THURSDAY, MAY 31, 18C6. REPUBLICS UNION TICKET. With mnlice toward none, with charity For all, with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right) let tia strive on to finish the work we arc in ; to bind up thn nation's wounds ; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, find for his widow and his orphan ; to do all which may achieve and cherish a just and a lasting peace among our clvc8 and all nations. Abraham Lincoln's Second Inaugural Addrest. govebnob : Gen. JOHN AV. GEARY, of Cumberland co. CONGRESS : DANIEL J. MORRELL, of Johnstown. Subject to decision of Congressional Conference. ASSEMBLY : JOHN J. GLASS, of Munster township. ASSOCIATE JUDGES : JOHN WILLIAMS, of Ebensburg. CHARLES B. ELLIS, of John3town. KKGISTER AXD RECORDER: WILLIAM A M'DERMITT, of Clearfield tp commissioner: HENRY FOSTER, of White township. AUDITOR : JAMES M. COOrER, of Taylor township. rooR norsE director: CHARLES BUXTON, of Jackson township. Tlie Uelegale Election. The Delegates of the Union Party itft tabled on Monday, pursuant to the rail of the Chairman of the County Com mittee. The proceedings of the Conven tion, and the ticket placed in the field, can be found elsewhere. Among the resolutions is the following : "Re tched, That we endorse and. approve the course of lien. A. A. Barker, our Repre sentative in Congress, and are grateful for his labors and votes in behalf of measures which we regard as of vital importance to the interests of the country' The passage of this resolution was not desired by the present Congressional Representative nor by his fiiends, but protested against by both. The leaders of those who controlled the Convention Insisted, however, upon its passage. We will not stop to ask why they so insisted, though some persons might wonder on reading the resolution that its supporters endorsed first and approved afterwards. Perhaps they felt they could go it blind, having such unbounded confidence in the present Representative. It may be that in all the host of the solar system of the Cambria Iron "Works, there was not intel ligence enough to discern that approval should precede endorsement, at least among conscientious men. Wc might, but will not, suggest that the anomaly might be the result of a habit formed in consequenco of an entire absence of con science, and naturally cropped out -in the resolution. The Convention, however, by the votes of the men who opposed the renomination of our present Congressman, "endorse and approve" his course and declare themselves "grateful for his labors and votes in behalf of measures which they regard as of vital importance to the best interests of our country.'' By the mouths of these witnesses, then, there is no just occasion for a change nor for giving the other counties of the District an equal claim with this one to the nomi nation. On the other hand, the party owes a debt of gratitude to Mr. Barker. Such is the Official Record and who made it ? Was there then a private pur pose to serve ? Was there spleen to gratify ? Or did the lesser planets and the satellites that revolve about the sun of the eolar 6ystem of the Iron Works deem it essential to show their worshipful at traction toward their great centre 1 We suppose it was because of the un deniable truthfulness of the resolution quoted, that it was industriously, and no less industriously than falsely, circulated that tbo renomination of the present in cumbent of the Congressional office was nought by bis opponent of iwo years ago and by others of like Democratic faith. What shall bo said of the devotion to principle, of love for the great acts of the present Congress, in men one of whose shibboleths was to threaten that "Barker cannot be re-elected : Johnstown will not support him." Wc will show you better devotion, not to a man, but to truth and principle. Whoever is the duly chosen nominee of the conferees shall receive our full and unabated support, even though the nomination should fall to the centre pf the JchiiSitown Solar System. If there is satisfaction jn the reflection that a tri umph jVas been secured over a "faithful" Representative, to whom the party is un der a debt of gratitude for his services while he ttas earning hi right to be cal led faithful, a triuaph gained by threats not to support him if nominated, and oth er means of still worse character, then be the satisfaction theirs. The result in the District is vet id bd ascertained. That the nomination rill is given to the county is a doubtful proposi tion, though those who produced the pres ent condition of affairs in it assert that thev will secure the nomination. .Will se cure it. How ? What kind of influence is to be used ? A kind of which mention daro be made in public ? The District contains many able men. It will be hotly contested. The nomination is now open to any who chooses to seek it. Each county has a claim equal to that of any other county in the District, Let the District then put forth its strongest man, and let each good union man seek to make sure of the election of our nominee. General Grant's Opinions. The editor of the Lewistowo, Maine, Journal has been favored with an inter view with General Grant at Washington, and sends to his paper some notes of the conversation which occurred. The first statement made is to the effect that while the Lieutenant-General smoked twenty cigars a day in the field, he now gets along with eight or ten ; but some others are of more importance. General Grant recognizes the presence of disloyal senti ment in the South : "A year ago," said he, "they were willing to do anything ; now they regard theniselvc3 as masters of the situation. Some of the rebel generals," he added, "are behaving no bly and doing all they can to induce the peo ple to throw aside their old prejudices and to conform their course to the changed condi tion of things. Johnston and Dick Taylor particularly are exercising a good influence; but Lee is behaving badly. He i3 conducting himself very differently from what I had rea son, from what he said at the time of the surrender, to suppose he would. No man at the South is capable of exercising a tenth part of the influence for good that he is, but instead of using it he is setting an example of forced acquiescence so grudging and per nicious in its effects as ro be hardly realized." The General expressed his opinion that the tone of "certain men and certain papers" at the North is doing incalculable mischief "in making the late rebels believe that they are just as much entitled to rule as ever, and that if they will only stand by what they are pleased to call 'their rights' they will have help from the North," and reiterated his wish, expressed some time ago, that "the New York Daily Netrs and kindred sheets" might be sum marily suppressed. lie expressed the same views given in his lately published letter, as to the needed immediate increase in the regular army, and casually remarked that he thought Sheridan, with two thou sand American soldiers and plenty of American officers, could "clean out Max imilian" in six month?, with the co-operation of tho Mexican?. Have Deserters a Right to Tote. In Ilarriaburg, on Friday, what is known as the "Franklin county" deserter case came up on an appeal for hearing be fore the Supreme Court. The facts in this case may be briefly etated as follows : Henry Reilley, the plaintiff, a citizen of Frankiia county, was drafted into the mil itary service of tho United States on the 19th day of July, 18G4, and having been regularly served with a notice of his con scription, he refused and never did report to the Provost Marshal of the 16th Dis trict for service in the array of the United States, nor did he furnish a substitute, or pay the required sum of money therefor. When the plaintiff of the case offered to vo'.e in the township of Hamilton, county of Franklin, on the lOlh of October, 1865, the judge of the election refused to re ceive his vote, on the ground that the plaintiff wa3 a deserter from the military service of the United States, and in con sequence thereof was disfranchised by the act of Congress providing for the enrol ling and calliDg out of the national forces, approved the 3d day of March, 1865. When the case came up in the Franklin county court, on the suit of Henry Reilly vs. Benjamin Huber, Judge of Election, judgment was rendered against the de fendant in favor of the plaintiff, for one dollar and costs of suit, thereby annulling the law of Congress, and relieving all des erters, heretofore citizens of Pennsylvania, so far as the decision of the lower court is concerned, from the penalty uf disfran chisement. To this decision the defend ant appealed, and on Friday the case was argued, as stated above. Decision reserved. Buchanan's Ex-Secretaiiy of tiie Interior in Paris. Jacob Thompson, Secretary of the Interior under the "sage of Wheatland," is just now in Paris, and very desirous of returning to this country and renewing his allegiance with the Fed eral Government. He denies any longer the existence of the right of secession and accepts the fact of the abolition of slavery, an institution which he deems was a posi tive harm to the Confederate cause, and does not believe that any sensible person would harbor the idea of resuscitating it. He upholds the veto of the Civil Rights bill, which he declares was an unconstitu tional act, on the ground that it will not only inflict great evils upon the negro, but because it must necessarily give the black a certain degree of superiority over the white man. He says that all legislation for the negro ought to bo local by State legislatures, for the reason that men who have iver lived in the South and know no?hin of the actual relations between reaster'and servit there, cannot legislate properly, &?. The pM story. B,A financial pannr k agitating Eng land at present. Union County Convention. The. Union Nominating Convention of Cambria county met in the Court House, Ebensburg, Monday, 28th instant, at 1 o'clock, p. m., and was called to order by D. O. Evans, Chairman of the County Committee, and organized by the election of Dr. John Lowman, of Johnstown, President, and Stephen L. Evans and Cyrus Elder as Secretaries. After calling the roll of delegates, and settling contests, the Convention proceeded to express the preferenco of Cambria county for Con gressional nominee. H. A. Boggs, of Johnstown, nominated D. J. Morrell, Esq. W. R. Hughes, of Wilmore, nominated the Hon. A. A. Barker. A ballot was had, which resulted in the choice of Mr. Morrell, whoso nomination (with the exception of one dissenting voice) was made unanimous. Mr. Morrell was authorized to appoint his own Con ferees. The Convention then proceeded to nom inate a county ticket, with the following result. " Assembly John J. Glass. Associate Judge .John Williams. " " -C.B.Ellis. Register $ Recorder Col. Win". M'Dermit. Commissioner Henry Foster. Auditor Jas. M. Cooper. Poor House Director Charles Buxton. The following resolutions were offered and adopted : Resolved, By the Union citizens of Cambria county in Convention assembled, That we are now, as heretofore, devoted to the Union, the Constitution and the enforcement of the law3 ; that the friends of the Government of the United States and the flag thereof, are our friends, ind are alone deserving of our sup port, and that we can never consent Jo give place and power to the perjured men who for four years waged war against our country, or to the more cowardly traitors who sympa thized with rebellion, and rendered it their powerful political aid and support. flesolved, That we have implicit confidence in the National Union Organization, and the loyal masses North and South ; re believe the great party that, in the face of every dis couragement and by virtue of enormous sac rifices, conducted, the war to a. successful issue, possesses the wisdom and patriotism to settle the political questions now before the people, upon the best and surest founda tions, so that peace and justice, liberty and union, may endure to the latest generations. Resolved, That as citizens of the great Iron District of the great Iron State of Pennsylva nia, we are iu favor of such a revision of the Tariff and Revenue laws of the United States, as will a3ord adequate protection to domestic industry ; we believe that labor alone Is the creator of all values, and that the first duty of Government is to care for and sustain the laborer. Resolved, That we endorse and applaud the action of the House of Representatives of the United States, in passing a bill to equalize the bounty of Union soldiers, to whom the country owes a debt of gratitude which can never be paid. Resolved, That we are proud to know that the late Union Convention of the State of Pennsylvania took no step backward, but held the flag of our country full high ad vanced, with liberty inscribed on its tolds ; that the platform of the Convention meets with our entire approbation, and we promise to General Geary, the hero of Lookout Mountain, who marched victoriously from Atlanta to the sea, the largest Vote ever polled for a loyal man in Cambria county. Resolved, That we endorse and approve the course of the Hon. A. A'. Barker, pur'Repre sentative in Congress, and are grateful for hi3 labors and votes in behalf of measures which we regard as of vital importance to the best interests of our country. Resolved, That the administration of the Public Affairs of Pennsylvania by Governor A. G. Curtin during the period of our history marked by the most gigantic rebellion on record, has been attested by such constant watchfulness, unwearied labor, unyielding courage, patriotic devotion, and shining ability a3 have made his name illustrious in the annals of this Commonwealth, and given him a place in the memory and affections of the people which will not be forgotten. After the appointment of a County Committee, which will be named here after, the Convention, on motion, adjourned. Tlie Impending- Crisis In Europe. Several distinguished Copperheads, under the lead of that arch-traitor Cowan, Doolittle (whose constituents have also asked him to resign his eeatin the Senate,) and Clymer had, as we are credibly in formed, a mutual "admiration eociety meeting," at the Continental Hotel, in Philadelphia, a day or two since, at which time Clymer was affectionately implored to decline as a candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania, and accept the "position of Minister Plenipotentiary to some foreign court, for the benefit of his health. Cow an was the chief spokesman and ready to do'all the dirty work anything to dis tract the party that made him respectable in life: Tho appeal to Mr. Clymer to withdraw was a bitter pill, but Cowan is said to have been most earnest, solemnly assuring him that it was an impossibility to elect him, and Mr. Clymer is represented to have finally yielded. It this should prove true, the majority of General Geary will: be increased to one hundred thousand. liar. Tel. i tm JEST" Ileister Clymer, according to the Reading Journal, is studying practical navigation preparatory to taking command of the Copperhead flotilla that will set out, after the October election, to the head waters of Salt River. On Tuesday of last week, be, in company with some forty ladies and gentlemen, embarked at Columbia, Pa., on a raft, and passed down the Susquehanna as far aa Port Deposit, where they took tho boat for Havre-de-Grace, and the cars for Philadelphia. They will find going vp stream more difficult, but Mr. Clymer will no doubt be equal to the "emergency." jSetF The Republic is the name of the new Johnson organ launched oq the wave of journalism in Pittsburg. The war which has so long be6d im pending over Europe has hot yet begun, but the last hope for the preservation of peace has departed, and the last prepara tions for actual hostilities have, been com pleted. Tho entire armies of Prussia, Austria, Italy, Bavaria, Wurtemburg, Saxony, Hanover and most or all of the minor German States have been put upon the war footing, an3 the official declara tions of the Governments of Prussia, Aus tria, Italy and England agree in repre senting war as fully determined upon. England, as the Earl of Clarendon stated in the House of Lords, was willing to of fer her good services for the preservation of peace ; but standing alone she "could do nothing against the determination that war was the most effective means the only effective means of giving effect to an ambitious policy." Austria still appears anxious to avert war, if possible. She not only adheres to her offer to disarm, so. soon as Italy and Prussia will do the same, but she has of fered to open new negotiations with Prus sia concerning the Duchies of Schleswig and Holstein on another basis. But Prussia and Italy are more anxious for war than Austria for peace, and shrink from every offer that could possibly avert war. Both are bent on apgrandizemeor, and if they should be unable to escape the restoration of peace, the heavy expenses incurred by their armaments would be useless, and would have to be repeated perhaps under circumstances less favora ble. The speech of Louis Napoleon settles the question on which side the whole pow er of France will be employed. In pub licly announcing to the world that he "detests" the treaties of 1815, and does not intend to make them the "basis of the foreign policy of France," he declares his alliance with Italy, which endeavors to set aside those treaties, and his antagonism tc Austria, which in them finds the sole guaranty of her existence. The an nouncement is strikingly similar to the famous words addressed on New Year's day, 1859, to M. de Hubner, "regretting the relation between Austria and Italy." While Loui3 Napoleon announces his sympathy with Italy, the minor German States openly range themselves on the side of Austria. Saxony, on the sitting of the Federal Diet, on May 5th, moved that Prussia should be requested to make a pa cific declaration, as otherwise the Diet" would be compelled to take those steps which have been provided by Article 19 of the Federal Act. This resolution, threatening Prussia with the declaration against her of a federal war, was adopted on the 9th insfc. Prussia made her com pliance with the resolution dependent upon the disarmament of the other mem bers of the Confederation ; which, under present circumstances, is equivalent to a defiance of the authority of the Diet. This new complication may bring on the opening of hostilities in Germany at any moment. The first scene of the war will be the Kingdom of Saxony, which both belligerent parties are desirous to occupy. In Italy, an atfack upon Venetia was expected on the 11th of May. The rumor has already proved to be errqneous, but the appointment of Gen. Garibaldi to an important command will accelerate the opening of the war in this quarter. m m A Monitor to go to Europe. The continued harpings of the foreign press, especially that of England, says the Philadelphia Press, against the Amer ican or monitor system of iron-clads, and their assertions that such vessels could never cros9 the ocean, and were entirely useless in a heavy sea, are about to be disapproved by a practical test. An opportunity has been afforded by the passage of the joint resolution congratu lating the Emperor and the people of Russia on the escape of that sovereign from assassination, and Captain G. V. Fox, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, has been deputed to convey the resolution to Russia and present it to the Czar. He will proceed thither in' the Monitor Miantonomab, sister ship to the Monad nock, which has recently made such a successful trip round Cape Horn to Val paraiso, on her way to San Francisco. The Miantonomah is now at Halifax, awaiting the arrival of Captain Fox, and will soon start on her voyage. After performing his errajwi to the Czar; Captain Fox will take the Miantonomah to most of the European seaports for the purpose of examining the present condition of the navies of the Powers. It is easy to imagine the utter amazement that will be created by the advent of this iron monster in Europe, not only at her armanent and complete impregnability, but at the refu tation of the prophecies so fondly indulged in by the friends of broadside iron clads. The sight of such a vessel will do much to create a wholesome appreciation of the power of the American navy and the geniu3 of the American people in con ceiving and consummating such a work. It would be well were her commander allowed to demonstrate the power of his guns by a shot or two at one of the unwieldy broadside ironclads of England or France. Were he allowed to do so, the fate of the Bhip would be forever sealed, for it would quickly be sent to the bottom. There is little doubt, however, that the opinion held abroad concerning these vessels will be radically changed by the transatlantic trip of the Miantonomah. Gen. Orris S. Ferry has been elected U. S. Senator from Connecticut for 6ix years from the 3d of March next, when the term of the Hon. Lafayette S. Foster will expire. He is an able, ear nest and. eloquent champion of advanced Republican principles, and will fill the seat with eminent ability and fidelity. C. O. I. It. Stephens. At the present moment the most prom inent man i. e. the man most talked about on this coutincnt is unquestiona bly James Stephens, C. 0. I. R., that is, Chief O rganizer Irish Republic, who landed in New York on lasU Thursday week trom .trance, where he had remain ed for about a month after his escape from Ireland in a fishing boat. For the time being President Johnson and his right hand man, Seward, and even Gen. Grant, are one and all eclipsed by the Irish ref ugee. His origination of the Fenian fol ly in Ireland, his arrest, his romantic es cape from Richmond Bridewell, and his equally romantic passage to v ranee from the Irish coast, have surrounded him with a halo of notoriety which will give Yan keedom a new sensation to write and talk about for a few days. But who is James Stephens ' The Stephens family are old residents of the City of Kilkenny, in Ire land ; and ever regarded there as the staunchest of Protestants. The father of James Stephens was a dyer by trade, and had his dye-house on John street in the city alluded to; his uncle was, and we be lieve still is, a sexton of the ancient An glican Cathedral of St. Canice, in the same city, while auother uncle is a printer by trade, and worked tor a number of years in the office of the Kilkenny Mod erator, during the proprietorship of Mr. Denroche, now dead. He alterward started a small job office ou his own ac count, but uoc being very successful, came to this country, and worked in Brockville for a few months, soaie three years since. It will thus be seen that Stephens comes of a decent Protestant connection in the lower walks of life. The father, the dyer, was the best off of the whole family, and was enabled to give James a tolerably good education at the ancient endowed grauimarschool of the city of his birth, and which grammar school is so pleasantly situ ated ou the banks of the beautiful Nore, and within plain view of the lordly castle of the Ormonds. Circumstances threw Stephens in the way of Smith O'Brien, and visionary and excitable, he entered into the wild plans of the latter, and was out with him in his brief and inglorious rising of 1818, which received its quietus at Billingary, a village in Tipperary, and close to the border of the county Kilken ny. More fortunate than his leader, Stephens, although slightly wounded, managed to escape to France. His liber al education now stood him in good stead, aud becoming a careful student of the French language at Paris he bye-aud-bye returned to Ireland almost competent to teach it. As a French teasher he had ready access to many respertable families in the city of Dublin and vicinity, and it is said that he even taught the daughters of Judge Kecgh, who recently tried so many of his treasonable friends. But the result of Smith O'Brien's rising in 1848 had not cured him ot his revolutionary ideas, which speedily assumed a Fenian complexion. .With his arrest and flight to America the public are already ac quainted. Brockville (Canada) Monitor. m "- m A A'ovel Picture. Two great forces fell before the con quering armies of the Republic the rebellion in the South and its Democratic allies in the North. Had Jefferson Davis succeeded slavery would have held one half the broken Republic and modern Democracy a good share of the other. These two combinations, triumphant in the same cause and over the same enemy, would have marched along the same path of cruelty, conquest, aggression, and crime. But their overthrow was accomplished in spite of their unity and desperation, and when they were conquered none so readily admitted their fate and awaited their punishment as themselves. In less than a year they find the executive agencies of a victorious Government diverted to their personal forgiveness and their res toration ro power. He who pronounced their doom voluntarily iuvites .them to controlling positions ; and as if to complete a reality which a few months since would have been discarded as the vision of a maniac, they are summoned to assist him iu the proscription of the great bodies whose strong arms and stout hearts de feated them with the bullet in the South and the ballot iu the North. There is only one thing necessary to complete the miracle, and that is for the party that defeated the rebels and elected Johnson, to consent to assist in these novel nuptials Dctwecn the Gavernment of the United States and the traitors who attempted its destruction. '- All goes smoothly with the new Atlan tic cable. It is now coiling at the rate of two miles an hour in the tanks of the Great Eastern. The Amethyst hulk is moored alongside of the great ship off Shcerness, while the Iris is ladea in turn at Greenwich, and will supply the Ame thyst's place as soon as the latter is emp tied. -Thus manufacture and stowage go on concurrently, and at the moment one" part of the great wire is receiving its ele mentary coating ot Chatterton's compound or perhaps spun at Birmingham, other J portions arf laid down in the great ship ready for the final paying out. The Lon don Daily Neics says : Tests, both of in sulation and continuity,- are ceaselessly put by the electricians. Nor are these confined to this year's venture. The old cable on board is for this purpose connec ted with the. new, and messages were transmitted on Saturday, April 28th, through a total distance of cne thousand five hundred and six nautical miles. There were then four hundred and eightv- two of these miles in the after tank, seven! hundred and sixty-seven m the main tank, and two hundred and sixty-seven in the fore-tank; and to make the test more searching and complete, communication has lately been established betwesn all these and tho chore. An Old "Revolution During the first five years of the r olution, a promising, healthy u1" a. uujuuuu oi eleven years to a of sixteen. He then, with knarJf his back and firelock on his eh took his place in the ranks of the' nental army. At reveille and J mounting, on the march and in the' John Gray stood for a snU;a. ,r eighty-six years ago. He shared i? hardshins nml nrrila nf ia: i-r rnmranpii four nt nlih, . .. - -muut ereSOYmi . en mat war and .: next nnrl tUa n?f U . uu v -inuug lilt j p.. march, hi hhl nrr.ro,lna ilf.n & J "-"i it'll OUt" after another, till John Gray f0DJ fiplf mnroliinre nlnr 7 'i ... ."""'o oiuiB. aioae. 4 humanity, aged 102 years. luTj than the nation fnr fought. His Dersonal renipml,Mr.: ' braces scenes and events, for the ka- cage ot winch other men are indelte-i history. He is one of thf. fpw mr,:. indorsers of tne Declaration, all of vtl signers have long since died. lie lived to see tho three millmna .,f freed from a foreign vnl-p ten-fold, and to hear the liberty tha: proclaimed through all the land. claimed to all the people in the Jfoj: The birth and the new birth of thetvj are emoraced vmnin tho period of remembrance. Honor to old Jnf, r and his few compeers, the veneraLiet vivors oi "the old war." BS,Gen. Dick Coulter tas rtk: the role he was expected to plav tC Johnson and Cowan and defeat GJ lie has given the little firm cf r1 tionists notice, to use Dick's own emphatic than classical language, th: "is not to be taken for a d dloul' he declines to run for Governor e support Clymer. Who ill next be t by the little coterie of political trai:. i ho il i he r TUBLIC SALE. JL "Will he exposed to public sa!c, x. residence of the subscriber, in the Ward, Ebensburg-, on TUESDAY, the of JUNE, 1SCC, the follow ing j ropt-rt- 4 head Horses, 1 TTngon, Shi.'l Sled, 2 Horse Rakes, 4 sets Harness, 1? and other articles too numerous to en: Fale o commence at 1 o'clock, p. z.. said day, when term3 will be niaJr i.w E E. r;. Ebensburg, May 31, lFCo. SHIELDS HOUSE, LORETTO. CAMBRIA CO., PA THOMAS CALL A A" J'n Accommodations ;n:jurpassed by acre Hotel on the Mountain. fMarS!, T i ICEXSE NOTICE. I J The following named persotsAvof their petitions for licenses, wh;cn v It sentea Tor tne action ot tlie Lo urt of Cu-J 3n eof, on jL:1 ?ec Cw. Dc- iI r. I i 1 f k ih; c e 49 lese 4- county, before the Judges there 4th June, lS'J. To wit: Tavern. Philip Faddd & Co., Allegheny tp.;i liaker, Larroll tp. ; Aaar.i kunz, G: bor. ; Daniel MIoaalJ, Cambria bor.: ward Howe, Cambria bor. ; Michael L;i:: Clearfield tp. ; Peter Malzie, Cont-aiaagi; 1st W. : Francis Seitz, Conemangh L:r VT. ; John Sirert, Conemaugh lor.. Z: jonn risiier, Lonemaugu bor., 2d W ; Downey, Johnstown, 2d W. ; J&hn Et: Johnstown. 2d W. ; John Kraft, Jolt? 3d AV. ; Remiguis Durach, Jolinsto-.i -John B. Mvers. Loretto mr. WVn Jte Loretto bor. ; Joseph Geis, likV.ui George Conrad, Richland tp. ; Pete: E Richland tp. ; Victor Voeg-htly. Satasf tp. ; Henry Hughes, iiumruitvUle bur.; hart Kest, Taylor tp. ; AViliiam CaHea, V ington tp. ; Isaac Crawfor-j, Ebensbur; icoj . .Michael J. Smith, Allegheny Joseph Col?, Curro.'ltown boro. : Fr.-.r.. Grosbergcr, Carrolitowu bor. : Lawrence: Carrolltown bor. ; Lawrence Scroth. G" town bor. ; Joseph Cole, Carrolltown Jacob Glasser, Chest tp. ; Joseph Sho?: Conemaugh bor., 2d A ; George r Ebensburtr, AY. AA'. : John B. AVillianis l- town, 2d AA". ; J. B. M'Creight, John.-roir: . ; K-.c&arU Jlly, Johnstown, 2d D. Nicholson, Johnstown, 2d IV.; V'm. Pal .Inlinston-n YV - r-;3 Vtt.mr JriVT?t 4th AV; Dominick M'Hugh, Millviejor.;E- ue. James, Milmlle bor. ; Lawrence tc:. Taylor tp. ; George AV. Mulliu, AYasfu:. tp ; Veronice Reilly, Washington tp.: Wilkins, AVashington tp. ; J. A. Moore J' burg, E. AV. ; S. F. Georg-e, Chest Sprb? J. Piatt, Susquehanna tp. ; John A. i Ebensburjr, AV. AV. : Geortre N. Ilo. -Tnhna tntrn dfh IV Van- M V. " ' J 1 T .k&JU .Hill - Chest fcpnngs bor. : Owen bweenv, AVi-SGun ton tp. u- f Quart License. Henry Schnabel, Johnstown bor.. -:if0 8 Cyrus Hart, Johnstown bor., 4th !iei Goughnour, Johnstown, 3d AA'. : n. h Of .tk t 7 in i i fc. ii t hi. GEO. C. K. ZA1IM. CItrtC- May 10, ItsGb-3t TN THE COURT of COMMavnl- 1 OF CAMRRTA COFSTY In the matter of the petition ot liams et al. for the Corporation oi w- c-ongreg Aiionai v.nur;n oi tucu-o 64 June Term, 1866. And now, April 4, 1866, petition re directed to be filed, and notice of sa;u ' cation to be advertised in The AlUgf -three successive weeks. By tue i-- 7th May, 1806. GEO. C. K. ZA11V May 10, 1866-3t EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Letters testamentary on the e:--Mrs. Jane Roberts, late of the bc-r Ebensburg Cambria co.-, deceased. ' been granted the subscriber by the of said county, all persons indctteu estate are hereby notified to make of their respective accounts, ani tho claims against it will present them- P authenticated, for settlement. E. J. WATEBSi Ebensburg, May 17, 1866-Ct. i-s. TO: i AT TTmTAV XJ Notice is hereby given that i- , v .r itwetn nersnip ucreiuiuic ciui'"!; uw. Snyder and Silas Byrne, in the Luo incss, on the Susquehanna River, i . The business will hereafter be carr the subscribers. r i?S SNYDER, GILLIXGn AM GA Susquehanna tp.r May 2lSCo- R1 EES J. LLOYD, . c w Siic.or of a. : nT3TTfls MfcLUUlOf-' - My- Office on Main toueet, V(Twm Hotel. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers