THURSDAY", MAY 3, 1866- u NION COUNTY CONVENTION! The Un ion Men of Cambria county, who were the friends of the General Government in the Ute War to suppress Rebellion, and who now hold that the great Principles vindicated in the Field must be preserved in the Councils of the Nation, are requested to meet in their respective Election Districts on Saturday, the 2Gi'A dny of Mcy, instant, between the hours of 8 and 7 o'clock, p. m., and select two Del- gates from each of said Districts to represent iuriu iu a. ounij orvenuon, to dc neia in the Court House, Ebensburg, on Monday the 2aih day of May, at one o clock, p, m when iind where Congressional Conferees will' be appointed, a County Ticket nominated, and ucn otner action taicen as the usages of the party require or the exigency demands. D. O. EVANS, Chairman Union County Committee, May 2, i860. Editorial Correspondence. Washington, April 28, 18C6. Your readers already know that we have imposed upon ourself the task of noting for their edification from time to time the distinguishing characteristics of some of tho men in the present Congress. Among those we will notice is Hon. John R Kelso of Missouri. Mr. "Kelso was born March 23d, 1831, in Franklin county, limited, and he never entered a school till hia twenty-fifth year. His motHer wa? hi early teacher, and around the home nreside he was instructed, in. the rudiments of a common education. After he became "a man, and had a family, he mastered a course of studies necessary to enter college and graduated from a Wes tern University. He haa been and still is a very laborious student, and even while in the army pursued the study of the languages with much success. Mr. Kelso is now devoting his means to. the erection of an academy iu his town, and intends on the close of his Congressional career, to give his life and labor to the cause of education. He is a useful member oi Congress, and though he has made but one set speech, it impressed all who heqrd it with the thought that the man himself was governed by a high "sense of duty. Mr. Kelso is a conscientious, patriotic, christian man, and cannot be swerved one hair's breadth from what he believes to be right. Such men are needed in the halls of Congress just now. too liable to decay to admit oceanic trans portation. The farmer's grain was all he had with which to pay for his cloth,- but with his cloth made at home, he pays for it with hia grain, his clover, his pheep, his chickens, his eggs, potatoes, turnips, beets, parsnips, and everythieg fit to be eaton, decayabla or not decayable, and for which under an anti-protective system he would have no consumer on account of the long distance between hina and those from whom he bought his wares.- Reconstruction. Protection, to American Indus try. That is an entirely. false notion that re gards the protection afforded by a high tariff as accruing only to the manufacturer. If the protective policy is at all worthy of Uhio, but moved with Ms parents to iMis- adoption by this country, it must work to 6ouriinl840, where he resided ever since. tne advantage, not of a particular State or section, nor of any special branch of industry, but must promote the welfare of the entire land, and of course of every species of industrial labor to which our climate and soil are suited. If, for ex ample, the foreign manufacturer makes and transports to us a yard of woolen cloth so that it can be sold to the actual consumer (say a farmer) for one dollar, would the article be in reality any dearer to the farmer if made at home and sold for one dollar and a half per yard ? Supposing the cloth to be manufactured across the sea, then some of our workmen here at home are either standing idle, or crowding into eome other (most probably agricultural) pursuit while foreign looms weave our cloth. Not our own, but for eign laborers, must be the purchasers of the produce of the farmer. The farmer's market, also, is three thousand miles away, Growing up in a slave State, among slaves, and in a community where anti-slavery principles were not tolerated, and educa tea py ultra pro-siavery parents, it is not etrange that he imbibed the doctrines inculcated by his parents, and by others with whom he was in daily intercourse Mr. iveiso wa3 thereiore tor a tune an ultra pro slavery man, and firmly believed in the divine authority of that institution Perhaps we cannot do bettor than to let 3Ir. Kelso tell his own story. In a letter to a friend, which we are permitted to copy, he says : ''I did not doubt the divine origin of sla very, and the terrible wickedness of those who opposed that divine institution ; and when, at seventeen years of age, I was or dained a minister in the Methodist Episcopal Church South, I 6et about strengthening myself, by careful study, so as to be able to crush the enemies of this our favorite msti tution. "I was candid in my investigation?, and as might have been expected, I tailed to find those strong defenses for slavery, which I had expected. "The farther I pushed my investigations, the weaker I felt my position to be, until, at twenty, after three years of careful mves tigation, I was compelled, in my own con science, to admit tnat 1 was on tne wrong tide. I still labored, however, in the church to which I belonged, but never touched upon he subject of slaverv, till near my twenty fifth year, when the corruption and disloyalty of the ministry of that church became 80 vident that I could no longer keep silent. 'I had possessed fine opportunities for observing the corrupting influence of slavery, as well a3 to witness much of its untold inhu manity, and, feeling .that I could no longer innocently remain connected with a church whose chief corner-stone was slavery, I left that church and united my influence with that of the few bold spirits who dared believe elavery wrong. "From that time to this, I have never ceas ed to contend for liberty and right. Through long, dark 3ears of proscription, even ve, unknown to the people of the North, I strug gled and wa3 sustained with the. belief that my cause was just, and the hope that the day would come when I should see the right prevail. "I saw my friends insulted, lorred and feathered, ridden on rails, sold at mock auctions, and then ordered out of the country. I saw scenes in the "slave markets and on slave plantations that make me shudder to this day. Wearied with these years of proscription, you will not wonder that I was the first man in my county to declare for the Union and enlist under her banner. I entered the Union army nt the very beginning of the war, and was never absent from my post till its close. It is understood that the Committee of Fifteen have agreed on a plan of recon struction to be submitted to Congress and the country for ratification. The plan is embodied in the following proposed Con stitutional Amendment : "Article Section 1. No Statesball make or enforce any hw which shall abridge the pnviloge? or immunities of citizens of the United States, nor shall any State deprive any person ot lite, liberty or property without due process of law, nr deny to any person within its jurisdiction tho equal protection of tho laws. - "section, 2. Representatives shall be apportioned among the several States which may be included within this Union, ac cording to their respective nnmb-pra counting the whole number of nersons in each State, excluding Indiaus not taxed. But whenever, in any State, the elective franchise shall be denied to any portion of its male citizens not less than twenty one years of age, or in any way abridged, except for participation in rebellion or other crime, the basis of representation in such Stat 6hall be reduced in the propor tion winch the number ot such male citi- j zens shall bear to the whole number of i . . . I male citizens, not less than twenty-one vears ot age "Section 3. Until the 4th dav of Julv 1870, all persons who voluntarily adhered to the late insurrection, giving it aid and couitort, shall be excluded from the rih to vote for members of Congress, and tor electors tor .President and Vice Presideu of the United States. "Section 4. Neither the United States uor any State shall assume to pay anv debt or obligation already incurred,, or which may bereatter be incurred, ' in aid of insurrection or war against th United States, or any claims for compen sation for loss of involuntary servico or labor. "Section 5. The Congress 6hall have power to enforce, by appropriate legisla tion, the provisions of this article." A bill to provide for the restoration of the States lately in rebellion to. their full yet he must send his produce there and I political rights, by admitting delegations deduct from his gross receipts the cost of transportation. If the manufacturer of the cloth sells it so that the farmer gets it from his store-keeper at a dollar a yard, the price the manufacturer of the cloth can afford to pay for the farmer's wheat and other products must be proportionable to that he gets for his manufactures. That is, the manufacturer selling his cloth at a dollar a yard can pay for instance eighty cents for his wheat ; but did he sell his cloth for a dollar and a half a yard, he could pay one and a half times more, or to Congress, and a second bill debarring leading rebels from holding office, is also reported, including the following. clauses : "First. The President and vice Pres ident of the Confederate States, so-called, and heads ot Departments thereof. "Second. Those who in other coun tries acted as States. "Third. Heads of Departments of the United States, officers of the army and navy ot the Uuited States, and all persons educated in the military or naval academy ot the United States, Judges of the courts of tha United States, .and "members of, either Houses of the 3Cth Congress of the agents of the Confederate one dollar and twenty cents, for his wheat. United States, who gave aid or comfort to l?nf tho. fVirmAr bnn nor Hia orlinn nf the late rebellion. sending his wheat to some other market. He owes the storekeeper for the cloth, and the storekeeper owes the importer, and the importer the foreign manufactur- er. me loreign manufacturer pays transportation on his goods the same dis tance as the farmer, but as his wares are not one-fourth as bulky as the farmer's grain, his transportation bill that he has to deduct from the gross receipts for his cloth is not a fourth what the farmer de ducts from the gross price received for his grain. The farmer, then, when he "Fourth. Those who acted as officers of the Confederate States, so-called, above the grade of Colonel, or Master in the navy, or any one who, as Governor of any or tne uonieoerate Mates, gave am or comfort to the late rebellion. "Fifth. Those who have treated offi cers or soldiers, or sailors of the army or navy of the United States, captured dur ing the late war, otherwise than lawfully as prisoners ot war. Colorado. The active part which he took in favor buys from the foreign manufacturer, must of the Union brought down the vengeance of the rebels upon him. In the winter of 1861, they burned bis dwelling and drove his family out into the snows, without food or clothing. One of his children perished, and the others, with his wife, then in very delicate health, endured Bufferings at which humanity recoil;?, and the heart sickens ! These outrages upon his family strengthened his heart, and nerved his arm, and mads him almost invincible in battle, and in sixty-one engagements with the enernv.of hi3 Country, he did not forget the hardships find trials to which his loved one? at home had been subjected. He was detailed by m 1 1 special order to rai.se ana commana a battalion, to hunt down those infamous desperadoes called guerillas, who infested 31iisouii and Arkansas. This mado his life as a soldier one of thrilling adventure, unsurpassed perhaps hy even romance send ins grain to the manutacturer in payment for his cloth or other wares, and take for it a price proportionable to that for which he has received his cloth. Meantime the capital and labor that would otherwise be engaged in manufac turing at home have either gone abroad or are in our fields, plowing, sowing, and reap ing, so that we are all producers of the same agricultural staples. On tho other hand, puppose tho cloth to be manufactured at home and to cost the farmer one dollar and a half a yard. Much capital and labor are taken from agriculture and put into manufacturing nureuits rinht here at home. As the first benefit, the farmer saves the transportation of his produce over the ocean. The men that are weaving hid cloth arc anxious for his grain. They will pav for his grain ro than he can get for it in foreign lands, and the proof of this is that the - .. .. ! - itself. By his owu hand he "smote Hum farmer docs get more lor Ins grain in times hip and tliiyli," and many of those blood- of protection right at his own door than thirsty scoundrels were forced to bite the dust. The name of Kelso became a terror to those infamous guerillas in all that region, and the country was soon cleared of the presence of the outlaw? and marauders. In consequence of wounds he received and the hardships he endured, tiis health wa3 very much impaired, and fu 1864, while still in the 6crviee, hi friends ran him for Congress, and, although be had no opportunity to canvass his dis trict, yet ho was elected. His early sdrauta-es for an education were very- in otner times no win receive ironi tne foreigu manufacturer. But from this the farmer gains little or nothing, the differ t i i -l i .i i i ence being naiancea oy ine eunancea price of labor caused by the demand for workmen in manufacturing pursuits. When the farmer's customers, however, and a resident physician who ministered The United States Senate on Wednes day, by a vote of 19 to 13, passed the bill providing lor the admission of Coloraao, and we presume no serious objections will be offered to its adoption in the House of Representatives, as no important influence will be exercised on the composition of that occy by the admission ot a single member. Although the population- of Colorado is comparatively small, it may now be considered stable, and is probably destined to rapid and regular increase hereafter. The Territory has suffered heretofore from the mutations common to placer-mining countries, but has outlived theai all, and substituted lode-mmmg in terests, which possess as much perma nence as those involved in the coal-mines or iron-works of Pennsylvania. Large amounts of capital being required to de velop the inexhaustible treasures which lie buried in the heart of the llackv moun tains, the admission of Colorado will ex ercise a beneficial influence upon her des tiny, by giving additional security to those who are disposed to make investments in her mining companies, and the aggregate wealth of the uatiou will thus be greatly increased by this important measure. m m i CnoLERA. Two emigrant sbips, the Virginia and the England are now lying at Quarantine, six miles below jjew York City, with Asiatic Cholera on board. The pestilence broke out on the vessel after they had left Europe. On the Virginia, up to Sunday, 61 had died and 70 were still under treatment. The mortality on the England is also large. The latter vessel touched at Halifax on her voyage, were beyond the sea, he could Dot sell them his hay, for it was teo bulky for transportation, nor his eggs, nor butter, uor sheep, nor any ol those vegetables so necessary for life and comfort, but to the cholera patients onboard, has since died of tho disease. There is considera ble consternation in New, York. Antoine Probst has been convicted ot the murder of the Decring family in which from their Dature are too fragile or1 Philadelphia. Jeff. Davlw In Prison. From Richmond, says, the correspon dence oi the Chicago Journal. I went down the James river to Fortress Monroe On the way objects of interest were point ed out, Fort Darling, Butler's Butch Gap Canal, Harrison s Landing, City Point, Jamestown, the first white settlement in the ' New World, Newport - News, &c. Upon introduction, I obtained a pass to euter the fortress, whero I had not been many hours, when I met the great rebel chief, Jeff. Davis, face to face, while he was taking his usual daily walk in the ramparts under escort of an officer by his side, and two armed soldiers behind him, and . I had a good view of him as he pas sed me. He was well dreseed, had a light colored felt hat, and new boots. His eye was clear and bright, his step firm, and his bearing proud as a Roman conqueror iie is inauigea in tnis recreation every day, and is apparently cheerful and free from care. During these walks he fre quently recites scraps of Latin and Greek poetry. He is privileged with the use of the fane library of the Fortress, and is per- miitea to write, ot course under inspec tion of tho commanding officer. He is a great smoker, and when in his apartment employs his time in writing, reading and praying. Alternately is very quiet and pious, and restive and boister ous. He freely expresses his opinions about the generals and leaders ou both ciues. iiq ininxs ij uieiian was our greatest General, and says Giant is no soldier, nothing but a butcher; Lincoln was a good natured man, but a jackass ; Andrew Johnson is pretty 'smart, and in clined to do the fair thing so far as he can, but he is not a great man. He thinks his c ipture very unjust, an he was paroled by the surrender ot Lee and Johoson, and says that if he had any idea ot being tak en lie could easily have made his escape. He was terribly enraged at whatFoote, of Mississippi, said of him, and declared that Footc was a "constitutional liar," that he "had often told him so;" said he was glad when he made his escape from the Con federacy, and that he "gave orders to let him go, and not to 6top him ,7 adding, "I was glad to get rid of such a nuisance." "The Duke of Marlborough," Jeff says, "deserted hi3 sovereign, fouaht success fully under the banners of another prince, and his name has come down in Lis tor v as one of the noblest men and greatest of generals of his time. But Marshal Ney, cne of Napoleon's famous generals, who, after the banishment of Napoleon to Elba, gave in his adhesion to tho ruling powers, and again joined his chief on his return, was, after his final overthrow, taken and shot as a traitor." His commentary upon these historic facts was this: "Treason never prospers, for when it does none dare call it treason." It is of no consequence to any one who knows from what source or by what means I derive my information concern ing the sayings and doings of this bold, bad man. I can only say the recital ia perfectly true and to be relied upon. ' " m m. The TricUf ua Panic. We have published a number of arti cles on the subject of. the disease said to be so injuriously affecting pork, both in this country and in Europe. The assur ances of medical men who have analyzed the disease go to show that the panic, which has been suddenly created, is not justified by the facts. The truth seems to be, indeed, that all animals may have trichina, and yet live in apparent health, so infinitesimal is the little wire-worm, discernible only with the miscroscope, which hides itself in the muscles of the flesh. The Chicago Academy of Science has had the subject under elaborate con sideration for a month past, and submitted a long report. They declare that-trichina have been found iu swiuc slaughtered in that city, and that out of 1,394 examined, twenty-eight, or about one in fifty, were infected. They unanimously declare that swine may be kept from contracting the disease if not allowed animal food, and that pork may be used without the slight est apprehension it the following coudi- j tions are complied with : That every por tion of the meat cooked exnerience a'tem- perature of at least 100 t'egrees Fahren heit ; or that it be properly salted and smoked for ten days ; or that it be thor oughly desiccated. In fact, in old hams, trichina is never found. Pickling, it ap pears, produces but a slight effect. It ap pears from the statements made in this report that trichina exists in the swine of this country to a much greater extent thau iu Germany, the proportion in that country beiug onl3' 1 in 10,000 ; and, further, that the number of trichina in the infected hogs is also much greater being, in some of the cases examined, as high as 18,000 to the cubic inch. The committee do not think there has been a single instance authentically reported in America of death from trichina, yet a panio has been produced in the mind of our public by the news which has reached us from Germany concerning the disasters which has occasionally followed the con sumption of pork in raw state. In their view, it would be folly to discard this kind of meat from our list of articles of food, when all possibility of injury attending its use may be avoided by the most simple means. J5Sf Vallandigham called , on Thad. Stevens recently, and in course of conver sation stated that if the President did not immediately begin to appoint Democrats to office he could not retain the adherence of a srogle Democrat three weeks longer. Some of the Republican Senators and Congressmen talk of a perpetual ses sion as a means ot checking the alleged injudicious appointments and policy which the President may see nt to adopt when Congress adjourns. Green peas and strawberries have appeared iu the city market, X ORETTO MARBLE - WORKS ! JLi The undersigned begs leave to inform tlie citizens of Cambri and adjoining coun ties that he has just received a stock of the finest It&lian and other Marbles at his estab lishment, in Loretto. Cambria county. Pa. Monuments, Tombs, Grave Stones, Table and JJureau tops, manufactured of the most beau tiful and finest quality of Foreigu and Domes tic marble, always on hand and made to order as cneap as they can be purchased in the city, in a neat and workmanlike manner, and on the shortest notice. The public are respectfully invited to give me a can oerore purchasing elsewhere, as I am confident that my work and prices will satisfy any person desiring anything in my line of business. Now is the time to get a'chenp job 1 JAMES WILKINSON. Loretto, May 3, 1866:ly UDITOR'S NOTICE. In the Orphans' Court of Cambria county, in the matter of the confirmation of me account of E. J. Waters, administrator of David E. Davis, dee'd.: And now, to wit, 12th March, 18CG, on motion of Geo. M. Reade, Esq., Samuel Singleton appointed Au ditor to report distribution of the assets to and amongst the persons legally entitled thereto. Extract from the Record. JAMES GRIFFIN, Clerk. Notice is hereby given that the duties of - .w.vu.ng ajjp-.iuiLutm win ie auenica to at my office, in the borough of Ebensbur- on Wednesday, the 23d day of May, inst., when and where all persons iuterested may attend SAMUEL SINGLETON, Auditor. May 3, I866:3t ITTSBURG LIGHTNING ROD WORKS. LOCKIIART & CO., manufacturers of both Copper and Iron Lightning Rods, Duquesne Way, 2d door below Hand StrteW Bridge, 1'ittsbcbg, Pa. t2T Wholesale Dealers are invited to send for prices. Persons of large or small means wishing a good paying business will please address us. , may3:2t rpiIE LADY OCULIST 1 JUiss LAURA LE SUER cessful practice has. been well! Pittsburg and vicinity for the l years, has now taken rooms at 1 of Mrs. Stahl, Iligh St., Ebebur? county, Pa., where she proposes I summer for the purpose ot irei 1- o DISEASES' OF THE EY The System is a cautious and C fiammation of the Eves. will remove extrann,,, . Chronic from the ihat art F URNITURE ! In addition to the general assortment of dry goods now being by us received, we will, on the 1st day of May, offer, nt low cash prices, the best assortment of FURNITURE and UPHOLSTERING GOODS ever brought to this market, consistiogof Dressing Bureaus, Bed Stead3, Loungps, Tables. Mattrasses. Pillows, etc. Warerooms, second story of store building. E. SHOEMAKER & SONS. Ebensburg, April 30, 18Gtt-3t. AUDITOR'S NOTICE. . The undersigned Auditor, appointed by the Orphans' Court of Cambria county, to report distribution of the money ia the hands of Wra. Kittell, Esq., administrator of the estate of John Reese, deceased, arising from the sale of Real Estate, hereby crives notice that he will attend to the duties of said ap pointment, ut the office of the County Com missioners, on SATURDAY, the 5th day of MAY", 18GC, when and where all persons in terested may attend. WM. II. SECHLER, Auditor. Ebensburg, April 5, 186C-td. the eyeballs, cure granulated VJ the eyelashes, instil f . bristles down upon the eyeballs .J i eventually destroying the sih' J-?,'c a correct position heenmo "t. will strengthen and restore wek in wiiiiouc me use of ti ' V1V.) "iuC oiuue, orarrrf severe remedies so frequently anDfv' : destruction of the eyes. " Miss LE SEUR also trea-3 , two of the most lingering and r.Z , eases to which mortals are suljeot. . wuicu proceea some ot the most fr.y. eases ot tue eyes. But as diseases wiiii ueeus are n.;.v . satisfactory than words, she would tC" respectfully call the attention of an "w gent community to her Dractic- tj cordially invite the afflicted to COII1P '.r the effect of the treatment for themseV. suring those whose cases are curable ; they put themselves under Her treatm?: follow strictly the directions given, tL certainly be rewarded with HEALTH AND SIGHT. " These are facts, and facts are eia stubborn things. BF.PEsr.scEs : . Rev. A. Baker, Pastor M. E ensburg. Pa. Kev. b. 15. Snyder, Pastor Cfc Church, Pit'sburg. Rev. J. A. Swaney, Pastor Bearer f E. Church, Allegheny City. Thomas Clark, Esq., firm oi Clark &T as, Pittsburg. Joseph Anderson, Esq., proprietors Hotel, Pittsburg. Wm. Edy, Esq., 31 Fifth st., Pittsb- Tnoinpson Bell, Esq., CouimercLll rourth St., Pittsburg. Rev. Templin Moore, D. D., Phihj. March 29, l8C6-3m t a i v.t i t I i i i -v it LLOYD & CO., BANKERS EBENSBURG, PA. t3 Gold, Silver, Government Loans and other Securities bought and sold. Interest allowed on Time Deposits. Collections made on all accessible points in the United States, and a General Banking Business transacted. March 1, 1866-tf JUST RECEIVED I A full assortment of MEN'S AND BOY'S CAPS. A large assortment of OVERCOATS, GENTS'. SCARFS, TRUNKS A fplendid assortment of PUBLIC SALE OF REAL EST: The undersigned will expose to by public outcry, at the Court House,; borough of Ebensbnrg, on SATURDAY 10th dav of MAY next, at one o'clock, r the following real estate, of which Wherry died seized. A lot or piece of ground, situate i: borough of Ebensburg, being part of h: 134, designated on the plan of s.iid Ur fronting on High st. 27 feet, and cut back 41 fee t, bounded on the east bv I, C. T. Robers, and on the west by lot cf Has son, Eq., having thereon tTcctedi.v building, rt centlv occupied by GeorefC,-- and now occupied by Mrs. Conncll. ALSO: A lot of ground, designated or. plan of said borough by the No. lftS. fro: on High st. 66 feet, and extending back :i Carolina st. 264 feet to Sample St., ta thereon erected two adjicent dwelling Lo:: a iog stable, and other out-ljuildincrs. ALSO: About 5 acres of ground, she: in the east end of the borough of Vbemkz jeing composed oni oi lots -os. Ij, i.s, r 9, known as the ''factory field," bour.i:4 the south by the road leading to Loretto. the north by land of Daniel O. Evan;, the east by land of David Jones, and os west by land of Samuel Baxter. ALSO : All the right, title, and i n teres Jane AYherry, of, in, and to lot No. 77. in borough of Ebensburg, bounded da these by Sample St., on the north by Crawford and on the west by Phaney st", bavin? th' on erected a frame dwelling house .iuJ f:. stable, now occupied hy Lewis Rodgers. lerms : One-half the purchase raonf b paid when the propert balance in one vear th to be be secured by the WM. KITTELL, iels y is sold, n: I ereaf'er, with inlrr l judgment bond? of I 1 CARPETS I At A. A. BARKER'S, Ebensburg, Pa. 6 Q UICK SALES, QUICK SALES, QUICK SALES, AND AND - AND SMALL PROFITS r SMALL PROFITS !" SMALL PROFITS !" BARKER'S CHEAP STORE I BARKER'S CHEAP STORE f BARKER'S CHEAP STORE I EBENSBURG, PA. EBENSBURG, PA. EBENSBURG, PA. LETTERS remaining UXCLAlMI ix the rosr orncr, At Ebensburg, State of Pennsylvania, April 1, 18GG. Mark Hollerman, C. Hill, J. R. Humme'l, Miss Jane Jonei, Isaac Kellev. Lieut. Charles Lut: BARKER'S ! BARKER'S I BARKER'S ! THE LARGEST STOCK OF GOODS. THE LARGFTST STOCK OF GOODS, THE LARGEST STOCK OF GOODS, THE BEST SELECTED, THE BEST SELECTED, THE BEST SELECTED EVER BROUGHT TO TOWN I EVER BROUGHT TO TOWN ! EVER BROUGHT TO TOWN ! LARGEST ! CHEAPEST ! BEST ! LARGEST! CHEAPEST! BEST I . LARGEST! CHEAPEST! BEST I GO AND SEE ! GO AND SEE ! GO AND SEE! The subscriber calls the attention of the public to the fact that he has just received and opened out the largest stock of SVRIXG GOODS, SPRING GOODS, SPIIIXG GOODS, both Foreign and Domestic, ever brought to Ebensburg. Buying twice as large a stock as any other merchant in town, he buys cheaper, aud ean therefore sell cheaper, than any competitor. The public is invited to call before purcha sing elsewhere. No charge for showing goods, buy or not buy. X&grTbe highcet market price paid for County Produce. David Brown, Mrs. Eliza Davis, 2 Michael Driskell, John S. Evans, John C. Elder, 2 O.' O. Evans, Miss Eliza J. Griffith, A. W. Preston, Jackson Gibbs, John M'Cov, Adam Schittig, Thos. Scott, Julius Stich. To obtain any of these lettes. the sr p-' ' cant must call for liadcertinl lttirr " r'w d:ite of this list, and pay one cent for ft'lvt tisinff. If not called for within one nonih, lb will be sent to the Dead Letter Office. Free delivery of letters by carriers, at : residences of owners in cities and large tof secured by observing the following rules: 1. Direct letters plainly to the street t number, as well as the post office and Sti 2. Head letters with the writer's vo-'f r and State, street and number, sign them pis ', ly with full name, and request that ans:'. be directed accordingly. 3. Letters to strangersor transient v:-!:: in a town or city, whose special address c be unknown, should be marked, in the lc--left-hand corner, with the word iiTranff' 4. Place the postage stamp on tte iT' right-hand corner, and leave space be:tf the stamp and direction for post-ma-bsj out interfering-with the writing. N.B. A request for the return cf,'rtt: to the writer, if unclaimed within 30 days c less, written or printed with the writer's post office, and Stale, across the Uft-hmu oi me envelope, on ine lace sicie, wui .. plied with at the usual prepaid rate of P;'1' age, payable when the letter is delivered -the writer. Sec. 2fi. Law of 1S;'.3. , JOHN THOMPSON, P. v Ik D1SSOL1 Notice 77-. ..tTP ution of irtni:k ce is lierebv jriven tmu "cjt"T MILLS and V. S. the name of E. J dissolved bv mutual consent. L. J BARKF-R, tradirg e--MILLS & Co., is th: , C retiring. ineuif'- All persons knowing in.'olit.! in ih ctid firm p.re rcouf!e make settlement. - E. J. MILLS i The undersigned will continue the rricrci- tile business at the old s-tand of E. J- , & Co., aud respectfully requests a continuw - . ' . - A -l . i j firm. eft of the natronflrre riven to the oM u'u J. MILLS will coutinueto have charge business and make settlements. T V. S. HATSU Ebensburg, Feby. 17, 18C6. A. A. BARKER, A. A. BARKER, A. A. BARKER, niGH St., niGH St., HIGH St.. EBENSBURG. EBENSBURG. EBENSBURG. -T-xu TimMAS it DOVT.E. liaT1IM I located uermanentlv in Chess Sp-1". VlCeS IU lUC CllliCUS VI IU1II yia... - - . a r k ti VntifrS S.0's Uuice one uuur suuic c. . .. Chess Springs, April, 23, 1866-4ir rt wrt t. J.-Tr in Cl"fM Watches, Jexulry, Musical lnstm " tioDS, &c, Evljisburg, Pft-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers