JtzLG Allogliaiiiaii. THUBSDAY, APRIL 12, 1866. liEPUBLlCAN-UNION NOMINEE. With malice toward none, with charity for 11, with firmness rn the right, as God gives to. tee the right, let us Btrive on to finish Joe work we are hi; to bind up the nation's wounds ; to car for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan; to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and a lasting peace among our selves and all nations. Abraham Lincoln' Second Inaugurml AdJrett. FOR GOVERNOR : 2lajor-GenrTil JOHN W. GEARY, TonwEKLY 0F CAMBRIA. COCXTY. lasiagsor Hie civil Itlglit Bill Over Jlie Veto. TW&Tjate on Friday, by the following vote, passed the Civil Kichta bill over nr- - a . - President's veto : Yeas Messrs. Anthony, Brown, Chandler, 'Clark, Connes3, Cragin, CreswU, Edmunds, Tessenden, Foster, Grimes. Harris. Hender son, Howard, Howe, Kiikwood, Lane, (Ind.) Morgan, Morrill, Nye, Poland, Pomeroy, Ham say, Sherman, Sprague, Stewart, uniner, Trumbull, Wade, Willev, Williams, Wilson, Yates 33. Na VS Teeara Pnolriilom Z"' r : ., Dooliltle, Guthrie, Hendricks, It. Johnson, Lane, (Kan.) M'Dougall, Nesmith, Xorion, Riddle. Saulsbury, Van Winkle, Wright 15. Absent Mr. Dixon. The names of Republicans voting "No" are in Italic. On Monday, the House also passed the bill over the veto by the vote of 122 to 41. co ma:, naving secureu a two-thirds vote in either house, it is become law. The passage of this important bill, after a protracted and extraordinarily able discussion in both houses of Congress. ays the Washington Chronicle, was bailed with delight by the lojal millions of the country. Ferhaps none of the great measures which have been passed during the present session hate been re ceived by the people with a more unan imous and hearty approval than this civil riijhts bill. In proof of this we need but refer to the opinions of the public pres, called forth by the President's veto. It is especially worthy of remark that not a fw journals which either apologized lor or openly sustained the veto of the Freed men's Kurcau bill, earnestly and persist ently urged Congress to pass the Civil Rights bill over the veto. The action of Congress will, of course, be regarded as a decided triumph of the radical Union element.! We ' are not dispo sed, however, to treat it in a boastful ; or revengeful spirit. "We believe, with the Senators and Representatives who voted for tho bill, that it is not only constitutional and just, but that it u demanded by the great majority of the loyal, earnest people of the Uuited States. It was not denied even in the President' message vetoing the bill, that some such measure as this was absolutely necessary to carry out, in good faith, the great amendment to the Constitution abolishing elaverv forever throughout the llenuhlip. - C" It will be remembered that that memora ble measure provided that "Congress shall have power to enforce this article by appropriate legislation." We need but recur to the proceedings of the Legisla tures of the late rebel States with reference to the freed men to show that this "legis-, lation" is not only "appropriate," but necessary. Attempts have been made in more than one State to remand by legis lation the liberated negroes again to bondage. The faith of the United States, pledged in the most solemn manner, and under circumstances of extraordinary of the liberty cf the blasks. Unless we want to occupy an infamous position toward the freedmen, and, like the witches in "Macbeth," palttr with them in a etatute-book such laws as will forever ptotect them from the oppression of their ibrnibr masters. Tho constitutional amendment made them free; this bill protects them in ite rights that belong to freemen, and furnishes the means ol their VlUUlCUllOU. J. 1113 UlUVU naa uinccaij iv make their freedom an accomplished fact. Nothing less would have sufficed. This is the second instance in the his tory of our' Government wherein a bill after being vetoed by the JbxecuUve has become a law. The first was the case of n nni mnortant measure durin-' the ad ministration of President Tyler, which, after being vetoed by that worthy, was of Congress? The fact that the bill has been passed over the veto, and the large majority by which it received the approval of both houses of Congress, as well as the hearty aoien which will go up from the people at tae reau;t, win, we nope, uouvcy anuwiuii lesson to the President of the Uuited States. Elected by the people, and proud as we believe he i to acknowledge him lelf their servant, he will reeognize in this result : the people's will, as expressed tbrough-iheir legally chosen representa tives. Let us hopei too, that ho will profit by the lesson; and retrace bii steps to the position he held and redeem the ... pieugea ne voluntarily gave in ... Tlie leop!e Speajtl "I havo faith in the people ; they will speak, and with no uncertain voice, and say who are their friends and who their enemies." So said, in effect, President Johnbon on the 22d February. The peo ple have spoken several times since then. They spoke on last Monday iu Connec ticut. The issue in that State was clear and well defined. It was confessedly the question whether the line of policy mark ed out by the President as to the recon struction of the rebel States should be ratified or repudiated by the people. On Monday evening, the figures told the tale that General Ilawley, who is not an adhe rent to the "plan" of the President, was triumphantly elected, and that Mr. En glish, who coutends with the President that treason is no crime and that traitors should go unpunished, and in whose be half all the available influence of the White House had been brought to bear, was "licked out of his boots." In Rhode Island, a couple of days after, General Rurnside walked over tho Gubernatorial race course almost unopposed. Tho Gen eral U nothing if he is cot a true patriot, and in favor of securing to the couutry the legitimate fruits of the great war through which we have just passed. Roth Houses of Congress have just re-enacted the Civil Rights bill, the President's objections to the contrary notwithstanding. This action is emphatically endorsed by nine out of ten of thoss who oompose the great party which is and has for five years been the sole prop and support of our National edifice. The people have spoken are speaking. The Prcisident should hearken. equalization of ISountics. We print on our outside to day the joint resolutions introduced into the Leg islature by Hon. Harry White, instructing the Senators and Representatives in Con gress from Pennsylvania to advocate and vote for a measure equalizing bounties to volunteers. After an able speech iu their behalf by Senator White, the reso lutions, which are wise, patriotic and timely, passed the Seuate on Monday. Our Ilarrlsbiire: Letter. Harriseurg, April 9, 18G6. To the Editor of The Allejhanian : In a few days, the Legi&lature of 186G will have passed aw?y, and be classed among "the things that were." Up to this date, it has been a most uninteresting session, very few measures of general interest having been enacted. So far as local legislation is concerned, your county ha3 asked but little. I suppose, yea, I know, that you have lost nothing on this score, as it is a fact beyond dispute, that one of the great public evils ol the day id too much legislation. The House, during the past week, passed a bill, offered by Mr. Quay, taxing the real estate of banks, in consideration for which, said banks will be permitted to charge an interest of seven per cent., iu lieu of the six per cent, now allowed. It is suid, that the effect of this bil!, if enacted into a law, will be to secure to the State treasury an additional revenue of five hundred thousand doll trs per annum. This looks very well upon paper. Rut who will really pay this increase of rev enue to the State? Why, of course, the borrowers from the banks, and not the bauUs. It is worthy of inquiry, whether or not the banks will not be largely the gainers by this law. It may be "a sugar coated pill," the operation of which will be to deplete the pockets of the people for the benefit of the banks that the excess of one per cent, will amount to a much larger sum than the $500,000. . If eo, the bill ought never to have a place upon the statute book. Your attentive and able Senator, Hon. Harry W bite, presented, on Tuesday last, i preamble and resolutions instructing our Senators in Congress and requesting our Representatives to use every effort to secure an equalization of bounties to vol unteers. Preamble and resolutions prin ted on outside of this paper. Ed. Alley Ry this your Senator evidences his regard for the interest of his comrades in arms, and bis desire to secure; equal' justice to all who entered the service for one and the same object, ; namely : to suppress an unhallowed rebellion. . Gen. White also made a very eloquent speech in opposition to a bill authorizing the construction of a boom in the Susque hanna river, and a large increase of boom age. In this, as in every other legislative act, your Senator shows that he has "an eye single" to the interests of his constit uents. Tho hardy eons of toil in his district, who are engaged in the lumbering business, have let largely by these artifi cial obstructions known as booms. They are contrivances gotten up for the pecuniary-benefit of the few to the prejudice of the maLy. All such' propositions find no favor with your Senator. On the 22E ass contrary, they reoeive at hi3 Jhands, a determined opposition. No little excitement has "stirred up" the people of the country, within the last week, arising from the veto of the Civil Rights bill by the President, and the passage of the bill by the Senate, notwith standing his objections. This result cau ses a "split," between the Executive and his oriyinal tviends in Congress, eo wide and deep that a re-uiion appears to be impossible. How a public man, such as is . Andrew Johnson, could have so far forgotten his pledges to the party that deiended him from the vilest aspersions of his enemies n,d the enemies of the country thac took him by the hand, u the spirit of confidence in his integrity and truthfulness, and elevated him to his present position, as to violate all these pledges, is one of tho unaccountable events which st;ipgers even the imagina tion. The sophistry and fahify of the statements contained iu his veto message have been most ably set forth by Senator Trumbull, of Illiuois. I send you a copy of the synopsis of his speech, which you should publish,' as I perceive you' have already published the veto message. Then let your readers judge between him and his accusers. The President has already tried his hand at endeavoring to control State elec tions, and enforcing them to eudorse his 'policy." His signal failure in his at tempt to defeat the bravc.Gen. Hawley in Connecticut has been heralded from one end of 'the land to the other. The loud huzzas of the populace, accompanied by the booming of cannon, give assurance that the loyal heart of the country is all right, and that there need be no fear , of the results of a four-years' ; bloody war being diverted from their legitimate end. After the election in Connecticut came that in Rhode Island, and so blighting of the hopes of the sect6sion sympathizers was the Union victory in the former State that the slaveocrats in the latter scarcely made a show of opposition to Gem Rurn side, the Union caudidite. If the Presidential intervention'in State elections has so far proved disastrous to the party into whose arms, he has thrown himself, by vhat show of reason can the advocates of Ileister Clyuier in Pennsyl vania calculate upon any advantage to their candidate arising from Johnson's de fection to his party, and his abandonment of all that is truthful and honorable ? The President will hesitate before licing into a wholesale proscription cf those who, holding orfice under him, decline to advo cate his "policy." In that way alone, l mean by proscription,) can his interfe rence in this State amount to a vote. Ry holuiug the sword in terrortm over the heads of Federal office-holders, a very few weak-kneed Republicans might be scared into voting for Clyiner, but there would be a coun'er effect upon honorable men of the opposition, who would become dis gusted with the adoption of such meas ures to uphold an Executive iwlro 'has proved ungrateful to the friends that elec ted him. Up to this time, your corre spondent has not met one Republican, either iu office or out of it, who endorses Audrew Johnson and his veto; and you must bear io mind that this is the politi cal center of the State. Here are repre .sentatives from all portions rf Pennsylva nia, who, naturally, reflect tho sentiments of their respective party friends at home. Indeed, the effect of the veto has been to draw the Uuion men clo.-fr together to nerve them for the coming conflict to in fuse into the organization a" 6pirit of rivalry, manifested in a determination that Pennsylvania bhall not be outdone, even by glorious iittlo Rhode Inland. ' As both she and her sister,' Connecticut, have already chosen gallant and loyal soldiers as their respective Chief Magistrates, the resolve is unanimous that the glorious old Keytone will fdlow the praiseworth v example by giving the soldier and patriot, General Geary, he largest majority ever polled in the State. Wc had a visit from the "Oid Public Functionary," James Ruchanan, a few lays ago. fit, was the iuest of Ex.-Gov. David R. Porter. It is said that his mission here had in View the organization of the friends of" Clymer, aud that he, himself J. R. would enter actively into the campaign. Well, that will do! If any one thing were necessary to itiurc the election of the Uuion nominee, it is that it be known that James Buchanan has taken Clymer into his embrace and pre sents him to the people of Pennsylvania as his peculiar favorite. The whole mat ter will resolve itself down to this: the election of Clymer will be an endorsement o; the administration of Ruchanan and his war policy. Mimbile dicta ! Why, such being the issue, General Geary's majority will be over jiffy thousand ! All eyes are now turned towards Wash ington, anxiously watching the? fate of the President's veto of the Civil Rights bill in the House of Representatives. -All the true friends of the country are sanguine as to the result. The House will certainly emulate the example of the Senate, and, by so doing, perfect. the pas sage of the bill. Oue thing is beyoud all doubt. Your Representative's vote will be recorded in its favor. , His record thus far stauds unblemished, nor. will it be tar nUhed, during his 'present or his second term. Mr, Rarker is not one likely. to be intimidated by such threats as those made in the Seuate by Saulsbury, of Delaware, and Davis, of Kentucky; the former de claring that the provisions of the Civil Rights bill could not be executed io bis State, and the latter averring that, "if the bill became a law, he should feel compelled to regard himself as an enemy of the Government, and to work for its over throw.". Here we have an exam pie of the animus of the .Copperheads' of the North. Here we have a specimen of trea son in emhryo. "Rule or ruin" has been, and will continue to be, the, motto of the secession-sympathizing party, known by the false appellation, "the Democratic party." Will such a party succeed 1 We will see. -Yours, &c. , Harrisburq, April 10, 18G6. To the Editor of rhcAUejhaHian : . . Since the mailing of my letter of yes terday, I have been furnished with a copy Ofthfr annexed bill, which was. introduced, somo time ago, by your Senator, Geueral Harry White, and which, by his exertions and eloquenc advocacy, has become a law. It is said, that bounty and per-eapita tuxes are baiug collected in your county, from some of those who have been in the mili tary service of the United States and been honorably discharged therefrom. It is tlesiiable that the people of. your courity should be apprized of the existeuce of iiua jav, ; and. further, that the citizen soldiers of t,au.v. county should know how much they are :nucv..i to xr,v watchful and popuh.r Representative the State Senate. It is characteristic of the soldier to be graceful to him' who be friends him. This cla sot voters in Gen. White's district will not forget him in the future. The following' is the law referr ed to : An Act to exempt persons who have been in the military service of the United Mates, and been honorably discharged therefrom, from' the payment of bounty.und per capita tax, and militia fines. ', Sec. 1. lie it enacted, Jc.', That all persons, who have been mustered into the military service of the United States, and have served therein for a period of not less than nine months, in the war to suppress the rebellion, and their property, and those persons' who have been discharged from said service ou account of wounds, or physical disability, contracted in such service, and their property, and the widows and orphans of such persons, and their property, shall be exempt from the payment of all bounty and per capita tax. lev ied, or to be levied, for paying bounties to volunteers, in the several counties cf this Commonwealth, and such persons shall also be exempt from the payment of militia fines. The foregoing act was approved by the Governor on the 30th ultimo.: Youfts, &c. Tlie Peace Proclamation. now in revolt against; the constitutional Government, and in arms around the Capitol ; that in this national emergency,1 Cunress, banishing all feeiing of m re passion or resentment, will recollect only its duty to the whole country ; that this war is not prosecuted on our part in any spirit of oppression nor for any purpose of conquest or subjugation, nor purpose of overthrowing or interfering with the rights or established institutions of those States, but to defend and maintain the supremacy of the Constitution and all laws made in" pursuance thereof, aud to -w- . ' preserve the Union with all the dinitv. OKl'HANS' COURT SAtp W ; VALUABLE REAL E, By virtue of an order. i3v .,;'.. 3 T Orphans' Court of Cambria count dersigaed will offer for sal f, the 30th, inst., ' ' ,J- Ko I. All that certain piece n woodland, situate in Cambria town J one mile West of Ebensburg J- turnpike, lands of Alexander' M y-': others, containing seven arr..o 1 J1'"' ea. xuis 13 a desirable proper i i nitumj t() I or timber land. Sale to be held ' House. So. 2. Beinjr all that certain of land situate in the Borough of rv alley south, 25 perches. t i .A'03 til,' thence west 16 perches to Lrli V - I 1 - . - -'!. equality, and-rights ot the several Srs' 5 f Z t,f "i tlV IlliimnotrnH - ik .t .1. . , . . " -n.i. mence V. " - , as suuu us inese .oujects are accomplished the war ought to cease." Arid whereas, these resolutions, though not joint or concurrent in form, are sub stantially identical, and as such may be regnrded as having expressed the sense of Congress upon the subject to which they relate ; theSiiroTlj proclamation of in be State of TcnrXLnd u have been suppled, the .urht ty 0l the Urmed State.- therein rnh .,..,4: . ' f , 111 u. J t 1 ' By the President of the United States of America : A PROCLAMATION. Whereas, by proclamations of the fif teenth and nineteenth ol April, one thou-i-and eight hundred 'and sixty-one, the President of the Uuited States, in - virtue of the power vested in him by: the Con stitution and laws, declared that the laws of the Uuited Slates were opposed, aud the execufWjv thereof obstructed in the States of Sout'.i Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, --Louisiana, and Texas, by combinations too powerful to be suppressed by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings, or by the powers vested io the marshals by law; And whereas, by. another proclamation made ou too sixteenth day. of August, in the same year, in pursuance of an act of c'ongress approved July thirteen, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-one, the inhabitants of the States of Georgia, South Carolina, Virginia, North Carolina, Tenmissee, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas, Mississippi, and Florida (except the inhabitants of that part of the State of Virginia lying west of the Allegheny Mountains, and to such other parts of that State aud the other States before named, as might maintain a loyal adhe sion to the Uuion and the Constitution, or might be from time to time occupied and controlled by forces of the United States engagod in the dispersion of insurgents) were declared to be in "a et jte of insurrec tion against the United States; And whereas, by another proc-amation of the first day of July, oue thousand eight hundred and sixty-two, issued in ptiruance of an act of Congress approved June 7, in the same year, the insurrection was declared to be still existing in the States aforesaid, with the exception of certain ppeeificd counties in the State of Virginia ; ' And whereas, by another proclamation made on the second day of April one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three, in pursuance of the act ol Congress of July thirteen, one thousand eight huudrcd and sixty-one, the exceptions named iu the - proclamation of August 10, 1SG1, were revoked, nd the inhabitants of the States of Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Tenuessee, Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Arkausas, Mississippi, Florida, and Virginia, (except the forty-eight counties of Virgiuia designated as West Virginia, and the ports of New Orleans, Ky West, Port Royal and Reaufort, in South Caro lina.) were declared to bc still in a state of ins-urrection against the United States; And whereas, the House of Represen tatives, on the 22d day of July, 1801, adopted a resolution iu the words follow ing, namely i . 1 "Resolved,' ly the House of Representa tives of the Conyrexs of the United States, That the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the country 'by the dis uriionists of the Southern States, now in reVolt against the constitutional Govern ment, aud in arms around the Capitol ; thai in this national emergency Congress, banishing all feelings of mere passion or resentment, will recollect only its duty to the whole country ; that this war is not waged 'on our part in any spirit of oppres sion, nor for any purpose of eonquet or subjugation, nor purpose of overthrowing or , interfering with the rights or estab lished institutions of those States, but to maintain and defend the supremacy of the 1 Constitution and to prcservw the Union with all tho dignity, eejuality, and rights of the several States unimpaired; and that as soon as those objects are accomplished, the war ought to cease." ' Aud . whereas, the Senate of the United States, on the 25th day of July, 18C1, adopted a resolution in the words follow ing, to wit : ' ' ' ' "Resolved That the present deplorable civil war has been forced upon the country by the disunioniats cf the Southern States, and such officers as h:nl 1 Mone.d to be in the undisputed exer"! "."f j their oSicial functions ; Aud whereas,, there now exists no organized armed resistance of misguided citizens or others to the authority of the United States in the States ot. Georgia, South Carolina, Virginia, North Carolina, Tonriiuna A IiK.i.. I . A l ... . - . v .1. ma, jjuuisiaua, iirivuusas, Mississippi, and Florida, and the laws can be sustained and enforced therein by the proper civil authority, State or Federal, ar.a the people of the said States are well aud loyally disposed, and have couformed or will conform in their legislation to the condition of affairs : growing out of the amendment to the Constitution of tho United States, prohibiting slavery wi'hin the limits aud jurisdiction of the Uuited States ; Aud whereas,-in view. of the before recited premises, it is the manifest d- ter mination of the American people that no State, ol its own will, has the right or the power to go out of, or separate itself from, t be separated from the American Union, and that therefore each State ought to remain and constitute an integral part of the Unit.jd States ; ' - And whereas, the people of the several before-mentioned States have, iu the man ner aforesaid, given satisfactory evidence that they acrjuiesee in this sovereign and important resolution of national unity; And whereas, it is helieved to be a fundamental principle of government that people who have revolted, and who have been overcome and subdued, must either be dealt with so as to induce them volun tarily to become friends, or else they must be held by absolute military power, or devastated, so as to prevent iheui from ever again doing harm as enemies, which last named policy is abhorrent to humanity and freedom ;....- ' ' Aud whereas, the Constitution of the United States provides for constituent communities only as States and not as Territories, dependencies, provinces, or protectorates ; And whereas, such constituent States must necessarily be, and by the Constitu tion and laws of the United 'States are made equals and placed upon a like footing as to political rights, immunities, dignity, and power, with the several States with which they are united ; And whereas, the observance of polit ical equality as a principle of right and jutice is well calculated to encourage the people of the aforesaid States to be and become more and mure constant and per severing in their renewed allegiance ; And whereas, standing armies, military occupation, martial law, military tribunals, and the suspension of the privilege of the writ of habeas corpus are, in time of peace, dangerous, to public liberty, incompatible with the individual rights of the citizen, contrary to the genius and spirit of our free institutions, and exhaustive of. the national resources, and outfit not, there fore, to be sanctioned or allowed, except in eases of actual necessity, for repelling invasion or suppressing insurrection or rebellion ; And whereas, the policy of 'the Gov ernment of the United States, from the beuinning of the insurrection to its over throw and final suppression, has been iu conformity with the principles herein set forth and enumerated : Now, therefore, I, Andrew Johnson, President of the United States, do hereby proclaim aud declare that the insurrection which heretofore existed in the States of Georgia. South Caroliua, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, Louisiana, Arkansas, Mississippi, and- Florida is at au end, and is henceforth to he so regarded. In testimony whereof, I have hereunto set my hand, and caused the Seal of the United State to be affixed. Done at the city of Washington, the second day of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-six. and of the Independence ot the United Slates of America tho ninetieth. ' Andrew Jonssox. Ry the .President : 1 Wm. H. SewariJ, Sec'y. of State. ' . tr, Judge Edmunds has been appoin ted U. S. Senator lroui Vermont, in place of Solomon Foof, deceased. Heister Clymer has resigned his c-cat in the State Senate. thence 23 perches aloiiir sui.l iliB f state of cultivation. 11 4 No. 3. All those five lots of in the extended borough of EbpC"; joing Triumph street on the n,V' ctnw, 1.. . e r -. oi.vi, auu .-i i oi m unur on tl.f enslmrg Sc Cresson Railroad . . i. i-. . . . . . - a , o'.uiu, lui OI JOIin J. IvGtHTtS. Hndfin- me- west ; Known as Iois No's. 2, L 8, on a plan of the saniA h.jj out W Davis in his life time. Immc.li.it.r: of all the Faid property will be pve the reservation of an I the rio-htot ha- thegrair. now growing thereon. ey to be p;l.'i" One-h-lf the nnrr. in one year thereaPic!!'.na!,cm: antJ ,bf upon the premises by thetl'Jnt'er'st of xhe purchaser. a-nd- fiy Sale to Commence at 2 oV'..: Divisions Nn's . "'" . - l uu l Ot tr, 4 premises. - GEO. M tt.. Adm'r of KoVert : 4l Ebensburg, April 12, 1866-3t. ' : .r..m !. lIlULtK. JACr. , m- holesale dealers iu DRUGS " CAii, &c. Mxnufaeturf rs of L1RKRTY 1VHITK LKAD. ZI.VC C WH3EL & MACHINERY URE Store and office, No. 137 N. Th'iv- Arch. Factory, 611 & 613 St. Jol:. Vincent st., Philadelphia, r.- DISSOLUTION. The-partnership heretofore existing between Thos. li. Moore," A. A. Barker, Evan D. Evans aud David Lewis, under the name and style of MOORE, BARKER & CO., en gaged in the mnnufacture of Lumber, has been this day dissolved by mutual consent, A. A. Barker and Evan D. Evans having sold their interest to Thos. B. Moore. All debts of thft firm will be settled by Moore & Lewis, who still continue the manufacture of Lum ber at the old mill. : t MOORE, BARKER 4 CO. March 15, 1SSS. JO WILSON. M. D . offers vice?. Jis Thysician and Surj.. citizen? of Ebensburg and sarrounJ: rry. O.Tiee three doors east of ti.?i rian church. , Aprilli; THE LADY OCULIST. Miss LAURA LE SUER. vi cessfnl practice has been well Pittsburg and vicinity for the years, has now taken rooms at tLe: of Mrs. Stahl, High St., El-.pnshi.rfr. county, Pa., where she propo?es summer for the purpose ot ireatir DISEASES OF THE EVLS. The System is a cautious and si'a-1 never been known to fail in suv. flammation of the Ees, eithtr .. Chronic will remove extraneous? from the eyebaUs.-cure prranuLr.ed f 'hat the eyelashes, instead of grc bristles down npon the eyeballs fi: eventually destroying the sight, w.l a correct position become sofi sci will strengthen and restore we.ii trt standing til without the ievft' Lunar Caustic, Blue Stone, ct any 4 severe remedies so frequency apjAit destruction of the eyes. , Miss LE SECR also trpt ra: RHEUMATISM asd NERVOUS DY two of the most lingering r.nd pa eases to which mortals are subject, which proceed some of the most f eases of the eyes.' But as disease cured on paper and deeds are n satisfactory than word?, she won'.d respectfully call the attention of s gent community to her practice, cordially invite the afllicted to cor j the eRV-t of the treatment for then' suring those who-" cases are curs they put themselves under tier trt' follow strictly the directiors g.'Tti), certainlv be rewarded with ' " HEALTH AND SIGHT. These are facts, and facts are : stubborn thiagf. " - ( EEFFEEXCES : Rev. A. Baker, Pastor M. E. CL 1 , ensburr. Pa. I Rev. E. B. Snyder, Tastor CL:J Church, Pittsburg. Rev. J. A. SirHrrcy, Pastor Be E. Church. Allecheny City. Thomas Clark,' Esq., firm ot Clan as. PittsbuTg. Joseph Anderson, Esq., prcprie: Hotel, Pittsburg. Wm. Edy, E?q., 31 Fifth St., Thompson Bell, Esq., CvwEtn Fourth St.. Pittsburcr. Rev. Templin Moore, D. D-, rhi1- March 20, 1806-3m PUBLIC SALK ! There will be offered at tlie premises, on THURSDAY, t of APRIL, 1866, the Coal Bank : property of Evan E. Evans A mile west of Lilly'3 Station, on ' Railroad The Bank is in operation, e.i working order at the presut t. are 47 Acres of Lund belonging i good title. This Land fronts scope of Coal Land, the proJj must come through it to get to&i- mouth of the Gangway is wiu- of the P. R. R., which makeiii" nient. AY ill also be sold, togetbr cr s to suit purchasers. 1 HORSE, 2 MULES, - 10 CO AL-WACON?. .'BLACKSMITH T00U; And all kind3 of Tools necesM? on the Coal Business. A!5f'- 150 TONS COKE! C2J Persons wishing to p"rc quested to call and examine tfc? ' r-iZ-f- SaI tr pnmmence ai or! m., when terms will be male if.- f5 At the same time nd F :. will be oirerd at public sa! ? T.nml rnntaininer 76 acres, wea ". uate about one-fourth of a Station, and having- taereu -frame House and frame Barn. April 5, ISCCtd DISSOLUTION of FAl'; Notice is hereby given nership heretofore existmp . MILLS andV. S. B F.Kt r.. 1 .: the name of E. J. MILLS , dissolved bv mutual consen- retiring. All persons kae'- indebted to the said firm make settlement. J; - ' - The undersigned will conu-- tili business at the oM ti- - & Co., and respectfully reque'.. oi me pairoiingc , .vec; i tvitt t. w5ll rontinueto a4 business and make settlement l - Ebeaiburj. Feby. IT,'
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers