured by this noble reme dy. Prompted by a desire to benefit the af flicted and unfortunate, I will send the recipe for preparing and using thia medicine, in a sealed envelope, to any one who needs it. Free of charge. Please incloso a post-paid envelope, ad dressed to yourself. Address JOSEPH T. INMAN, Statiox D, Biblb House, New York. January 4, 18G6-Gm. LETTERS remaining UNCLAlVr TT THE past nrnpr At Ebenslurg, State of l'ennylvan;. .- ; . -March 1, 18CG. Vim. A. Kerr. N. F. Anes. David Miller. Wm. Ayres. James II. M'Connell. I. C. Harr. 5Irs. Elizabeth Meyers. Mrs. C. Badger J. B. MUler. Timothy Brook3 Mis3 B. Ellen Kelson. Adam Bernhart"' John Nelson. Joseph Bender John .Rowland. James Conwav Rebecca. Shankel. Mrs. Maria DaVi? Minnie Shortincarrier.Adam Elmer ' l'eterhemore. Bev. Thomas I Thos. L. Shields. . Michel v.- - Miss Lucy Singer. " " To obtain any of these letters tbe cant must call for "adve rtix?d l,tt.l. date of this list, and pay one cent fo?' t tisinr. . . . . aul:. It not. cr.lled for. within on jnors . will be sent to the Dead Letter OfE-V Free delivery of letters by carrim .... residences of owners in citics'a.nd lar-eto secured by observing the fbllcwir ruV 1. Direct letters f.lainl ,to the Vlre'eu ( number, as well as the post oftice and 2. Head letters with the writer's von and State, street and number, sin them ly with full name, and requesfthat aii' be directed accordingly. 3. Letters to strangers or transient xh in a town or city, whose special address c be unknown, should be maiked, in the lo left-hand corner, with the word "Transit 4. Place the post.ipe stamp on the t- tIyi-iU corner, and leave space betw, the stamp and direction tor pott-narking-out intertering with the writing. A request for the return of a e to the writer, it unclaimed within an Ha.. less, written or printed with the writer's post vftce, and State, across the left-lnn,-"j( TO of till pnrplniiA nn )lm f.jcn r-: J :n i t . . , ... v c u c, niuu pucu v, nu in, inc usual prepaid rate of po age, payable when the letter is deliver,! the writer. Sec. 23, Law of 18;3. JOHN THOMPSON", P v DISSOLUT OX of PARTXEIlSin Notice 13 hereby given that the -nership heretofore existing between L MILLS and V. S. B RKER, trading c the name of E. J. MILLS k Co., is tins"; dissolved by mutual consent, E. J. J!il. retiring. All persons knowing thence! indebted to the said firm are make settlement. requested E. J. MILLS k C; The undersigned will continue the mer tile business at the old stand of E. J. Mill & Co., and respectfully requests a continue 'SI ot me patronage given to the old firm. L j. .UL,i.t will continue to have charge of; business and make settlements. V. S. BARKER Lbensburg, Feby. 17, 18CG. mc 3 s DISSOLUTION The partnership heretofore exir. between Thos. Ii. Moore. A. A. Barker, tr: D. Evans and David Lewis under the V and style of M' IOBE, BABKEB & C0.,1 gaged in the manufacture of Lumber, been this day dissolred by mutual cor;f A. A. Barker and Evan D. "Evans having their interest to Thus. B ioore. , All dt' of the firm will be settled by Moore & Le? who still continue the manufacture of hi ber at the old mill. MOORE, BARKER & CO. February 22, lSCS-3t T ICENSE NOTICE. J 4 The following named persons hnveE'.- tneir petitions for licenses, which wi!l be- senteJ for the action of. the Argument Cor of Cambria county, before the Judges ther on Tuesday, the 31 of April next, to wit: TAVERN'. Daniel Raffertr, Cambria bor. ; Peter Fi er, Conemaugh, 1st w'd : James II. Btnf -Johnstowji, 3d w'd ; Philip Shultie?, Job town, 3d w'd ; Francis J. Parrish, Alleght tp.-; Jacob Ream, Yoder tp. i ft d r a il.U. C. K. ZAIIM, Clerk Q. 5 March 15, lSGO. XKCUTOR'S NOTICE. Letters testamentary on the es-'.'f William G. Williams, late of EbeiHf. borongh, Cambria county, have been pra:v to the subscriber, residing in Cambria UT ship. All persons indebted to said es' will come forward and mate nunrn-nt. i rV e i B i i those having claims against the" same f present them probated for settlement. THOMAS Vv. WILLIAMS, Executor. March I, 18f".6-Ct. ! : A i 11 K ? X EC UTOR'S not: c E. - Letters testamentary on the estate Evan E. Davis, late of the borough of EVer br.rg, Cambria county, have been- granted : tie subscriber, residing in said boroutb. X persons indebted to sa.d estate will comefrr- vrard and make payment, and those !"'" claims agninst the same will present probated for settlement. THOMAS E. DAVIS, Executcr February 8, ISGG-fit STRAY. Came to the preml?e3 of the stibscribt in .Allegheny tp., in the month of Decern1, last, a two-year old BULL, red and wh spotted, with right ear ofT. The owner t come forward, prove property and take t away, otherwise he will be disposed oi accc i i n ding to law. SIMON BEXDE3. is March 1. lSC6-m. ril() THE PEOPLE! JL "REMEMBER NUMBER ONE' Bring your Greenbacks along and gtS,: TTfirspa shod for 2.00. You can cef Jp Buggy or Wagon ironed or repaired atB- Singers shop, near Isaac Lvans Tanner? Ebensburg, Oct. 12, 1865-3m. OLL1DAYSRURO IRON WOKK- 0; AND NAIL FACTORY- B. M. JOHNSTON, Manufacturer of r BAR, BOLT & ROD IRON, NAILS & SrlK Hollidaysburg, Blair Co., Ti March 15, 18G6.tf JTTST RECEIVED ! A full assortment of MEN'S AND BOYS CATS. A large assortment of OVERCOATS, GENTS' SCARFS, T&rtf A splenclid assortment'of CARPETS ! At A. A. BARKER"- Ebeusturg, T-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers