52? THURSDAY, APRIL. 10, 1866. REPUBLICAN- UNION NOMINEE. With malice toward none, with charity for all. -with firmness in the right, as God gives tu to see the right, let us strive on to finish the work we are in ; to bind up the nation's wounds ; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow and his orphan ; 10 do all which may achieve and cherish a just and a lasting peace among our selves and all nations. Abraham Lincoln's Second Inaugural Address. FOR GOVERNOR : Major. General JOHN W. GEARY, FORMERLY OF CAMBRIA COUNTY. . EMitorlnl Correspondence. Washington, April 10, 1S6G. We trust our readers will not become weary with our notices of distinguished men who occupy seats in the House or Representatives, for wc have rarely, if ever, had a Congress since we have been a nation, in which there were fo many men of power and ability. All right thinking men concede this, and are glad that it is bo ; while others deplore this state of things, and sigh lor the olden times, when the members chose to follow the leader fchip of some one man. Those timea are looked back to as the palmy days of the llepublic, and many pray for their return ; but they will return "no more. Such a condition of things is not in accordance with our institutions. There should be no leaders, and the country maybe proud of the fact that there are so many able men now in Congress that no-one man, whatever be his talent, can aspire to the leadership, or, if he aspire to such a posi tion, can attain it by general consent. No; let there be in these halls a conflict of opinion, for out of the conflict shall come the best form of legislation, and the greatest good of all will thus be promoted. But we will not premise further, as wc took up our pea for the purpose of noti cing one or two gentlemen whose public course we have observed with much interest during this session. Hon. Justin L- Morrill, from the second, district of Vermont, and the able chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means, was born in Strafford, of that State, April 14, 1810, and is therefore fifty-six years of age. He appears to be about forty-five. Tliis we presume is owing to his abstemious habits and the intelligent care which he observes of laws of health. Mr. Morriil i3 about the medium size, somewhat angular in person, with a slight stoop of the shoul ders. He has a kind word for all whom he meets, a benignant countenance, is affable and courteous in his manners, and merits, as he receives, the respect of men of all parties in the House. Mr. Morrill's only education was received in the com mon schools and academies ct hi3 native State. He afterwards engaged in mer cantile pursuits, which he followed with assiduity, and we think with success, until 1848, when he turned his attention to agriculture. He was first elected to the Thirty-fourth Congress, and has been returned to each successive Congress up to the present time. He was for some time an influential and useful member of the Committee of Agriculture; but since the Republican party has been in the ascendancy, he has served on the Commit tee of Ways and Means, of which he is now, as we have said, tho chairman. He is known as the author of the tariff which bears his name, a measure which very naturally met with very severe censure iu Europe, particularly in France and -England. It was not made to please the manufacturers of those countries, and it U not strange, therefore, that the selfish statesmen and journalists of the old world denounce it. Some of our own journals iu the interest of free trade are ulso disposed to criticise it rather severely. - If we haJ any complaints or, demurrers to file agai"i.t Mr. Morrill's protective ideas, we should' W that he does not come up to our notions cf jtcctioa by a long ; chalk; we would give ti.e possible protection to all the great leadn?; manu facturing interests of the country, partic- ularlv to that of iron, and wc are not fish in this, because we firmly believe that " the best interests of the whole country will thus be promoted. Mr. Merrill is certainly deserving tf much credit that ' ' he ha3 so far mastered the great financial questions of the country as to be able always to throw much light upon those . objects which lay at the foundation of " all national prosperity. His thoughts and reflections upon those topics indicate that - ho has been for a lonjj time a most labo rious student of this most difficult and ' abstruse science. It is thought by many that he will be selected by the Legislature of Vermont as the successor, to tho U. S. - : tfeuate, of lion. Solomon Foot, and we are sure that the Green Mountain State could not find a better man to fill tho place of the lamented Foot. There is another gentleman, a member of this House, whom it would Dotbe amiss for us t DOtice in this connection. We i refer to Hon. Samuel M'Kee, of the ninth district of Kentucky. Mr. M'Kee was born in Mt. Sterling, Kentucky, in 1833, and was brought up as a farmer. He entered Miami University, Ohio, at the age of nineteen years, and graduated at that institution in 1857. He studied law, and commenced the practice of that profession in Mt. Sterling, Kentucky, in the county where he was born, in 1858. He was reared a Whig in politics, and remained a member of that organization while it existed. When the war broke out, Mr. M'Kee took a strong and firm stand for the Union cause, and unlike many other Kentuckians, was a strong cocrcionist, and he adhered to this doctrine when it needed Federal bayonets to enforce it. lie also now, unlike some of his colleagues, .stands up like a man and pleads the cause of those who have beeu and arc still oppressed. He entered the army of the Union in 18G2 as captain in the 14th Kentucky Regiment of voluu tccrs, and was taken prisoner March 22, 1SG3, and was confined in Libby prison, Richmond, until April 3d, 1SG4, when he was exchanged. While in prison, he was set apart for execution by the Rebel authorities, in retaliation for the execution of the spies whom Gen. JJurnside shot in Kentucky ; but the Federal authorities promptly interfered, and prevented this barbarity. Mr. M'Kee took an active part in favor of Mr. Lincoln's re-election, and did good service on the stump in his native State. The majority for M'Clcllan in his district in 1S64 was some 2,200; but when Mr. M'Kee ran for Congress, in August, 1SGG, his majority was 2,000 over all. Mr. M'Kee is quite a young man, and gives unmistakable promise of usefulness. He has those elements of character which are so necessary to the public man in a country like ours and in an age like the one in which wc live. He is sincere, patriotic, intrepid, and intelligently so. He can give a reason for his faith in humanity, justice, and right, and is not afraid to ally himself with the right, though it may be unpopu lar in his own State. He does not take counsel of his fears, but knows his duty, and dare perform it, regardless of conse quences. He apparently wastes no time in going where duty calls. He is repre sented as having done eminent service to the Union cause in the late elections in N'pw Hampshire and Connecticut. Some - - r dajs ago, he electrified the House by an explanation, as terse as it was truthful, sensible and just. He said: "Mr. Speak er, I arise for a personal explanation" the House was in alistcning attitudeatonce 'I have been represented by the associ ated pTess as saying that Kentucky is one of the most disloyal States in the Union. I did not say that, but did say, that she was the most disloyal State in the Union." Ho is bold, fearless, truthful, sanguine, determined, conscientious, willing to do his duty his whole duty and abide the consequences. May Kentucky ever be represented by true and noble men like him. Senator Trumbull's Speech. Guilt of Jeff. Davis and Others. The Judiciary Committee of the House is now holding a daily session for the purpose of examining the records submit ted to it by the War Department concer ning the alleged guilt of Jeff. Davi, Sanders, Thompson, Ureckinridge and other Confederate leaders in the assassin ation conspiracy. .These records are of themost voluminous character and startling import. Judge Advocate Holt is present cac'a day, and vouches for the validity of the documentary evidence produced, and explains to the committee the circum stances under which it was Meposed. Thus far the testimony has been of the most variable character, and given by men of all conditions in life, from those who assume to have been valets in the house hold of Jeff. Davis, .to wagoners in the Confederate army of General Lee. The great mass of proof thus obtained, abouuds in decided statements criminating all the above named personages, beside a host of others, among whom i3 Mallory, the ex- rcbcl jSaval Secretary. So decisive is this testimony considered by a number of the members of the committee, tfcat at such time as it may report, a minority, at least, will urge the immediate trial of Davis. Ruti.er on Geary. General Butler, in a recent speech at Ilarrisburg, express ed his opinion of General Geary as fol lows: "You, geutlemen, constituting the Union majority of Pennsylvania, are standing by those who stood by you, for I recognize in your candidate for Governor one of the best soldiers of the war, and one of the foremost and firmest and most reli able statesmen of your Commonwealth, of whom I can say from personal knowledge, not paying a compliment where none is needed, that no man will find in him, when elected, evcu a shadow of treachery to the principles to which he shall declare him self committed." A Voice From the Grave. The following extracts from the speech show, conclusively, that the disagreement between the executive and. Congress is of the President's own seeking, arid that his expression of regret that he was obliged to return the bill is simply pusillanimous : "Mr. President I have now gone through the veto message, replying, with what patience I could command, to its various objections tD the bill. Would that I could stop here, that there was no occasion to go farther; but justice to my self, justice to the State whose represen tative I am, justice to the people of the whole country, in legislating for whose behalf I am called to participate, justice to the Constitution I am sworn to support, justice to the rights of American citizen ship it secure?, and to human liberty now imperiled, require me to go farther. Gladly would I refraiu from speaking of the spirit of this message;, of the dan gerous doctrines it promulgates; of the inconsistencies and contradictions of its author; of his encroachments upon the constitutional rights of Congress ; of his assumption of unwarranted power, which, if persevered in and not checked by the people, must eventually lead to a subver sion of the government and the destruc tion of liberty. "Congress, in the passage of the bill under consideration, sought no controversy with the President. So far from it, the bill was proposed with a view to carry out what raeu supposed to be the views of the President, aud was submitted to him before its introduction into the Senate. I am not about to relate private declarations of the President; but it is right that the American people should know that the controversy which exist3 between him and Congress in reference to this measure is of his own seeking. Soon after Con gress met, it became apparent that there was a difference of opinion between the President and some members of Congress in regard to the condition of rebellious States and the rights to be secured to freedmen. The President in his annual message had denied the constitutional power of the general government to extend the elective franchise to negroes; but he was equally decided in the asser tion of the right of every man to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. This was his language. Rut while I have no doubt that now, after the close of the war, it is not competent for the general government to exttnd the elective fran chise in the several States, it is equally clear that good faith requires the security of the freedmen in their liberty aud their property. There were some members of Congrsss who expressed the opinion that in the re-organization of the rebellious States the right ot suffrage should be extended to the colored man ; though this wa3 not the prevailing sentiment of Con gress. All were anxious for a reorgani zation of the rebellious States and their, admission to full participation iu the Federal government as soon as theso relations could be restored with safety to all concerned. Feeling the importance of harmonious action between the different departments of the government, and an anxious desire to sustain the President, for whom I always entertained the highest respect, I had frequent interviews with him during the early part of the session. Without mentioning anything said by him, I may with perfect safety state that acting from considerations I have stated, and believing that the passage ot a law by Congress securing equality in civil rights when desired by State authorities, to freedmen and all other inhabitants of the United States, would "do much to relieve anxiety iu the north, to induce the Southern States to secure these rights by their own action, and thereby remove many of the obstacles to an early recon struction, I prepared the bill substantially as it is now returned with the President' objections. "After the bill was introduced a punted copy was sent to him. At a subsequent period, when it was reported that he was hesitating about signing the Freedmen's Bureau bill, he was informed of the con dition of the civil rights bill then pending in the House, and a hope expressed that if he had objection to any of its provisions he would make them known to it3 f riends, that they might be remedied, if not des tructive of the measure : that there was believed to be no disnositiou on tho part of Congress, and. certainly none on my part, to have bills presented to him which he could not approve, lie never indicat ed to me, nor, so far as I know, to any of its friends the least objection to any uf the provisions of the bill, till after its r ass-age: aud how could he consistently with him self? The bill was framed, as was sup posed, in entire harmony with his views, and certaiuly in harmony, with what he was then and has since been doing in pro tecting freedmen in their civil rights all through the rebellious States. It was strictly limited to the protection of the civil rights belonging to every freeman, the birthright of every American citizen, and carefully avoided conferring or inter fering with political rights or .privileges ot any kind. The bill neither confers nor abridges the rights of any one, but simply declares that in civil rights there shall be equality among all classes of citizens, and ibat all alike shall be subject to the same punishment. Each State, so it docs not abridsre the great fundamental rights be longing under the Constitution to all citi zens, may grant or withhold tuch civil rights as it pleases. All that is required is that in this reepect its laws shall be impartial. And yet this is the bill now returned with the President's objections, and such objections !" m ' Kgk- Hon. Daniel S. Dickinson died in New York, on. last Thursday evening, after a short but . very severe illness, at the advanced age of 66 years. " He was Attorney General of New York at the time of his death. It is well at this present political junc ture, when the probable course" of Abra ham Lincoln, had he livedo is a matter of general speculation, to reproduce a passage of his own recorded opinion. In a letter to Maj. Gen. Wadsworth, written while the battles of the Wilderness were in pro gress, he speaks as follows : "You desire to know, in the event of our success in the field, the same being followed by a loyal, cheerful submission on tho part of the South, if universal am nesty should cot be accompanied with universal suffrage. Now, if our success shall be realized, followed by such desired results, I cannot see, if universal amnesty is granted, how, under the cir cumstances,, I can avoid exacting in return universal suffrage on the basis of intelli gence and military service. How to bet ter the condition of the colored race has been a study which has attracted my rserious and careful attention, silence I think I am clear and decided a3 to what course I shall pursue in the premises regarding it a religious duty, as the na tion's guardian of these people, who have so heroically vindicated their manhood on the battle-field, where, in assisting to save the life of the Republic, they have dem onstrated in their blood their right to the ballot, which is but the humane pro tection of the flag they have so fearlessly defended." Adjournment of the Legislature The Fenna. Legislature adjourned fine die on Thursday last. Hon. Louis W. Hall, of Rlair county, was electrd holding over Speaker of the Senate. The follow ing resolutions were unanimously adopted by the House : "Hesolncd, That in the name of the Commonwealth we tender to Governor Curtin our thanks for the fidelity with which, during four years of war, by which our country was ravaged, and its free in stitutions threatened, he stood by the Na tional Government, and castinto the scale of loyalty and the Union the honor, the wealth and the strength of the State. tlJieaolvidt That by his devotion to his country from the dark hour in which he pledged to the late lamented President of the United States the faith and steadfast support of our people, he has gained for his name an historical place and character, and while rendering himself deserving of the nation's gratitude, has added lustre to tKerame and glory, to the name of the Commonwealth over which he has presid ed for two terms of office with so much ability, and in which he has tempered dignity with kindness, and won the high respect and confidence of the people." i m The Civil Rights Kill. LETTERS remaining UNCLAIMED IS THE POST OFFICK, At Ebensburg, State of Pennsylvania, April 1, 18GG. We print on our first page, to day, the law guaranteeing civil rights to all men, without regard to color. A perusal of the law, and a candid consideration of all its provisions, will expose the utter Tjnfair ucss and uncandidness of the opposition which this measure ha. provoked. If the principle of this law is unsound if the rights which it guarantees are unjust, then are the spirit and principle of the Declar ation of Independence and of the Consti tution of the United States untenable, un christian, inhuman and diabolical. " The Declaration of Independence declares and maintains that all men are born free and equal. The civil rights bill seeks to give practical effect to this sublime truth. The Constitution "provides for the gener al welfare secures domestic tranquility," both of which the civil rights bill seeks to secure in their highest sense. Such is the fair and only meaning of the civil rights law. We trust it will be carefrlly perused by all our readers. m Oi Gen. Grant Arrested. A Washing ton dispatch to the Philadelphia J'rtss gives the following account of tho arrest of General Grant for fast driving iu that city : "Yesterday afternoon, as Lieutenant General Grant was driving on North Fourteenth street, two officers attempted to stop him, as he was going rather fuster than the law allows. They, however, at first failed, but one being mounted on a fast horse, after a race of about three hun dred yards overtook the General aud in foriuei him that it was his duty to place him under arrest. Gen. Grant offered to pay the officer the fine, but the letter, not having power to receive fines on the high way, informed him that he should report himself at the station. The General ques tioned the right of the officer to arret him, and immediately drove off at full speed. The facts were yesterday reported to Superintendent Richards for such ac tion n ho mav seem fit to take. The General subsequently reported himself at the station-house, paid his fiuc, and was discharged like any other man." . m The Most Horrible Murder on Record. On Wednesday afternoon of last week, one of the most horrible butch eries ever perpetrated was made kuown in Philadelphia. A whole family of eight persons, named Deering, residing in the first ward of the city, were discovered to have been murdered and cut to pieces with an ax. The bbody deed had been perpetrated several days before, for the bodies when found were" in an advanced stage of decomposition. A German named Probst, who lived in the capacity of hired man with the Deering?, has been arrested and has confessed that he committed the deed. He- criminates a second " party named Younger in tho murder. Gen. Geary ha3 written a letter to' the business men of Pittsburg, in which he avows himself in favor of a general railroad law. David Brown, Mrs. Eliza Davis, 2 Michael Driskell, John S. Evans, John C. Elder, 2 O. O. Evans, Miss Eliza J. Griffith, Jackson Gibbs, Adam Schittig, Mark Hollermari, C. Hill, J. R. Humrnell, Miss Jane Jones, Isaac Kelley, Lient. Charles Lutier, A. W. Preston, John M'Coy, Tbos. .Scott, Julius Stich. To obtain any of these letters, the appli cant must call for "advertised letters," give the date of this list, and pay one cent for adver tising. It not called for -within one month, they will be sent to the Dead Letter Office. Free delivery of letters by carriers, at the residences of owners in cities and large towns secured by observing the following rules : 1. Direct letters plainly to the street and number, as well a3 the post office and State. 2. Head letters with the writer's post oTice and State, street and number, sign them plain ly with full name, and request that answers be directed accordingly. C. Letters to strangers or transient visitors in a town or city, whose special address may be unknown, should be marked, in the lower left-hand corner, with the word " Transient." 4. Place the postage stamp on the upper right-hand corner, and leave space between the stamp a'nd direction for pott-marking with out interfering with the writing. N.B. A request for the return of a letter to the writer, if unclaimed within 30 days or less, written or printed with the writer's name, post ofice, and State, across the left-hand end of the envelope, on the face side, will be com plied with at the usual prepaid rate of post age, payable when the letter is delivered to the writer. See. 23, Law of I8fv3. JOHN THOMPSON, P. M. LLOYD & CO., RANKERS EBENSKURO, PA. ri7 Gold, Silver, Government Loans and other Securities bought and sold. Interest allowed on Time Dosits. Collections made on all accessible points in the United States, and a General Hanking Business transacted. March 1, UC0-tf LI C EX SKI) AUCTIO NEK1L The subscriber, having taken out a regular license a3 an Auctioneer, is prepared to cry nil manner of Sales on short notice and at reasonable terms. Address JESSE WOODCOCK, mar26,05 Hemlock Cambria co. Pa. TO THE PEOPLE! ' "REMEMBER NUMBER ONE !" Bring your Greenbacks along and get your Horses shod for $2,00. You can get your Buggy or Wagon ironed or repaired at R. II. Singer's shop, near Isaac Evans' Tannery. Ebensburg, Oct. 12, 19G5-3m. E LDERSIUDGE ACADE.M Y.- Will open its Thirty-ninth Session on WEDNESDAY, APRIL 16th. For particu lars, address Rev. A. DONALDSON, March 20, 18CG-3t Principal. ikUlCK SALES, QUICK SALES, QUICK SALES, AND ANI - AND SMALL PROFITS !': SMALL PROFITS !" SMALL PROFITS !" BARKER'S CHEAP STORE ! BARKER'S CHEAP STORE ! BARKER'S CHEAP STORE I EBENSBURG, PA. EBENSBURG, PA. EBENSBURG, PA. BARKER'S ! BARKER S ! BARKER'S ! THE LARGEST STOCK OF GOODS, THE LARGEST STOCK OF GOODS, THE LARGEST STOCK OF GOODS, THE BEST SELECTED, THE BEST SELECTED, THE BEST SELECTED EVER BROUGHT TO TOWN t EVER BROUGHT TO TOWN ! EVER BROUGHT TO TOWN ! LARGEST ! CHEAPEST ! BEST ! LARGEST! CHEAPEST! BEST ! LARGEST! CHEAPEST! BEST! CO AND SEE . GO AND SEE ! GO ND SEE ! The subscriber rails the attention of the public to the fact that he has just received and opened out the largest stock of srnixG coops, srnixo g o ms, SPUING GOODS, both Foreign and Domestic, ever brought to Ebensburg. Buving twice as large a stock as any other merchant, in town, he buys cheaper, a. id can therefore sr!l cheaper, than any competitor. The public is invited to call before purcha sing elsewhere. No charge for showing goods, buy or not buy. Eictf" The highest market price paid for County Produce. A. A. BARKER, A. A. BARKER, A. A. BARKER, IIICH St., HIGH St., HIGH St., EBENSBURG. EBENSBURG. EBENSBURG. rpiIE LADY OCULIST. JL Miss LAURA LE SUER wi cessful practice has been well v'n ! Pittsburg and vicinity for the la t: years, hag now taken rooms at the . of Mrs. Stahl, High sL, Ebensburg r county, Pa., wHere she proposes spW summer for the purpose of treating " DISEASES OF THE rviTa The System is a cautious and safe"n never lion 1.-n it-n r . - - u io.il in KnKJ 11 . - M . . .tvo, cimer uronic will remove eiinr.na irom int. eyeballs, cure granulated pt,; hot 4 Via I . Ac- SUI; that the evolficKco j . bristles down iiVOn the eveballsnj' eventually destroying the" sight, a correct position Won. cr' .u a'! will strengthen and reside wea& stand:nc nil without b rJ:-' Lunar Caustic. R1ik Sinn . ut K: , severe remedies so frequently apj lv". ' destruction of the eyes. Miss LE SEUfl also treat; 0 RHEUMATISM ajtd NERVOUS U? two of the most lingering and pal-v eases to which mortals are sul.ject. i-V which proceed some of the most f eases of the eyes. But as disease; paper ana ueeas are TauA . ennsiaciory man worcs, sue would tVf respectfully call the attention of an i gent community to her practice, an: ..j .....v.- muicfeu io corae a--. me enect ot tue treatment for thenisel surinsr those whose they put themselves under her trcatm?' follow strictly the directions givtn thV certainlv he rewarded with HEAL'"'' AND SIGHT. These are facts, and facts are said stubborn things. EKVF.BESCEb : Rev. A. Baker, Pastor M. E ensburg. Pa. Rev. E. B. Snyder, Pastor Church, Pittsburg. Rev. J. A. Swarrey, Pastor E. Church, Allegheny City. Thomas Clark, Esq., firm ot Clark i! as. Pittsburg. Joseph Anderson, Esq., prorriet i:; Hotel, Pittsburac. Win. Edy, Esq., 31 Fifth st., Pitt;-. Tiiompson Bell, Esq., Comment Fourth St., Pittsbnrg. Rev. Templin Moore, D. D., FLiLii. March 29, lfcfi6-3m CLr:ts Lf-iTtr ORPHANS' COURT SALE. VALUABLE REAL EST. By virtue of an order, issuing or. Orphans' Court of Cambria county dersigned will oiler for sale, ca J10 the 30th, inst.. No 1. All that certain piece or -woodland, situate in Cambria townscl: one mile West of Ebensburg, adjoiri turnpike, lands of Alexander M Tick; others, containing seven acres and E. cs. This is a desirable property :. reciding in town, nd wishing to t or timber land. Sale to be held r.U , House. No. 2. Being all that certain sc,u?.Tr of land situate in the Borough of F.lt beginning at the land ofE.Sboer.i the north, an l extending thence nlor: alley south, 25 perches, fo land of la ell, thence west 1G perches to Julia: thence 25 perches alo.;g said street:. ti. noemaKer : containing iwo ar: c: acres, which. are under fence, nrJ .'s : state of cultivation. No. 3. All those five lots of crcr.?.'.. in the extended borough of Ebeu.-o" joing Triumph strct on the north, street, and lot of E. M'Griw on th:: ensburg k Cresson Railroad station south, lot of John J. Robert, nr. ;ti the west ; known a lots No's. 2. f. a 8, on a. p!an of t!:e sain laid out It Davis in his lifetime. .Immediate of all the said property will I e pi': the reservation of and the right ot Li the grain now growing thereon. a c y u i c viiv Uoii till, li in. , ey to be paid on confirmation, and ti I in one vear thereafter, with intere?: upon the premises by the bond arji of the purchaser. Sale to comment nt 5 cWi Divisions No's. 2, and 3. to be sAl premises. GEO. M. T.n Adm'r of Robert P.ivis. Ebensburg, April 12, 18Co-3t. BSgF Green, the Maiden bank robber and murderer, was hanged in East Cam- abridge, Mass., on Friday last. A Caki to Invalids. A Clergyman, while residing in South America as a Missionary, discovered a safe and simple remedy for the cuie of Nervous Weakness, Early Decay, Dis eases of the Urinary and Seminal Organs, and the whole train of disorders brought on by baneful and vicious habita. Great numbers have already been cured by this noble reme dy. Prompted by a desire to benefit the af flicted and uufortunate, 1 will send the recipe for preparing and using this medicine, in u 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, Statiox D, Biule IIoisk, New York. 23 Itch ! Itch! Itch! Scratch! Scratch! Scratch! WheatorCs Ointment will cure the Iteh in iS Hours. Also cures Salt Rheum, Ulcers, Chilblains, and all Eruptions of the Skin. Price 50 cent'. For sale by all Druggists. By sending CO cents to WEEKS & POTTER, Sole Agents, 10 Washington street, Boston, Mass., ifwill be forwarded by mail, free of postage to any part of the United States. "DUHLIC SALE ! JL There will be offered at TnblK the premises, on THURSDAY, the of APRIL, lFG'J, the Coal Panic kne' property of Evan K. Evans fc Co., mile west of Lillv's Station, on tl; Railroad. The Bank is in operation. nd working order at the present tin:f. are 47 Acres of Land belonging to i:. cood title. This Land front- on scone of Coal Lnnd. the vrodz. "A must come through it to srr-t to mark mouth of the Gangway is wixVAn tV.' of the P. R. R., which makes it vcr; nient- Will also be fold, together or to suit purchasers, 1 HORSE, 2 MULES, 10 COAL-WAGONS. BLACKSMITH TOOLS, And all kinds of Tools necessary t on the Coal Bfir.css. Also, i TONS COKE ! 2 Person wishing to pur..: questM to call ar.d examine U.e I rvf- Siile to commence a. one m., when tf rm3 v. ill be mrt.le k-. 11 K. E. r:VA jv- At the same time r. i will be o'.TYr-'d nt public sa ' Land containing acres. uate about one-fourth of : f Statu n, and having theri i ' frame House nd frame B.irn. , April 5, If 001 i : 1 ' H ANDBILLS ! BLANKS I CARDS! Printed at 'THE ALLEGIIAN1AN" OFFICE. ISSOLUTION F r.KT-Nt Notice is hrrebv H"1' .1 l .;.tm ! ner-nip ii e rrio iorr !-' -MILLS and V. S. B M.Kr ':-.t: the name of E. J. MILLS Un dissolved by mutual i.?'. t t. retiring.- All ptr-"ns kno" ; ' indebted to the said firru ar.,.j. make settlement. '. J "" The undersigned will coni.r. J til- business at the old x k Co., and respectfully rc-iv:fy? ; of the patronage given t " "f J. MILLS will continue to non business and make settlement- f Ebensburg, Feby. 17, A UDITOU'S NOTICK.- , . The "ndersigneu Au' by the Orphans' Court of tain- , report distribution of the vxoae -of Wm. Kittell, Esq., adnum. estate of John Reese, Jc"ai';;f the sale of Real Estate heret.. that he will attend to the .' pointment, at the y ht : missioned, on SATIMW', MAY, 186G, when and vriien t-cested may aUend. " Ebensburg, April 5, lS'3-tci- I it I ft 1 : i ii 3 if jfucc .'I; !, id t I. $.11 I i s .dt m ..i i 7 'lie low ft ini h ti $e I r.ts! We it ijti .in f i rvt! "Ort: .alt let i flxo ?Pok ?om: v fiui Lap tea! rpce at i at:d roui era Urc Crc ays Hot tin Viv Ia lost eft I hod is a V I i i tone otc lie t am( Mi .part