1 " THURSDAY, AUGUST 23.i86a.- KEPUBLmkX UNWN ' TICKET. With' mrtt tovrttrd none, with charity for all, 'with firinftrss in the right, its God gives ns to se the right, let ns strive on to finish the work w are In ; to bind up the nation's wounds; tJ cre for him who shall haTe borne the bottle, and for his widow and his orphan; va -do all which may achieva and cherish, ft jast and a laetiog pence among out elv and all nations. Abraham Lincoln's fjwfxf Inaugural Address. OOVESWOR : Cn. JOHN W. GEARY, of Cumberland to. CCSOHEJS : DANTEL J. WORRELL, of Johnstown. Sulject to decision of Congressional Confersnce.') appbmblv : JOnK J. GLASS, of Allegheny township. AssociAtK judges: JOTTN "WILLIAMS, of Ebensbnrg. CHARLES B. ELLIS, of Johnstown. nroiRTrB and becoiter : "WILLIAM A M 'DERM ITT, of Clearfield lp COMMISSIONER : HEKRY FOSTER, of "White township. AruiTOR : JAMES M. COOPER, of Taylor township. pooh worse pirector : CHARLES BUXTON, of Jackson township. Arrival or Cockalorum Lnffln 6(ok. HE HIMSELF ANNOUNCES HIS COMING HE RECIPROCATES CIVILITIES nE ADVISES TIIE PEOPLE! For pome time past, rumors have been afloat that our cotemporary, the Democrat tt' Sentinel, was to undergo a change in its editorial, as also in its financial, depart ment. Last week,, these rumors pave place to a positive statement to the effect that a W. II. M'Eorue, hitherto of Wilmore, in this county, had purchased the establishment and assumed his posi tion in the editorial 6anctum. We beseech the pardon of our readers for supposing that only an ordinary personage, a gen tleman of good manners and of respecta ble culture, was about to become a resi dent of our quiet " village. We beg forgiveness, also, of Cockalorum for our egregious mistake in supposing him to be on ordinary personage as before described. We confess that we were napping, and so failed to discover the true title of our heroic adventisf. Laboring under our strong delusion, we penned the following paragraph, wherein we sought to" extend an ordinary courtesy and welcome : "A Cn asoe. Mr. Clark "Wilson haa disposed of the Dent. $ Sent, establishment t Mr. W. H. M'Enrae, by whom it will hereafter be conducted. The outgoing and incoming editors have our best wishes." We deeply regret the modesty of our brief announcement. Had we known the other titles that of right are to be claimed by the individual whose coming we her alded, we would have made an endeavor to be equal to the jjecasion. A3 the next best thing to be done, we herewith give the public all the principal acts and savings of COCKALORUM LAFFINSTOK Eubequent to his arrival. But few per Eons, very few indeed, were aware our town was to be honored by one eo distin guished. In fact, most, if not all, of those who were confidentially made aware of Cockalorum Laffinstok's coming, inno cently supposed him to be what the modest title we gave him indicated. But they were deceived. - COCKALORUM ANNOUNCES III8 COMING. "We come amongst yon not us a 6tranger to battle for the right! of Democracy, nor as a pleading supplicant for your smiles and approbation. Claiming little Cambrians the land of our nativity, there is no necessity that we should iisk for a continuance of the patronage heretofore extended to the Democrat $ Sentinel." COCKALORUM RECIPROCATES. We need not preface the reciprocation by any cxterded remarks. Suflice it to pay that no one whose veins are not full of the purest Laffinstok blood could have replied to our welcome in the following peculiar style : "We return thanks to our neighbors of the Alleghnnian, for their we!l-wishes in our new enterprise. Although their color is somewhat different from ours, their wishes of success are nevertheless accepted." : Tho only explanation of this allusion to color wo can give is the supposition that the Laffinstok family suppose themselves to have inherited the blood of tho African general Hannibal. But we refrain from asserting ihi, and ask our readers to bo content with taking for granted that the allusion is to the African blood permeating through that of the Laffinstok's, without inquiring whether it is traceable to Hannibal or not. FURTHER MAGNANIMOUS CONDUCT OF COCKALORUM LAFFINSTOK. He says : "While looking out of our sairetum window yesterday, a cullered gal of African descent looked up and smiled approvingly at ns. We suppose she thought 6he was passing The Alleghaninn office." A few families of African descent have been residing in, our midst for some year.-", but as they are universally known to conduct themselves with propriety and humble madesty, the only explanation we cau suggest of thtf foregoins alleged occur rence is that the female person alluded to is a member of the Cockalorum Laffinstock family, whohirtng accompanied Cockalo rum Laffinstock hither, consented to play the part ascribed to her. As the peTsona of color in our community always demean themselves properly, and do not seek to form acquaintance with the like of Cock alorum, we are made con fid en! in our assertion that Cockalorum has no allusion to them in tho magnanimous article we have clipped from his paper. TJCMIL1TY AND REFINEMENT O COCKA LORUM LA FFI N 8TOK. The following is a fair example of Cockalorum's English, and shows at once the humility and the superior refinement of tho Laffinstok b!ood : ""Wjistib. Local matter from every sec tion of the country, subscribers for the Senti nel and a n'gger baby to worship in spare moments, and also to keep ns in mind of our insignificance." COCKALORUM OFFER8 BIS ADVICE TO 6UCH CITIZENS A8 COMPOSE OUR BABE PALL CLUB. Before giving the remarks of this dis tinguished member of the Laffinstok lin eage, we will furnish a sketch of those persons who compose the club. There are forty-three regular members, some of whom are members more for the sake of encouraging a manly and innocent sport than any other purpose. The members who visit the grounds of the club and take an active part in the games number about thirty-five. Of these, eight were too young to bo included in any draft ordered. Nevertheless, twenty-three were in active service in the army. Those that served with the militia are not coun ted as having been in the service. Of the twenty-three in the army, eight act with the late Democratic but now National Union party, and fifteen with the National Republican party. Among the Democrats are some who have borne wounds, some who have suffered imprisonment, and some both wounds and imprisonment. Among the Republicans are men of whom the same may be said with equal truth. Not one in the club has ever been t Canada refugee, a laurel or a thistle eater, or sought at any time by flight, or by concealment, to escape the Tigors of con ecription. Nor is there one against whom any charge has at any time been brought of endeavoring to evade his liability to conscription by any dishonorable means whatever. Every member old enough to act on his own responsibility has some reputable calling. We wish to show you, dear reader, not that the members of the club and Cockalorum Laffinstok arc equals, but that Cockalorum Laffinstok in. giving his Baconic fj) advico to the club was speaking to men who, though not of distinguished origin, are able every one of them to date his ancestry as begin ning with Mr. Adam, proprietor of an Edenic garden, situated on the eastern border of the Mediterranean. But here are the word? of Cockalorum Laffinstok: "The Base Ball Club of this place still con tinues the practice of this innocent amuse ment. It is good exercise for small school boys, but we do not approve of men between twenty-one and forty-five engaging in it. A great many who are now counted good on "home runs" could scarcely walk one hun dred ynrd3 when the Government ordered a draft. How is it, Base Ball players ?" COCKALORUM LAFFINSTOK'S PATRIOTIC ELOQUENCE. ''The Sentinel will be published without fear, favor, or distinction. The frowing walls of Fort Lafajette and Mifflin no longer are opened to receive us. The bell of Seward no longer demands incarceration. The garments dyed in blood have passed away. The reign of terror is at an end. The midnight slum bers of our citizens will no longer be dis turbed by the tramp of the press gang or the defiant ytlls of the 'truly loyal.' All these scenes have been enacted, kind reader, within the 1 jst six years. And what has been the result? ''The question can be answered by the most illiterate amongst you. A few words will embrace all, namely: Taxes, Niggers, and a divided Union. "With these few words intended as an in troduction where none !s needed, we enter upon the publication of the Democrat $ Sen tinel, hoping that it will receive the support and approval of our Democratic friends, as long as it upholds Democratic principles and no longer." LAFFINSTOK A POET. A& an introduction to Cockalorum's sublime verse, we give two lines from an obPcure English poet named William Shakspeare : "I had rather be a kitten and cry mew Than one of these same metre ballad-mongers." But the lines of Laffinstok not beinir guilty of metre, cannot come under the denunciation of W. Shakspeare. The effort of Cockalorum, of which we will give you an example, is a parody on a poem called "The Raven" by Edgar A. Poe, who (we may as well tell it) had no Laffinstok blood in hh veins : "Then I pondered o'er my fate and thought of my native State, While the sweat adown my brow did freely pour, I could not then repent so away to h 1 I went. While a sweet negro scent brought me head- " Jong to the door, . Brought me headlong to that fearful prison door. Where I should remain forevermore. I had not long to wait, soon hinges bejan to grate, And the d 1 made his appearance at the door, He welcomed me with pride and asked me when I died, And said he would me guide to a cell on the. first floor, a cell on the rst. floor jastr6pVosiie-thefabl to kceffth-Jjr;ar.jBOt,jJtfiaw? Wber 1 8hoiema!areVeore; I fcSft And leave him. lion. IXelster Clymer and Gov James I Orr. . ; 1; During the sitting of the late Phila delphia Convention, tho Central Johnson and Clymer Club held a meeting each evening. Among other persons of note, who made ppeecbes, was Governor James L. Orr, of South Carolina. The fact that Governor Orr had been in active rebellion against the United States seems not to have abated his popularity with Clymer Democrats a single iota, for upon ascend ing the stage, he was greeted with three cheers, and upon rising to speak, he was loudly applauded and again given three cheers As was natural and proper, he congratulated himself on being able again to be by the side of his old Democratic brethren. Governor Orr makes very fair, promises. He makes the people of the South appear very contrite and willing to do more to uphold the results of the war than even the steadfast North. Of the public debt he says : "Although your public debt was contracted in a war against that section from which I came, I should feel that any rcpudiatioa of that debt tarnished my honor." Governor Orr for several sessions was a member of the H"uso of Representatives and once its Speaker. At each session, and when he became Speaker, he took a solemn oath to support the Constitution of the United States; yet in sixty-one, he violated his oath and plunged into rebellion. Hence, it is very natural to take the Governor's fair promises at a pretty large discount. . Then, again, for the Governor, in speak- ing to Northern people, to call the public debt "your public debt" and to say as he does, "I am in favor of acknowledging all debts contracted by your government, or my government, for whatever purpose," is simply to vtter words tha: at the North will mean one thing and at the South may mean another. The people of Pennsylva nia will not likely be deceived by such juggling. The Governor has made more straightforward promises many a time, and broke them as he would a thread. On behalf of the people of the South, the Governor says : "The Nationality of the Government has been definitely set tled. The Union is inseparable and the South is ready to stand to the decree made upon the field of battle. We accept the decision, and intend to carry it out, and to aid you in carrying it out." Very good, so far as it goes, but the Nationality of the country is not the only thing settled by the war. Also, "the people of the South are better satisfied with the settle ment than if it had been a decree made by the most powerful government on earth." Some of our readers may think these promises indicato the true feeling of the people of South Carolina, but let us ex amine the acts of the people of that Slate through their chosen Legislature and State Convention. Tho President required of South Caro lina during the fall of last year that she would ratify the amendment abolishing' slavery, that she would repudiate all debts contracted to aid the rebellion, that the ordinance of secession should be declared void from the first, and he also desired the passage of a code in refereoce to free persons of color that would be acceptable to the country, at the same time doing justice to the white and colored population. South Carolina ratified the amendment abolishing slavery under the pressure of a telegram saying, "The President consid ers the acceptance of the amendment by South Carolina as indispensable to a res toration of her relations with the other States of the Union." Previous to this, her Legislature refused to ratify the amendment. Her Convention repealed the secession ordinance, , but adjourned refusing to declare it void from the beginning. Yet Governor Orr expects the loyal North to believe hi saying that the people he rep resents accept it as settled that the Union is inseparable. The State has not to this day disavowed "debts and obligations created or assumed in her name on behalf or in aid of the rebellion." Nor does Governor Orr inti mate any intention of her so doing. She did, however, pass a code lor her freo negroes, of which the following are featurts and extracts : That a free person of color shall not sell any garden vegeta ble, cereal, fresh or salt meat, poultry, or any product of a farm, without authority from his master, or a district judge, or a magistrate. All persons of color making contracts for their service or labor shall be known as servants, and -those with . whom they contract, as masters. District judges may bind as apprentices negro children between 18 and 21';fe'ars 2 of ag wboso parents aro not apparently whera thia Wa -nuts h.'W 4 whenever - inejur utofrogra-. w ,r T?-fTiil contamlnalionT This code as so noton- ouslywcked that Gen. Sickles to the present time prohibits its enforcement. Who shall we DcKeve-Gov. Orr.speaking for" SouHh 'Carolina or. Suth iQaroUna herself? , , . " y . - The Johnson Conyention which met in Philadelphia last week ,wa3 as respect able in point, of numbers' and 'talent as Democratic convocations usually arc. Doolittle, Cowan & Co. engineered the concern, assisted by a horde of lesser lu minaries. The great work, in fact the only work achieved by the Convention was the fulmination of a "Platform of Principles" and an "Address to the people of the United States," in each of which the main idea underlying the mass of words is that rebel Congressmen should be allowed to represent rebel constituen cies in the National Legislature. The proceedings of the Convention were laid before the President on Saturday by Messrs.xBandall & (o.t on which occasion the President made acharacterieticjspeech, saying much about the Convention, more about the Constitution and the Union, but most about his "policy." The Mifflin County Convention met in Lewistown on the 13th inst , and appoint ed D. W. Woods, Jesse JMendenhall and John Henry, jr., Congressional conferees, with instructions to support Col. John P. Taylor, of Mifflin, as their first choice for Congress, and D. J. Morrell, of Cambria, as their second choice. - Tho Huntingdon County Convention met in Huntingdon on the 14th inst., and" jnstructed their Congressional con iefees to vote" for Capt. Bricc X. Blair, of Huntingdon, for Congress. .' Pennsylvania Sends Greeting to . . the Loyalists of the South. The Union State Central Committc of Pennsylvania has issued the following address, extendiug a hearty welcome to the patriots of the South who will meet in convention in Philadelphia on the 3d proximo : Philadelphia, Aug 16. The Union State Central Committee of Pennsylvania send greeting to their bravo Union brothers of .the South, and extend to them a heart welcome, on theoccaion ot their meeting in this city, on Monday, the 3d day of September next. History iurni.-hes uo parallel to the patriotism, courage and fidelity of those men who, from the beginning of the. rebellion to the end, fought the good fight, and kept the faith. The question to be decided is whether loyalty is to be proscribed and punished in the persons of patriots like these, or treason rewarded and houored in the per sons ot the guilty authors and agents of the rebellion. Shall the loyal masses or the baffled and defeated traitors govern the country? In these great issues all are vitally concerned, and our Southern compatriots have instinctively turned toward the spot whence the Great.Charter of American Liberty was first proclaimed, and propose, within the sacred shadows of Independence Hall, to renew their J vows of fidelity to tha principles of that immoitai crceu, ana to aice counsel wnn ineir union irienas. "On behalf of the loyal men of the Commonwealth ol Pennsylvania, this Committee hereby gratefully extend a cordial welcome to these "patriots and friends from the Southern States. All who come will be received with open arms and warm hearts. ' The Union men of the entire Common wealth are cordially and earnestly iuvited to come here and honor the occasion with their presence, and to enable all to confer together upon the present and future of our imperiled country. It is also suggested and recommended that our friends from other States send delegations here on this important occa eionj not to sit in convention, but to cheer and ico-operate with these tried champions of liberty from the South. " By order of the Committee. f " Ftt. Jordan, Chairman. ' Maximilian of Mexico having declar ed a blockade of the 'port of Matamoras and other Mexican ports, unsupported by competent military or naval force, Presi dent Johnson has issued a proclamation proclaiming and declaring that the block ade is held, and will be held by the United States to be absolutely null aod void against the Government and citizens of the United States, and that any at tempt which shall be made to enforce the same agairisc the Government or citizens of the United States will be disavowed. " The latest news by the Atlantic Ca ble is, to the effect that negotiations for the establishment of peace between Prus sia and Austria aTe in progress, and that peace is regarded certain. ' -"-President Johnson has issued a proc lamation releasing Texas from the opera tions of martial law, and restoring it to the regular State authpritiei rebels. ' -Darwin A. Finney haa been nomina ted for Congress in the 20th Pa. district, to succeed C. Y- Culver. i The cholera is prevailing to a fearful extont in Cincinnati and other Western cities. . -Another Fenian raid. into Canada is feared. - Thad. Stevens has been renominated for Cougreet in the Lancaster district. A Prophetic Letter. f ': o'lbe- whole- country are awaro of the manly, course pursued by Gen.' Geary, as Governor of Kansas, under Pierce, but few have seen his appeal to James Bu chanan not to betray his country, by ad hering to a cabal of traitors .who - had ruled Pierce and nearly ruined Kansas. As an evidence of his fidelity to principle, and his remarkable foresight, wo reprint the following letter from Gn. Geary to James Buchanan, dated February 12th, 1857. Here, as in a mirror, he seemed to foresee and.to foretell the awful revenge that would punish any want of fidelity on the part of the Executive. He counsels James Buchanan, almost in set terms, what to do to save the republic from the plots of Jefferson Davis, and he predicts that if Jefferson Davis is permitted to carry out his policy, "the entire country will be involved in calamities too dread ful to contemplate and as disastrous as any that could befall a nation." But James Buchanan was deaf to all such ap peals, and General Geary, finding himself deserted by his chief, resigned his office, and was succeeded by Robert J. Walker, another Democrat, who was sent to Kan sas in the-belief that he . would prove a more willing instrument. The. catastro phe was completed by the indignant re fusal of that eminent statesman to do the work which had disgusted and disheart ened both his heroic predecessors. No true Pennsylvanian can read this letter of Gen. Geary without recalling the whole history of Buchanan's administration, and without feeling a new sense of gratitude tha the citizen who, nearly ten years ago, thought and wrote in this way, is shortly to assume the Executive chair of this Kreat State : "Executive Department, MEItT, I "Lecompton, Kansas Territory, "February 12, 1857 "Hon. James Buchanan Dear Sir : No apology is needed for my again ad dressing you. notwithstanding my last letter was written only two days ago. In that I informed you, at considerable length, of the condition of affairs in this territory, of certain outrages that have recently been committed, of the character of tho men, mostly Government officials, by whom thtse outrages were instigated, and that my situation ar.d usefulness here would depend mainly upon the support of the General Government in my endeavors to maintain the peace and promote the welfare of the Territory. Siuce then new developements have occurred justifying all I then wrote, and of which it is impor tant you should be apprised. ; "From reliable sources information has been received that uew plans are being formed, not ouly to assassinate myself and certain meuibers of my household, but to crcnte a breach of the peace, which threat ens to be far more serious than the out rages that have been suppressed, and whivh have for their ultimate. aim nothing short of the dissolution of the Union .in case of the failure of the unjust aud iula mous attempts that are beini; made to force the institution of slavery upou the . unwil ling people of this Territory. Having positive assurance of the truth of such reports, which have reached me from sundry sources, and being satis fied that the danger was imminent, and that prompt action was needed to avert if, I at onct addressed a communication to General Persifer F. Smith, at Fort Leav enworth, apprising him of the facts, and asking him to snd to my assistance two companies of cavalry. I made this reque.-t in accordance with unrevoked instructions f'rnm the President, 'to maintain order and quiet in the Territory of Kansas, ard if disturbance occur therein to bring to punishment the offenders;' and with the firm belief that the assurances received by me ironi tne same nigii source, mat in carrying out these instructions I would be aided by such military force as I might require. "This belief was not in the least shaken by rumors that were rife throughout Le compton and vicinity, that the agitators of the pending disturbances were boasting "of, aud glorityiug in, information they assumed to have received from Washing ton, that it was the intention of the Sec retary of War, Jeffertou Davis, to with draw from me all military aid and protec tion, and thus leave me at the mercy of the assassins who were plotting my des truction and that ot the country. "Judge, then, of my astonishment upon receiving from General Smith, in reply to my requisition for troops, a letter confirm ing the worst of these bold and infamous rumors. In that letter he not only re fuses to furnish the troops required, but coolly informs :uc that I am to be depriv ed of the few men that were detailed to guard the executive building, and the public records and other property belong ing to the Governor. He says : Ail the forces here have bcen designated by the Secretary of War, and are under orders for other service more distant, and even the companies near you will have to be called ''There can, therefore, no longer beany room to doubt, if tbero were any before, the truth of the statements made to me by parties of unquestionable respectability and veracity, that the riotous men with whom I am surrounded, and who have already created so much mischief and perpetrated so many and such heinous crimes, have all alou naa t:ie counte nance, encouragement and support of Jeff. Davis, and othera high in authcrityj that these high officials anticipate with satisfaction, not only new disturbances in this Territory, but a dissolution ot the Unioa itself by forcible means at no far distant period; and that the seizure of the United States arms at Liberty, Missouri by the ruffians who invaded Kunsa, in September last, was done with their sanc tion and approval, and was hut a rirelim inary step to similar atrocious and trea sonable acts now in contemplation in other portions of the United 8tat. - 'lleuee, it l with iiu ord; of anTipf v that T ntmlr. oiii '. wary if to the existing state of things ia g and urge upon you, a soon ftfl -v. n .. vurir ? have assumed tho Presidential oft t i the turbulent men who employ tilej .... " . r 'em.,,; cuti posu-iuua aim opportunities i t uwgci jjuijuoto, uuu IU Support ' I j;he power of the General GovernnJ .executive oi in is .territory. "t may be, no; all hia laudable Cff0?f ; pi tocivc 1(9 pcuoe aua promote ii perity. h "Should this duty beneelecM irJL parties now holding official positiLikt and to whom I have heretofore a; t your especial attention, be rets! '1 fi It mitted to .consummate their trea- designs, depend upon it that thtd,. far distant wheu tho entiro corJtc: be involved in calamities too drc contemplate, and as disastrous tsL'. could befall a nation. ;,Very respectfully, '"Your friend and ob't eervt "JOHN W. GEARY 1. CJU ERIFF'S SALES. ,1 KJ By virtue of sundry writs of Veni L" pon., Alias Vend, Krpon. and. Fieri alis." sued out of the Court of "Common PlMt .. Cambria county,- and to tne d win oe exposed, to public pale, at ti,e f0l.F r tts iiouse, in r-oen5iurg. on A1U.MJAI t day of SEPTEMBER, next, at one o'clotk to., the following real est.te. to wo ta m All the right, title aad interest of Ric'inbl urimiu oi. m una to ono-tourtb of a lc ground, situated in the borough of Eb burg, Cambria countv, trontint? thirtoM It feet on High street, and extendiue bnckfr a liiuiuicu uuu liiiny-iwu ieei 10 ont-lcu"'-of John Griffith, adjoining one-fourth .V John Griffith on the east, and lot off), Lewis on the west, having thereon erec;. two-story frame house, now in the ockjk of Erastus Smith. Also, one-fourth lot of around. sirai-wA thft horontrh of Ehpnshnro f!:i mliria fronting thirty-three feet on Lloyd stree Bon extending back one hundred and tbirt-. feet to one-fourth lot of John Griffith, joining Phaney 6treet on the east nnd i a fourth lot of John Griffith on the wcst. Taken in execution and to be soli at le d suits ot Joseph Kemp, endorsee of JiGi? Ross and others. lmu Al.SOJ - i All the right, title and interest of Job: J Noel of, in and to a piece or p-trcel of ' ;- Eituatcd in ashingtoo township. Can:ir county, adjoining lands of Thomas M Goi: Daniel O'Skelly, and others, coutaiain; ; hundred and forty-six acres, moreorlj about one hundred acres of which nrec':i ed, having thereon erected a smaiijj nouse ana irnioe oarn, now m tne vecz of F. M. Hammers Alo a piece or pi reel ot land siJna; Munster township, Cambri.i county, ridj-ii-irc lands ot ..Iicbael Brnwley, Anthony '''''n and others, comaining two h'.n.dre; ' twe-nfy-one acres, more or Jess, uniapro' Taken in execution and to he Bold utA6J suit of William Carney. also: th All the right, title and interest of 17 till Efkliolt,' of, in, aiid to the following i-,. pieces or parcels vt lund, to wju o.. piece or purcel of hind, f ituated in BlfiJ. tojvnship. Cambria eounty, dj of James Duncan. Snmuxl LSrallirr.atiri c: roniiiir.intr fortv-on scrf. mr.rf - mt J'nc o j " -- improved. d, "o: 2, a piece or parcel of land, situt. n Blrtcklkk Uwnship. Cambria county, ndj j ing lands o! r-njiiuel Kearney, John Tamf others, containing fifty acres, more or 1 "bout sixteen acus of which re cits haying then-on erected a small frame he and log stable, now in the occupancy o?J. Lumeraux. Taken in execution and to be soM .'' - . e a .3 : t 5 salt of Francis Seitz, nojr fcr use of :.t-4 Kocuendorler. also: All the right, title and interest of Jc; Cole, of, in, and to a lot of groun J fcitu in the borough of Carrolhon n, Cambria fronting on Main St., and extending bac'-f -. an auer, adjoining lot of Lawrence h-.j.j Oil the south nnd si strppt nn the north.:' ni luereon ercciea a iwo story irame u . r . stand, a oue Ftorv fra rame house,, a one :'t" :arpenter shop and'nf :cupancy of the stid j 'in i i plank office: a frame c stable, vo jv in the occ seph Cole. Taken in execution and to be eALrtV- suit of M. M. M'Cnllough, Jr., A Co. also: All the right, title and interest of I Sherry, of, in, and to a piece or parcel of 1 situated in Blacklick township, Canibm adjoining lands of Joseph Miller, L. V. E nnd others, containing thirty seres, .cor- t5 less, about fifteen acres of which are clfJ having tl ereon erected a log houe aui stable, now in the occupancy of the said.' Sherry. Taken in execution and to be eold suit of EJward Shoemaker. lit cel. also: All the right till. mA r .Morgan, ot, in, ana to a piece or pur land, situated in Jackson township, C" county. adjoining lands of Richard I' Andrew Duiunire and othcia, contain; a hi ty-three acres, more or less, about forty- acres of which are cleared, having tber ; erected a two story plank house and a hi'1 log barn, now in the occupancy of the Cii i :5t -tii John Morgan. Taken in execution and to b oia suit of Charles P. Murray, for use of ' Callan, now for use ot F. A. Shoetuaier. also: Vf All the right, title and interest of J--Treftz. of. in, and to a lot of ground, sita' in the borough of Johnstown, Carabr; fronting on Bedford street and exti back to an alley, adjoining lot of Griffith on the north and an allej " -4: cfl c t south, having thereon erected a tw0 'joi nllnVVinue. f..m. .t.kU anil clilD S?hW ''k. now in the occupancy of the said Jh Treftz. Taken in execution and to be sold ' suit of James Watson. also: . All the right, title and interest o. ' Ilornick, of, in, and to a lot of ground."-. ted in the borough of Johnstown, lJr; county, fronting on Franklin street. v ing lot of C. L. Pershing on the oort lot of John Wehn on the south. br,B on erected a two story vlank house, the occupancy of A. D. Brinker. . Taken in execution and to be eola suit of Commonwealth. .,jf JAMES MYERS. Sb-. Sheriff's Office, EbensburgAujj ETyour LIVE STOCK IXSJ The 'Great Eastern D'"cl!,", Horse Insurance Company," ot insures Ilorses and Mules rgam1 1 , theft, fire, accident, or natural ileASf"b . thorized capital, $100,000. Charter . State of Pennsylvania March 12, JAMKS M. HARB, TLtl6;ltn Ebw1 fra f -