V ess: TITURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, I8ec. REPUBLICAN UNION TICKET. With malice toward none, with charity for all. with firronrss in the right, aa God gives cs to pee the right', let us strive on to finish the work we nre in ; to hind up the nation's wonnJs ; to care for bim who shall have borne-the battle, and for his widow and his rphnn ; to do a'l which may achieve and chrrifh a just and a lasting pence among our selves and all nations. Abraham Lincoln's Stemd Inaugural Address. oovebxor : Gen. JOITN W. GEARY, of Cumberland co. CONGRESS: DANIEL J. MORRELL, of Johnstown. A8FFMBLY : JOHr- J. GLASS, of Allegheny township. ASSOCIATE JUPOF8T JOHN WILLIAMS, of Ebensburg. CHARLES B. KLLIS, of Johnstown. REGISTER AND RECOHPER Z WILLIAM A M'DERMITT, of Clearfield tp. COMMISSIONER : " TTE.VRY FOSTER, of White township. ' AUDITOR -JAMES M. COOPER, of Taylor township. rooR house director: CHARLES BUXTON, of Jackson township. Announcement. Throe numbers after the present will .complete the seventh yearof theexistence of The Alleghanian. During five of these seven year?, I have been its propri etor and editor, and humbly, and I trust faithfully, have sought through its col umns -to defend and establish the aims and principles of the Republican Union party, believing that by so doing I was rtrving the interest of the entire country. From this faith, it is perhaps unnecessary for me to pay, I have not departed. Nor shall I. The Alleghanian, though thus advocating the teachings of the party of its choice, has never been a mere party crgan, and much less the mouth-piece of a clique or faction. During the five years it has been under my control, it has never askcd; nor has it ever received, a dollar of patronage from any political source whatever. Its advocacy of princi ples and candidates, whether Federal or State, County or District, ha3 never been to it a source of gain. Its entire income, from the printing ot suffrage tickets and political handbills during the past five years, has not amounted to one hundred dollars. I do not utter these statements by way of complaint. Far from it. I eire only to show that The Alleghanian has been an independent paper, and that its editor has never sought to make his purse fat by mean? of his political principles.- Since the day I first put on the editorial girb, I hive uot had a moiet of sufficient leisure in which to discharge au editor's duties. Many a time my edito rinls have been written during an hour ttolcn from the care3 of a mercantile life. i Now, more perhaps than at any former period, is all my attention required by my mercantile affairs. I propo.-e, thera fore, to relinquish at the clocof the pres ent volume the publication of The Alle (jlia iian. While such is my design, I would be eorry to see the county srut of Cambria destitute of a Republican Union organ. The absence of such an organ v:uld be a loss to the larger portion of the county. Regularly has The Allegha nvm pone forth to the poople of this sec tion, rxplaning and maintaining the prin ciple? ever -dear to it, nnu exerting its ir.fluoneo toward the establishment iu the hearts of the people of this section those principles that bid fair soon to triumph in every part of the Union. I deem it no vanity to say that the interests of the Republican organization will 6uQer in the absence of a paper here to advocate its claims'. I therefore propose to 'grant free rf'rent, interest or charge, fur a term of three or vicre years, the rntire Alleghnuian establishment, valued at ahout a thousand dollars, to any worthy person of Ebenxlurg or vicinity, or to ay association of persona, of vchtm J am iciling to be one, icho xcill undertake to ccntinue the publication of the paper for the time named in the interest oj the Republican Union party. Judging from experience, I entertain no doubt that under judicious management the paper -could be made a profitable investment. Rut for the reasons named, I wish to withdraw from its publication; and desiring that the couuty seat shall not be without a Union newspaper, I make the foregoing offer. . A. A. Bauker. President and Congress. Those journals and iuen who havef een fit to' abandon their fcrmer associates and fellow laborers in tho great Union Repub lican :party in order to support the Presi dential -policy of reconstruction, have never failed when opportunity offered to charge upon Congress all responsibility for the present poe'uro of affairs. We rrc amoDS those who repel every such intimtion, and hold that the course of Cofgre-ss has been distinguished for mod trationorbcarance, and wisdom. It has been in its proclivities so radical as to frichten many who love what is conserva tive io seeming but pot in truth, yet iu has time and again withheld its radicalism that opportunity might be afforded for healing; the breach between it and the President, though on every occasion greet ed on?y with repulse. It differed from tho President, as was its right, but at no time ha3 it been unwilling to heal this difference on any fair basis, though per sistently and properly refusing to acknowl edge even by implication that it could not rightfully impose conditions. A few men, extreme in their views and differing widely in them' with the Congressional majority, at various times gave utterance to impolitic references to the President, which were quickly seized upon as the occasion for attack, cot only on Congress, but on tho great body of the Union Republican party. Yet if a justification of the extremest measures proposed ir. Congress, fave that Of reducing the rebel States to territories, were required, sueh justification is at hand from the Presi dent's own mouth. Thus it has been proposed by Thaddeus Stevens to confiscate tho property of rebels. President Johnson advocated like doctrine, thus : ''Their (the rebels') great plantations must bo seized, and divided into small farms, and bold to honest, iudustrious men." . Thaddeus Stevens and others proposed tho disfranchisement of rebels. So did President Johnson, in these words : "The traitor has ceased to be a citizen, and in joining the rebellion has become a public enemy. He forfeited his right to vote with loyal men when ho renounced his citizenship and sought to destroy our Government." So in regard to negro suffrage, the 'President ppoke as follows in a dispatch to Governor Sharkey, of Mississippi: "If you could extend the elective franchise to all persons of color who can read :he Constitution, of the United States in English and write their names, and to all persons of color who own real estate valued at not less than two hundred and fifty dollars, you would completely disarm the adcersary and set an example the other Stales icill folloio. Do You See It Sow! The Huntingdon Globe recently declared that President Johnson was not empow ered to punish treason, aud thatCongres3 was to be blamed fur not causing Jeffersnu Davis to be punished. We published the Glole h article eiitire, so as to do it no in justice. In last week's issue, it replies to our btrietures and gives unjust extracts from them. The pith of the Globes lasc article is that the Attorney General is the person to indict Jefferson Davis or any other leading rebel, that the President has only power to execute the law after conviction, and cannot bring an offender to trial, and also that Attorney Genera! Speed is a radical' and we must defend our own color. These points wc shall answer, beginning with the laft aud end ing with the first. Judge Stansbcrry, of Ohio, a "My Poli cy" man, is Attorney General, and has been for nearly two mouths. Have you been asleep, Globe, or only "smiling" right often ? The President, as the first Executive officer of the nation, has power to bring offeuders to trial,-aud especially Jefferson Davis, for he is 'confined in Fortress Monroe under a charge of assassination prrjerred by President Juhuson, and is beyond the reach of any cnurt 'in the laud, being held as a Stale Prisoner. It is perfectly proper for the Attorney General to indict Jefferson' Davis or any offender against the United States, and it is equally proper for the President to direct him so to do, for he is the le;al adviser of the President, and to a great extent within his control. Wc will further add that Congress has no power whatever to bring an offeuder to trial, except in cases of impeachment, nor in any case to cause hia punishment ai'ter trial. A United States Vart could direct the Attorney General or one. of his subor dinates, to indict Jefferson Davis, but whai would be the use of so doing while Jefferson Davis is beyond the the juris diction of any civil court in the world? The Globe says : "Why does Congress keep the Southern people out of the Union ?" Wo will let Andrew Johnson civc the priccipahjpart of our answer for the reason of denying the right of repre sentation to the Southern people : "I say that the traitor has -ceased to be a citizen, and in joining the rebellion, has become & public enemy." Such, we apprehend, is the reason Congress has in justification of its course. Andrew Johnson required certain guarantees of good faith from these "puLlic enemies" before he could consent to re-admit them to the rights of citizenship, and Congress, net recognizing the xclusive jurisdiction of the President in tho ujrk of reconstruction, bays that his conditions are insufficient aod proposes to require other additional ones. We hope you are answered now. The Issue. It is scarcely possible for political contestants to appear, before the country on an issue more sharply defined, or upon questions more capable of being under stood by the masse.', than those that to-dav distinguish the Presidential policy of reconstruction from that proposed by Congress. That the issues now under'o ing discussion do thus admit of compre hension by the people, is most fortunate indeed, for it doej not often happen that questions so important in their consequen ces are submitted to them for irreversible decision. Although intimations to the contrary have sometimes been made, yet it is a happy fuct that no party, nor any faction of a party, contemplates the permanent or even long continued exclusion of the lately rebellions States from full partici pation in all the benefits and privileges that belonged to them prior to secession. The . whole controversy between the President and Congress is one of terms. Primarily, they occupy similar positions, while some of the Democratic leaders differ from them both in contending that upcm the suppression of rebellion, a State is at once remitted to all its old relations with the other States. Tho President required of the States that had taken up arms no less than four conditions, hirst, (previous to the adop tion of the constitutional amendment abolishing slavery in the United Stafjes.J mat slavery be abolished by each siay-' holding State. Second, The ratification of tho anti slavery amendment until its adoption was secured by having the approval of the requiite number of Stafcs. Third, The annulling of the ordinance of secession. Fourth, The repudiation cf all debts contracted to aid the rebellion. These conditions the President repeat edly declared must be complied with by the insurrectionary States before they would be allowed to resumo their for mer relations in the Union. Upon the assembling of Congress iu December ia?t, he asked for the immediate admission of the duly elected and loyal representatives sent by the reconstructed States. Congress, however, scarcely be gan its debates before it became apparent that its course would not be in harmony with the Presidential policy. After ciiiht months of deliberation it matured a plan consisting of an amendment to the Constitution, which declared, First, That every person born in the United Siates, and subject to their juris diction, shall be a citizen thereof, and shall not have abridged the privileges or immunities of a citizen. . : Second, The apportionment of repre sentatives according to population, except when the right to vote is denied to any male inhabitant twenty-one years of age, unless for crime, and in such case the basis of representation to be reduced in the proportion the number of citizens over twenty-one years deprived of this right bears to the whole number of citizens in the State. Third, That no person who was a leg islative, judicial, or military officer, took an oath to support the Constitution ot the United States and afterwards engaged iu rebellion, shall be eligible to any office, civil or military, under the United States or any cf them. Fourth, That the rebel debt be repudi ated and the National debt be held unquestionably valid. Thu3 the President and Congress both stand on the same ground that it is constitutional and wise to require guaran tees of good faith from the States that attempted secession. Many Democratic leaders, chief among whom is Reverdy Johnson, of Maryland, have declared their conviction that a State whose people have engaged in'rcbellion is by the over throw of 'the rebels immediately restored to its normal condition, with all the rights and immunities of sny other State of the Union. Did tho Democratic lead ers abide by this conviction and contend for it as their faith, it would form an important element iu the posture of affairs. Evidently for the sake of Presidential patronage, and the increased possibility of their coming into power, they have fore gone their couvictions, and support the Congressional principle of reconstruction carried to the extent of the conditions required by the President. The legality and necessity of requiring conditions are thus affirmed by President and Congress aud acquiesced in by the Democratic leaders. : Morrissey nnd his friends give as a professional reason for ; supporting the Presideut that he keeps the biggest policy shop in the country. The New Jersey Legislature last week elected Hon. A. J. Cattell, United States Senator." He is a sound Union man. The Cleveland Convention was a miserable failure. - . . "Uly I'oiicy" in ISGi. ANDREW JOHNSON ON KKCONSTUUCXION. . - "In calling a convention to'restore the State, who shall restore and re-establish it? Shall the man who gave hia influ ence and his means to destroy the Govern ment ' Is he to participate in the grc it work of reorganization ? Shall he who brought this, misery upon the State he permitted to control its destinies ? If this be so, then all this precious blood of our brave ?oidiers and officers so freely poured out will have been waHtonly spilled, 'all the gloriou victories won by our noble armies will go for nought, and all the battle fields which have been sown with dead heroes during the rebellion will' have been made memorable in vain. Why all this carnage and devastation ? It was that treason might be put down and trai tors punished. Therefore I say that trai tors shall take a back seat in the work of restoration." ANDREW JOnNSON IN FAVOR OP DIS FRANCHISING: TRAITORS. r " I say that tho traitor has ceased to be a citizen, aud in joining the rebellion has become a public enemy, fie forfeited his right to vote with loyal men when he re nounced his citizenship and sought to des troy our Government. We say to the most honest and industrious foreigner who comes from England and Germany, to dwell among us, and to add to the wealth of the country, ' Before you can be a citi zen ycu must stay hpre for five years.' If we are so cautious about foreigners, who voluntarily renounce their homes to live with us, what should we say to the traitor who, although born and reared among u, has raised a narricidal hand against the .Government which always protected him ? r5Iy judgment is that he should be sub jected to a severe ordeal before he is re stored to citizenship." 0 ANDREW JOIINSON IN FAVOR OF EXECU TING TRAITORS. " Show me who has been en erased in these conspiracies, who has fired upon our flag, who has given instructions to take our forts, custom houses, arsenals, and dock-yards, and I will show you a traitor. Were I President of the United States, I would do as Thomas Jefferson did in 180G with Aaron Rurr. I would hive thorn arrested, and if convicted, within the meaning and scope of the Constitution, by the Eternal God I would execute them!" ANDREW JOIINSON FAVORS CONFISCA TION. "' Treason must be made odinu3 and traitors .must be punished and impover ished. Their great plantations must be seized and divided into small farms, and sold to honest, industrious men." ANDREW JOHNSON JUDGED BY HIMSELF. "Whenever you find a man anywhere prating about the Constitution of the Uni ted States, spot him; he's a traitor." Andrew Johnson's Cnmpiign Nashville, Sejitembn; IS (34. Speech at Gen. Grant on MeSster Clymcr. A special correspondent of the Chicago Republican, who hnd a conversation with General Grant after the Presidential party left Cincinnati, and who wa3 authorized to make public the General's sentiments, says that General Grant felt that to ask men whose sons had shed their blood lor the Union to vote for men who hud ben disloyal to it was the greatest insult' mat could be offered. Southern men he could make allowances for. aud he could ride through the South and got out on a platform and shake hands' in friendship with such men as Lee, Johnson, or For rest, because, though they had been al most educated in secession, they come now truly honest and loyal iu their adhe rence to the Union, and were seeking to strengthen it. Rut he did not feel that way toward Northern men who had once been disloyal, and neither desired to asso ciate with them nor have them for his friends. No such men should have his support, nor ought they to be supported by 31 r. Johnson's friends throughout the Northern States. He 'particularly in stanced, as a specimen of this objectional class of men, Heisier Clymer, the Demo cratic candidate for Governor of Pennsyl vania, saying that to ask any soldier to vot3 for such a man, of at oue time known disloyalty, against another who had served four years in the Union army, with credit to himself and benefit to his country, was a gross insult. ; mm m The Old Pennsylvania" Reserves. A convention of the lbuner members bf the Pennsylvania Reserves was held at Lancaster on Thursday last, at which Col. R. Riddle Roberts deli"ered an elo quent address. An election was held for a Roard of Directors, composed of three members from each regiment, and a meet ing of the Board of Directors was held afterwards, at which the following srentln men were elected permanent officers of the Roard : President, Andrew G. Cur tin ; Vice President, Rrigadier-General H. G. Sickle, of Third Regiment P. It 0.; Treasurer, Colonel J. P. Taylor, of First Cavalry P. R. C; Recording Secretary, Adjutant John C. Harvey, of First Regi ment P. R. C.; Corresponding Secretary, Colonel John 11. Taggart, Twellth Regi ment P. R. C. The next meeting will be held at Harrisburg on the 30th of May, 1807, the anniversary of the battle ot Rethseda Church, the last battle in which the Reserves participated. Meetings will be held annual'y hereafter at such place as may be decided upon by those present at the meeting. At these meetings the order of business will be : First. An Oration. Second. Report of the Board of Directors. Third. Election ot Officers. Fourth. A Banquet. . Oregon is added to the States which have ratified the Constitutional Amend ment: " i 8 . . V . 3 jEZ-g o onsirnctioii. ' - ' : ' THU POLICT OF THE.trXIOS PARTY TO BKST0B.E THB NATIONAL fciUON I Resolved by tha Senate and LTotise oj Rep resentatives of the United SlaUs of America, in Congress assembled, two-thirds of both Houses concurripg, That the .following ar ticle be proposed to the Legislatures of the several Slates n3 an amendment to the Con stitution of the United States, which, when ratified by three-fourths ot the said Legisla tures, ptiall be Vttlid as i pArt of the Consti tution, n:mt-lys . "Article , Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States, and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge.the privilege, or im munities of citizens of the. United Stat ?. Nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberij, or property without due process of law, nor deny to any person .within its jurisdis'ion the equ'l procection of tho laws. "Section 2. Representatives shall be appor tioned among: the several States r.ceordiug to their respective numbers, counting the whole number of persons in each State, excluding Indians not taxed ; bit whenever the right to vote at any election for electors of Presi dent and Vice President, or for United States Representatives in .Congress, executive and judicial officers, or the members of the Legis lature thereof, is denie-1 to any of the male inhabitants of such State, being twenty-one years of age, and citizens of the United States, or in any way abridged, except (or partic ipation in rebellion or other crime, the Kasis of representation therein shall be re duced in the proportion which the number of such male citizens shall bear to the whole number of male citizens twenty-one years of age in that State. 44 Section 3. No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, elector of President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the U. S., or under any Stnte, who, having- previously t?ken an oath as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United StatesT or as a mem ber of :ny St.ite Legislature, or as an execu tive or judicial officer of any State, to sup port the Constitu ion of the Unit?! States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebel lion against the same, or given aid or com fort to the enemies thereof; but Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of efch House, remove such disability. " Section 4. The validity of the public debt of the United States autlorized bylaw, in cluding debts incurred for the payment of pensions and bounties for service in suppres sing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be questioned, but neither the United J tates nor any Slate shall assume or pay any deht or obligation incurred in aid ot insurrection or rebellion against the United States, or any claim for the loss or emancipation of any slave, but nil such debts, ol ligations, and claims shall be held illegal and void." Hats SJcsej't a SiiiEtiug- SSsin. The N. Y. If'rald, heretofore an ardent supporter of President Johnson's policy, sneaks thus of the result of the Maine election : "The general results of the Maine elec tion are very decisive and very significant. They are startling and incomprehensible to the Conservatives and indicate a popu lar ground-swell wholly unexpected by the radicals themselves. It is manifest to us that this, remarkable election turned more upon thn exciting political events of the day, North and South, than upon the exact political issues presented between the Southern restoration policy of Presi dent Johnson and the reconstruction policy of Congress. Extraordinary results are generally due to extraordinary causes. Had the Republicans simply held some thing like their standing majority in Maine, the result could have been ex plained. by the simple statement that the battle was fought between tho Union party of the war and the old Copperhead Peace Democracy. Rut the enormous gains to the Republican vote throughout the State require a larger explanation." After endeavoring to find a plausible excuso for the overwhelming rejult, it concludes thus : " Whatever may have been tho real causes, however, operating" to bring about the extraor iiuary results of this "Maine election, it is too decisive against the Democracy and Conservatives to be lim ited to Maine. We apprehend that, as in all our political contests of the past of a national character the result in Maine indicates the geueral drift of the elections coming after it throughout the Northern States. The propect now of a Conserva tive majority in the next Congress is very doubtful j.the prospect of another radical Congress is better than it has appeared at any time since December last. In short, this Maine election of 1866 will probably mirk another new chapter in our political history, and perhaps another reorganiza tion ot parties, and another reconstruction of platforms for the Presidential election, beginning with the close of the coming elections o! October and November." When we remember that a few days ago the lien dd was their particular foul mouth-piece, this desertion of the Copper head cause is peculiarly significant. A lew more ''Earthquakes" are iu prospective ! Overhauling a Falsehood. Rooms Union Statu CEMnu Committee, 1105 Chestnut Stkeet Philadelphia, September 13. 186G. . y C. R . Aahcorn. Esa . Hoveicell. Pa. Dear Snt: Yours of the 11th insr. is duly received, enclosing that sha'melesslv false card ou tho subject of bounties jiveu by Congress to white and colored sojdiers. Our political adversaries 'are acting upon the adage, "A lie well adhered to is as good as the truth." As military agent ot" Pennylvania at Washington for more than two years, I became familiar with the laws of t'oogress granting boun ties to soldiers. 1 mo?t positively ufSrin that no act or acts ot Congress di.-crimi- I nate against iclule soldiers or in facor of coiorea sotttieis. All assertions to the con trary" are falsehoods, iutended to mislead and deceive. You are at liberty to make any uso you please of this communication. , Yours, trufv. . . . A Jordan' , Cb airman, i. I I -iiiupui u oraer iuin Orphans' Court of C itnbri count iu314, signed will sell on thenrcmi.. ,.en the 8thof OfiTOBER next, all tlf . Farm ituate in Clearfield ton-vT11 Augustine, late tfie property of l.' deceased, containing one hundred t or less, about forty acres of tv-iT ed, under fence, nnd in a coo l Stat, tivation having thereon erected a h &f Dwelling House, a frame Dwelling n ;: Cabin Darn, and a Stable. Alsa " Orchard of a good quility ol Frniflv Terms cf Sale . O money to he paid on confirmation r I one-third in one year, and one-th V? H " . . . - ine rv. third i- ueatn or the widow of the intestate terest. SFctirprt bvti Kas i , j oua m the purchaser. V KNOS O. M'Mn.J sep27J CECELIA WILT . Administrators of Joseph Wj:t' c OAL MINES The Sonman Coal Piding, on Penna. Railroad, till lease on royalty. Five ft. vein u Bituminous CdhI already dereWi K three and six ft. veins are said t0 this property. . A ready market can C for this Coal. Apply to TVSI. EDGE, Downingtown, J. or to J. A. SHOEMAKER. Sontiiia? Sept. 21, T866-tf ' 1 r F i T?LDERSRIDGG ACADEMY- t-i AVill open its Fortieth SesskDcst nesaay, uct. lOtli. J: or particu! ti the Principal or Assistant. ' Rev. A. DOVALTs .S. S. OILSON, A.E ?r r.nersriuge. ra., sept. 27, IgG6-3t t s I STEAM SAW-MILL FOR SAL The undersigned will sell theirs Saw Mill, situate in Snmmerliil! towns! the line of the Ebenburg & Wilmore Road. The Mill is in jrood running i i ! with a Circular Saw and other fixtnn tacnea. lue fcnpine 13 a sixteen hors. er one, and oPthe first class. The n' a Cylinder, three feet in diameter tw, two ieei Jong, wnn t:rate liars, &c. Al Rag-wheel and Carriage, Saw Ssi ( Head Block, Tail Block, Dogs, and Mules on render rests, ull ready to: They will answer fora Water Mill. All the above will be sold on reas terms. THOMAS D. KEES HUGH E. ROBERT aulC: Wilmore, Cambria co. rpiIE EDEXSRURO FOUXDff' JL FOR SALE! The continued ill health of th cnV.d J compels him to cfTer the above named j rable property at private sle. The pr-i is situated in one of the best locntir Cambria county, is w!l known, hiivin; in operation a number of year?, and i? well patronized. The stock in the esrul wont i complete and in crood cor-.Jition i eluding everything necessary for wijin, me tmsincss. JOS?" For further particulars, sn.l inquire of or address E. GLi. Ebensbunj, Aug. 23, ISC6tf N TOT f OH. Having received a coram ss on i the Orphans Court of Cambr;a county f. examination of witnesses relative to tht citic performance of a contract betwee: vid Evans, (Mason.) dee'd., and Re3 J. i for the sale of a certain tract of land; ia Cambria township to said ReesJ. io notice is hereby civen that I wtil the dutiea of said annointmen; at mv oF. in Ebensbur, on FRIDAY, the 5th of ! 1 JObhU, next, at 2 o clock, p. ni., when k where ah persons interested mav attend. SAMUEL SINGLETON, Co: Ebensbnrg, Sept. 20, '8CG-3: E. R. DUVALL & CO., Jlanvfadirrtr. PORTABLE STEAM ENGINES asd.': LAR SAW-MILLS, Warehouse, No. 24 S. Howard stre1 Baltimore, jIo. rii July 5, 18G5:6ra. " TM. 31. UORMRY WHOLESALE GTUC: 2TI Librrtr street, directly opposi: Eagle Hotel, " Pittsbcbs.; A supply of the best brands ni F nl ways on hand. jacg UG11 A. MoOOY, Saddle and Harness Manw'x EBENSBUKG, P; Office one door east of Davis, Jones it Store. . A large stock of ready-made LTarness.- dles, Bridles, &c, constantly on hand c- sale cheap. wee. to, u" TNSURANCE AGENCY. JL James Purse, agent for tbe BUlr cc: and Lycoming Mutual Fire 'fiTitee C panics, Johnstown, Pa. tST Will attend promptly to mating ranee in any part of Cambria county application by letter or in per?oti. March 12th, 18f'.3-tf. . W M. R. HUGHES, Wilmoei, I Agent for ENTERPRISE FIRE INSURANCE CO-1 ital S2.C00.000. PRO. MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE O CAMBRIA CO. July 5, 1S66. T TPF.XRl.yn AITI'TTOXEEK- JLi The subscriber, having take" J regular license as an Auctioneer, to cry all manner of Sales on short il and at reasonable terms. Address JF..iSK WOODC0CN mar26.6M Hemlock Cambria co-H B KICK! BRICK! BRICK On hand and for sale, in any qnS" a superior article of rr' FRO XT, BUILDING $ rAriXG delivered on cars at the lowest rates. Address JOHNSTOWN MFG. IV augl6:3m Johnstown IME Or leave. Lime for sale, at Lilly's sta Plane No. 4, by the bushtl or c Snippea to jounsiown, f,utuj-' station on the Penna. Rail Bo -rrrr, l A A . . n JO.. r