THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, IS66. REPUBLICAN UNION TICKET. Wllh matire toward nnno. w us rhtrit. rnr 1 all. with SrmnfBs 5n the right, as God Rives I to tee the right, let us strive on to finish mo work wo are, in; to bind up the nation's r " " ' ;lt?noJsna" r.e home the buttle, and for hie widow and his uiiriif lilt i iti lp. h nil t 1 1 T" no t it oto n n n n i i orphan ; to do all which may achieve and cherish a jot and a lasting peir among our selves and nil notions. Abraham Lincoln' Second Inaugural Addrest. oovkbsor : Gen. JOHN W. GEARY, of Cumberland to. DANIEL J. WORRELL, of Johnstown. ASSEMBLY JOIJN J. GLASS, of Allegheny township. ASSOCIATE JCPGFS: JOHN WILMAMP. of Ebensburg. CHARLES B. ELLIS, of Johnstown. 1 REGIKTVn AND RFCO!'lER ' WILLIAM A M'DERMITT, of Clearfield tp commissioner: HENRY FOSTER, of White township. . AfiuTou : JAMES II. COOPER, of Taylor township. POOR TJOt'SE director: CHARLES BUXTON, of Jackson tow nship. Our Candidates. Gen. John "W. Geary, our nominee for Governor, belongs to ono of the many Scoth-Irieh families which are to be found within the borders of Pennsylvania. It would be strange, therefore, if he had failed to inherit the sterling qualities of head and heart that comprise the charac teristics of that race to which he belongs, and who combine the fire, wit, and vivac ity of the Irishman with the shrewdness, intellect, and pertinacity of the Scotch. Of this Scotch-Irkh race are many of the best intellects of the day, and especially of Pennsylvania. They are to be found among the people and in posts of trust and responsibility, in rural districts as farmers, in cities as merchants, in church es as preachers, in courts a3 lawyers and judges, in legislative halls as patriots and statesmen, and in military life as skillful and devoted soldiers. Two positions held by Gen. Geary have contributed more, perhaps, than all other influences com bined, to give him a reputation among the people, and to prove him worthy of being the chief magistrate of the second State in the Union. The first of these is the part he took as Governor of Kansas territory, and afterwards as Colonel, then Brigadier General, and then Major Gen eral iu the Union army. Gen. Geary was bom in "Westmoreland county, in this State, on the 19th day of December, 1819, and hence is now in his forty-seventh year. During the years hen Gen. Geary was a boy, his father was eDgaged in the manufacture of iron, n business which at that time much more than the preseitt exposed capital to dan ger cf loss. "While young Geary was yet a mere boy, his father became insolvent, and was of course compelled to retire from business pursuits. During the few remain ing years of Lis life, he supported his family as preceptor of a select school. He was never able, however, to rid him self of the burden of debt that hung over him, and at his death, left it and a good name as the ouly legacies of his two sons. At the time of his fathei's decease, young Geary was attending Jefferson College, which he immediately forsook in order to take upon himself the duties that devol ved upon him by reason of his bereave ment. He bravely assumed, not only the care of his mother, hut the obligation to discharge the remaining debts of his father, and t hid, through his indornirable industry and most praiseworthy economy, he succeeded in doing. Thus in Gen. Geary is again exemplified that nobility and magnanimity in youth are the uner ring marks of usefulness, honor, ai?d oltcn distinction in mature years. Subecquer tly, he engaged for a brief period as a clerk in a wholesale mercantila establishment in Pittsburg; alter this ho engaged in the study cf civil engineering, and also of the law, to which he was admitted to practice in his native county. Spaco will not allow us to follow the mljeet of our -sketch through all the events of his little less than rcuir.utic career. SuHicc it to say" tbat on the l.-rcaking. out of the Mexican war, Gen. Geary wr. Superintendent of the Alle gheny Portage Railroad aud a resident cf our own county ; that ho accepted the captaincy of a company attached to the . - . . . - r '2d Pcnn.-vlvanik reaimeot of volunteers that he took art in the actions cf La Hoya. Cerro Gordo, Ohepultenec snc J I Garita de lielen, and at the close of the var, icturncd hi;mc, the honored Colonel f the. regiment. In January, 1819, he das by President Polk appointed post master of San Francisco. This position he held but a short time. Scarcely, how ever, had he retired from his duties until he was elected lirst Alcalde or Mayor of the city, and wa3 soon after made Judge of First Instance by Brig. Gen. Riley, of the U. S. Army. In May, 1850, ho was elected Mayor of . San Francisco, and at Jho expiration of Tjis "term,' declined ro-elcction. At the time of framing a Constitution for California, he was instru mental io securing therein the prohibition of fIaTerJ- From 1852 until the f&ll of 1850, Col. Gcarv remained on his farm io thb vicinity of New Alexandria, in his native county. Duringthefall mentioned he left his quiet home to assume, under PWeiil Pierce, the. Governorship "of Kansas Territory, a position which he held until March 20th, 1857. During his administration of affairs in Kansas, he used his influence eo far as consistent with the duties of his office in favor of making it a Free State. From 1857 uptil 1861, he again lived in retirement upon his farm. After the attack upon Sumter, he again lelt his peaceful home and repaired to Philadelphia to organize a regiment of volunteers. No sooner was it generally known that he was about to organize a regiment, than he had the proffer from various portions of the State of bixty-eix companies for his command. It is scarcely necessary for us to recount the history of G;n. Geary during the period of the rebellion. His command was among the first lo meet the enemy in the strife of battle, and among the last to retire from the conflict. He has stood the Ehock of full sixty battles. lie fought the battle of Bolivar, the first, if we mistake not, in which any portion of the army of the Potomac was engaged. He has four times borne wounds upon his person, received in defence of his country, lie laid his first born son an offering at the altar of his country, and saw him fall yielding his life as a sacrifice for his country's honor. He fought against Jack son in the valley of the Shenandoah, wi'h Hooker at Chancellorsville, and at Gettys burg was a flame of vengeance against the rebel host. In the Southwest he was with Thomas, Grant, and Sherman. At Lookout Mountain he led his men in one of the most perilous charges of the war. He was present during the entire campaign against Atlanta, lie received the surrender of Savannah, and was made its Governor. He was present through out Sherman's march northward, and witnessed the surrender of Johnson. Such is the man presented by the Union Repub lican party to the people of Pennsylvania for their suffrages. In the election of that gallant soldier of the Revolution, Gen. Miffliu, to the gubernatorial chair, the people of Pennsylvania fitly foreshad owed their inteution to place in a like position that gallant soldier of the rebel lion, Gen. John W. Geary. ' OUR NOMINEE FOR CONGRESS. At Tyrone, BUir county, on Tuesday, the 21st of Ausust last, the Union Repub lican Conferees of the 17ih Congressional district placed Daniel J. Morrell, of Job nstown, in nomination as the candidate of their party for Congress. Mr. Morrell is a native of 3Iaine, but quite early in life, and before his settled habits and modes of thought could have been formed, removed to Philadelphia and filled the position of clerk in a wholesale dry goods house in the Quaker city. Excepting a short sojourn in the West, he continued a resident of Philadelphia until 1855, having in the interim become a success ful merchant. During the year named, he associated himself in a firm styled Wood, Morrell & Co. a firm formed for the manufacture of railroad irou in the town which has since been his residence. This firm purchased the old and never successful Cambria Iron Works, and continued the manufacture of iron under their original name until 18G2, when the partnership of Wood, Morrell & Co. gave place to the Cambria Iron Compauy. Mr. Morrell has been the manager ri the works from the timn he first became interested in them. They now form the largest establishment for the manufacture of iron in America. They giveemployment to more than fifteen hundred persons. Mr. Morrell has never been in public life, nor taken an3r'active part in politics, though all his sympathies have at all times been on the side of the old Whi" and the existing Union Republican party. His management of the establishment uuder his conirol setms always to have given satisfaction, and has been attended with more than ordinary success. It 1 - apparently has never bceu part of his pollcy to e his innuence and patronage r political purposes, or else Cambria ....,.., 1 .!.. 1, 1 LI! toumy . iium iu-uay uu a jicpuuii'xin instead of a Democratic county. His polit- ical opponents in the present campaign are under obligations to him for the majority that this county will in October cast against him. Whatever' opinions may be held as to the means used to secure his nomination, yet in private life and iu his business relations, Mr. Morrell bears a character that has ever been free from reproach. His chances of election may best be judged from the results of the election in this district duriug several years past. Gen. Hartranft's majority in the district last year was nine hundred and ninety five-. Mr. Barker's two yea r ago was five hundred and six; and in sixty-two, the district elected M'Alister (Dem.) to Congress by a majority of over seven hundred. This year, the district will be thoroughly canvassed by both parties. " TIIE COUNTY TICKET. . Our Democratic opponents feel very sanguine of electing their County ticket, while we are sure that ours ought- to be successful, if sterling worth and all the qualities that go towards making upright men and faithful officers ever make success a thing to be deserved. In John J. Glass, our nominee for Assembly, is to be found a Republican who maintains his political integrity by the strength of his faith and knowledge, and stands firm amid surroun dings well calculated to draw him into other ranks. In John "Williams, of Eb ensburg, and Charles B. Ellis, of Johns town, our nominees for Associate Judges, are two old and venerable citizens, who deserve an enthusiastic and triumphant support. Col. M'Dermitt, our candidate for Register and Recorder, would make an excellent officer, and if valuable and patriotic service against the rebellion gives a man any claim over others for our suf frages, then Col. M'Dermitt should receive th em with the heartiest welcome. In Charles Buxtou for Poor House Director, and Col. Cooper for Auditor, are two can didates that need no commendation, nor any position, to make them honored and useful citizens. We urge our friends throughout the county to do their whole duty from the present hour until the second Tuesday of October nex. The issues between coc tending parties have seldom been more important. The Republican party asks to place no stigma on the people of the South, nor to disfranchise a single man of all her people, nor unalterably to ex clude one of them from ofiice. She asks simply that the rebel debt be repudiated and the National debt made secure beyond repudiation, that the political power of those lately in rebellion be reduced to a level with that of the Northern people, and that the same justice and the same privileges to move from place to place, to sue, to be sued, to make contracts, and to engage in enterprises, be accorded to all men, and that leading rebels shall not be exalted to offjee without the sanction of Congress. Because she asks these things. Of so just that ?io man assails them, she is threatened, and bullied, and called a- foe to the Union, while the people are sought to be intimidated from their free choice by muttering of another rebellion in which the Executive part of the govern ment will be on the side of the rebels. Condensed Jolinsonism. It has been observed that his AccideDcy is in his speeches slightly given to rep etition, and that in fact a very few . ideas serve him as the-suhject-mattcr of a great macy orations. The Chicago Eveni-g Journal having studied the subject, gives the following excellent "Digest of the President's Stump Speeches :" They say I'm a demagogue I ain't. They say I'm a traitor I ain't. They say I'm a usurper I ain't. They say I'm a tyrant I ain't. They say I'm undignified I ain't. They say my habits are bad they ain't. They say I'm always harping on 4iMy Policy" I ain't. They say I'm egotistic I aint. They say I'm obstinate I ain't. They say I make partisan speeches I don't. They say I talk about myself 1 don't. They say I use the pronoun I overmuch I don't. They say I must be gotten out of the way I musn't. They say I ought to have my head chopped off I oughtn't. 1 run this Government. I have been in office ever since I can remember. I have been alderman, constable, super visor, tax-gatherer, Congressman, and, by the help ot Booth, President. I am the only friend the negro has left. I put down the rebellion. I am the last hope of the Republic. I am the underpinning of the Consti tution. I am, I myself altogether, and no other man and "I leave the Constitution in your hands, gentlemen." ' . : A "Wet Blanket for Clymer. The New York Herald of .Tuesday last, one of Johnson's principal organs, says : "The Democracy of Pennsylvania, in nomina ting for Governor Heister Clymer, a peace man during the war, agaiust Gen. Geary, one of. the most distinguished Union soldiers, did for the Radicals the very best thing that could be done. For nobody supposes that there i's a ghost of a chance for Clymer against Geary, and no political philosopher has yet risen to show that, while Clymer cannot save himself, he will strengthen the Conservative Con gressional ticket in Pennsylvania. In short, Clymer is a dead weight upon the party." m , Decent, right-thinkiDg men of all parties rejoice that A. J. with his travel ing companions has arrived back at Wash ington from his electioneering tour west. Late dispatches 6ay that Prussia and Austria are on the verge of another war. The Maine election went Republican to the tune of 35,000. A. J. on Ills Travels. Following is the Associated Press ac count of the journey of th President over the Pennsylvania Railroad from Johnstown to Lewistown . AT JOHNSTOWN. Johnstown, 10.45 A. M. At least 3,000 persons wero here assembled, the L majority of whom cheered and veiled. Senator Cowan introduced the President as the great tribune of the American peo ple, which met with an enthusiastic re sponse. While the salutations were going on a bcene of thrilling interest and dreadful' apprehension was presented. Between the oriage and the railroaa ofhee, and over the old canal, was a plank-covered platform, on which probably four or five hundred men, women and children were closely gathered. Those of us who were on fhe platform of the last car were wit nesses of the giving way of the structure on which they were standing. . First one section of it fell, precipitating the occu pants to the ground, a height of apparent ly twenty feet. The second part soon fol lowed, and in less than thirty seconds these persons were thrown one upon an other, or buried beneath the ruins. Wo men screamed, and, with many excited men, rushed to the immediate location of the disaster for the relief of their friends. The women and children were seen with th eir faces blackened with coal dirt, upon which they had fallen. The train was obliged to move on to keep the time table right and to avoid accidents, aud there was therefore no opportunity afforded to ascertain the extent of the accident. The President instructed Deputy Marshal O' Beirne to remain in Johnstown to learn the particulars, and to extend all possible aid to the sufferers. GEN. GRANT RECEIVES A CIGAR. Conemaugh, 11 A. M. The train stop ped here for several minutes. The usual introductions took place. A cirar was presented to General Grant to match, as the donor said, the one at that time in his mouth. TIIE PRESIDENT APPRECIATES CERTAIN ATTENTIONS. Gallitzin, 12 M. Here the commit tee of reception from Altoona came on board. It consisted of Dr. Fin ley, chair man, and ten others. This gentleman in formed the President they had been ap pointed by the Councils and citizens to tender to him the hospitalities of the town, and this they did without respect to party and with great pleasure both as the President and as a citizen of the United State. The President, in returning his thanks, remarked he thought he know how to ap preciate such attentions. A SMALL PIECE SPOKEN. Altoona, . 12.30. The party were received b3' probably two thousand per sons, some ot them irom the surrounding country. They were conducted to a plat form bearing the motto, " Welcome to the President of the United States and the heroes of the army and navy." D. K. Neff, Esq., speaking on behalf of the Common Council and the citizens, said they felt ic to be a duty, as well as an honor, to receive and extend a cordial welcome in their mountain home to the President of. the Republic and to those members of the Cabinet and those dis tinguished officers of the army and navy who accompany them. Three cheers were given for the President, Secretary Welles, General Grant, Admiral Farragut and General Custer. The President made a brief response to the address, aud, in tendering his thanks, said he was glad to bo thus complimented by the people, for from that source it was more welcome than from any other. It was the people he had tried to serve from his advent into public life to the present time, and upon whom he would always rely to stand by the country in every emergency. It is the people who consti tute the source oi power in this country, and who, when properly informed aud freed from prejudice, will settle all public questions aright. Passing through this mountain scenery reminded him of his own mountain home in his adopted State. When. the rights of a nation are invaded and liberty and freedom driven from them, they always reside longest with the people of the mountains. If the time shall ever come that our free Constitution shall be lost, the freemen of the moun tains of Pennsylvania will be the last to give it up. We have just passed through a bloody and expensive war, but thank God the flag of the country still contains thirty-six stars. lie had thought the time had come when we should have per manent peace, but there seemed to have been inaugurated a policy in Congress, which, if persisted in, would result iu another struggle. Should we continue civil strife? Should we have peace? Were we prepared to see the Goddess ot Liberty struggling through fields of blood and making her eternal exit? Re3on struction and harmony were what the na tion now needs, but when the work was nearly completed, we f juud a conflict be tween the Executive and Legislative De partments of the Government, and for the course he, the representative of the people, had undertaken to restore the Go vernment according to the Constitution, he had been denounced as a traitor and usurper. He defended hi3 vetoes, and declared he would always be fouud de fending the people's rights. The excursionists partook of a dinner prepared at Altoona. A delegation ap pointed by tho Democratic State Central Committee have accompanied him from Pittsburg. It consists of ex-Governor Porter, J. II. Cresswell, Benjamin L. Forster, Chambers M'Kibben and H. B. Swarr. General Custer here left the party for Cleveland to attend tho Soldiers' and Sailors' Convention. SWINGINq AROUND TIIE CIRCLE. Huntingdon, 2.30 P. M. The Presi dent was called upon ' her? for a speech, when he merely returned his thartks, and said we were engage! in a political con-' test on which he believed the perpetuity of the Government depcuded. It waa for the people to see that the Constitution and rights of the States are preserved, and he believed all would be safe in the end. what one op tub number said blD IIE EXPECT A P. O. ? Lewistown, 4 P. M. A large number J of persons were here assembled. One of their number said this spontaneous gather ing to bid the President welcome wa3 al together irrespective of party. A Soldier's Widow Answers One of A. J.'s Silly questions. Thau Andrew Johnson's habitual and pompous parade ot his alleged sacrifices ana. sutterinirs by reason or the war, it- would be difficult to conceive more arrant and contemptible clop-trap. His appeals, in this respect, indeed, almost reniiud one of the trembling mendicant, who, cap io hand, and out at the elbows, begs his way from door to door. But the sober truth of history is just this, that these tales of woe, peddled by the Presidential pilgrim from place "to place, are purely fictitious the coinage oi his own distempered imagination. Their falsity is most effec tively exposed in the subjoined letter, addressed. to the President himself by the widow of one of the hr-ive men who fell a victim to the slaveholders' rebellion : ' To Mr. Andrea Johnson, President of the United States of America. Dear Sir : I" tnc speech delivered by you at Cleveland, Ohio, on your way to Chicago, aud which, I suppose, was re ported correctly, you ask : ' Who made greater sacrifices in the war than I ? Who suffered more than I ?" &c. Now, I take for granted that to these questions yeu ex pect from some quarter a reply, or yor would not have propounded them. So far as my knowledge-extends, up to this time, no one has undertaken the task. There fore, I myself, although but a very hum ble woman, scarcely known beyond the street I live in, will venture to fur nish an answer. And when I have done so, I will submit to the just judg ment of the world whether, on the score of "sufferings" and "sacrifices" (if tbere be nothing else), your claims to popular sympathy and support bear any comparison to mine. Before the rebellion, sir, I had a hus band, kind, loving, industrious, economi cal, who, for myself and our four little ones, made comfortable provision. Our nouie was tne uooae or peace ana plenty. ; the business. What has become of him ? He icas starved I Tor further particulars, and f fn .lr,,fh nt A ,i,7srs,m,-; n r .5 thot hv tho ! inquire of or address E. GLA; 1 .1 11 1 11. . " chivalric " mcu whom vour " TVV. would fiiin restore, without repentance, to the head of our Government. Since then I have been trying my best to earn breid for my little ones by plying the medic. At times, when that kind of employment has tailed me, I have even been obliged to stand, from early morn till night, over tho washtub ! I had two brothers, steady men, kind and generous. Had the rebellion left tueai as it found them, pinching po verty I should have never known. Alas ! alas I One of them perished from expo sure and want on Belle Island, and the other had his right arui taken off by a rebel shell at Antietatu. He caunot assist me. The privations and hardships I have had to endure have so shattered my own health and strength, that I feel, at times, unable even to eudure the fatigue of ply ing the needle. So that, except my trust in a merciful God, I have sacrificed for my country my all husband, brothers,, house, home, living aud I am cast, a beggar, on the cold charity of the world ? And all this I owe to the Southern slavc hohJers, and to their iniquitous attempt to murder my beloved country, a9 they did murder my husband aud brothers. Now, Mr. Johnson, since you invile a comparison, what have you suffered ? Ex hibit your scars, and wounds, and bruises ! Did you lose a leg or an arm, or wero you even so much as scratched or bruised ? Where is the blood you shed? Would it stain a white cambric puckct handker chief? How much property did you lose? Why, if report speaks true, during most of the time of the war you were living on the " fat of the land," in Nashville, out of harm's way, protected, as you were, by Union bayonets. Out of Uncle Sam's overflowing commissary stores you drew plenty to eat and to drink the best of meats, and, what was of still more conse quenco to you. the choicest of liquors. Add to this your handsome sala' as mili tary governor. Then the great Union party, whom you ha"e since so foully be trayed, made you Vice President, with a salary of 88,000 per annum. Then, to crown it all, John Wilkes Booth made you President, and there you are yet, to the tune of 25,000 a year, with " fxins." The rebellion found you, I learn, com paratively a poor man. Now you are rich, with a sound body, not to speak of your mind, whose soundness is not certain. You, Andrew Johnson, talk of your sacrifices and your sufferings, and chal lenge a comparison. Fie, fie upon you! Wtiy, sir, on that score, I ought to be America's Queen, and you ought to be sweating over the wash-tub ! And now, sir, are your questions as to wrro suffered more than you, who sacrificed more than you, bv reason of the war, answered? I did, bit, and I know hundreds of poor women, tossed from the heights of afflu ence into the vale of penury and want, who have suffered aud sacrificed ten thou sand times more than you, aed are makin no ostentatious parade ot it, either. Yours, respectfully, Mary Jane Oatherytaite. A Soldier's Widow,, and the mother of four fatherless children. Philadelphia, Sept. 7, .- ' ' "o '"icu COtnmiaa'.o the Orphans' Courtof Cambria f examination of witnesses relative ta t -cific performance of a contmM kJH vid Evans, (Mason,) dee'd., Rnd Ree j H for the sale of a cortoin . .-iKf i . r v V 01 land in Cambria township to said Reea j t M uwwvc is "cicuj Riven mat 1 win at- the duties of said appointment at m in Ebensburcr, on FRIDAY. ti, c TOBER, next, at 2 o'clock, p. m 0 'i where all persons interested mar '. ,A SAMUEL SINGLETON r Ebensburg, Sept. 20, ?866-3t 3 ttPHANS' COURT SaTrIT" By virtue of an order of the (Vv Courtof the countv of Oaml,r; .v signed, puardian of Marshall Wat,, T''' Annie Elizabeth Jones, Seward Jones, Dayton Jones, Margaret Xv, 1 TT i rrV, r : iT:,i y;leJ, t ulu vi. wuiius, uuuur CLiuuren the borough of Ebensburg, on SATrVl o'clock, p. ra., all the right, title Ending vi buv oiuu iijiiiuis ueing me Ucdiv' fourth part thereof of and in a certain or parcel of Coal Land, situate in W! ton Township, Cambria county, Ta., co- ing 47 acres and 142 perches, be the t" more or less, mentioned and describe':", deed of conveyance from William Tiler " unto Evan E. EvaSs, and Richard H.'f and Hugh Jones trading as Tudor 4 j,. datel the secondtlay of October, A. D. ). and recorded in the office for thtr?cflr of deeds in and for the said count? of q bria, in Record Book Vol. 21, page'lO.V suojeci 10 tne exceptions and reserra'J rights of ingress, egress, and repress privileges, excepted, granted and frovij. the said conveyance from the said W;; Tiley, Jr., to the parties aforesaid. An" so. subject to the dower of Eliza Jones 1 of the said Hugh Jones. ' Terms Cash. seC:3t EVAN E. EVANS, Guards 1 K AM SA U -j1 1 lAi I- Oil S ALV KJ The undersigned will sell their Si- fcaw Mill, situate in bur.nnerlull township the line of the Ebensburg & WilmuteP; Road. The Mill is in good rumi'in;; r with a Circular Saw and o.ther fiitw j tached. The Engine is a sixteen hor.- ; er one,v and of the first class. TheEo? ; a Cylinder, three feet in diameter, tv ; two feet long, with Grate Bars, kc. L j Rag-wheel and Carriage, Saw Snsb, Cr Head Block, Tail Block, Dogs, and 1 Slidc-3 on Fender Posts, all ready tor ? j They will answer for a Water Mill, j All the above will be sold on rcss;,- terms. THOMAS D. REE.-E HUGH E. KOBEKTS nulC:2ra. Wilmcre, Cambria co., I rpilE E13EXSJ5UIIG POUND?: JL FOR SALE 1 The continned ill health of tiesubscr compels him to oiler the above r.raed 0 rable property at private sale. The pToj 13 situated in one of the lest locta..' Cambria counly, is well known, Lavirct in operation a number of years, and well patrcr.;zcd. The stock in the est!. nient is complete and ir good condititi flmlin? evcrvthil!!? ECCCSSarV for rnrrv;? Ebensburg, Aug. 23, lSGt-tf E. 15. DUVALL & CO. ,1 Jfar.-.ifaiiv PORTABLE STEAM ENGINES asd C.lf LAR SAW-illLLS, Warehouse, No. 24 S. Howard lire; Baltimore, Ho. Shops at Laurel, Frince George's co., .V July 5, IS5G:Gm, A DMINISTPtATOR'S NOTICtH JTjl. Letters of administration on tne nf .Tr.lin Rl anrli fi pi H liite of Chess tr Cambria conntv. dceased, having granted the subscriber by the Regis'fti saiu county, an persons inueuieu iu " tate are requested to make payment o! respective accouuts, and those Laving c against it wi.l present them, properly si ticated. for settlement. M. D. WAGNER, Jdsr Chess Springs, August 2, '6G-6t. w M. M. GOPtMLY, WHOLESALE GR0 271 Liberty Btreet, Eagle Hotel, directly oppos:! PlTTSBCES; A supply of the best brars "f always on hand. sEt ir UGll A. MoOOY, Saddle and Harness Mmv'" EBENSBUKG. Office one door east of Davis, Jones t Store. A large stock of ready-made flame?? dies, Bridles, &c, constantly on hand : sale cheap. Dec. 25, JL James Purse, agent for t&e Ela'.t t'l and Lycoming Mutual Fire .j:wui panies, Johnstown, Pa. , . 2f Will attend promptly to cai ranee in any part of Cambria conn'-T application by letter or in person. March 12th, 18fi3-"tf. TTTM. R. HUGHES, WilmorV Agent for ENTERPRISE FIRE INSURANCE tu- ital $2,000,000. . TRO. MUTUAL FIRE INSURAi CAMBRIA CO. July 5, 1866. LICENSED AUCTIONEER--. The subscriber, having taea regular license as an Auctioneer, P to cry all manner of Sales on sG and at reasonable terms. Addres3 j JESSE WOOD-1'1; mar26,65 Hemlock Cambna"- BRICK! BRICK! BRICK On hand and for sale, in acy L a superior article of - t FRONT, BUILDING .j- PAVlJ delivered on cars at the lowest rate jtJJnsa JOHNSTOWN MFuJ- -o- J T DIE OR LEAVE. JLJ Lime for sale, ai x.i: - - y Plane No. 4, by the busnu oi cv; a Trstnwn. Ebensburg. tation oa the Penna. Rail Koaa. yj Address " r ..f' Hetnlet P- Oioro