THURSDAY, JUNE 27, 1867. An Element of Discord. Maximilian. During the rebellion, that portion of the Democratic party which did not mtertaiu a willingness, not to say a desire, that Jefferson Davis and his confederates would succeed in establishing a confederacy of the Southern States, was always anxious that in its efforts to restore supremacy the government would glove its fists before striking its foes. There seemed to exist a native and irradicable sympathy between the body of the Democracy and the men in arms against the nation. If not every, then next to every, person who was en gaged in the effort to overthrow the national supremacy had at some period of his life voted or shouted for Democracy. Jefferson Davis had been a life-Ion 5 Dem ocrat ; Toombs and Stephens bad aban doned the Whigs to fellowship with the Democratic brethren ; Slidell and Mason were both among the faithful ; Yancey, Beauregard, and Quantrell were orthodox in the faith ; Breckinridge had been a sort of high priest among his fellows; and, in fact, the rebellion was made up of Democrats, for its head was Democratic and its tail of the same material, and why shouldn't the two fragments, the one lying North and the other South of a supposed line, be in cordial sympathy ? But, alas, an evil day has come. "What was once the bond of union is about to become the apple of discord. Once, Democracy South and Democracy North both agreed that Sambo was a good chattel, was the most ornamental thing that could be placed upon an auction-block, was the most convenient animal in all this world. But this self-same Sambo, being cow a man, contemplated by the law to be of full stature, a creature vested with certain rights, and, in the South, endowed with the privilege of the ballot, the sensible men of the South, who really desire to put an end to the present abnormal condition of affairs, and to see their section exerci sing its influence in the councils of the nation, announce themselves ready to accept accomplished facts as such, to treat their former slaves as men, and generally to wheel in with the march of events. "What a beautiful prospect for Northern Democracy to reinstate itself in the South and assume at least a moiety of its former prestige in the Union ! Again we say, alas for the vanity of human hopes ! for the two parts of tbo once glorious Democracy that heretofore dovetailed together with closest fit -now refuse to join, and the whole secret of the calamity is, that Democracy South has learned something during the six years last past, while in the same time Democracy North has learned nothing, absolutely nothing. Democracy South consents to allowing Sambo a man's estate, and to go with him to the polls, and to sit with him in polit ical gatherings, and to solicit him for his suffrage, but Democracy North turns sick at the thought, and, in Pennsylvania, de clares it can't, it won't, and it shan't, swallow the nasty nigger-coated pill. In this emergency, when Northern Democ racy turns out to be of no use to anybody here, to be on bad terms with its friends in Europe victimized , into taking the bonds of its other friends of the confeder acy, we advise it to go aboard ship and endeavor to creep into one of the ports of Japan. Perhaps it will not there be counted an antediluvian fossil. That Convention. Thero is something romantic in the fate of Maximilian and his attempt to establish an empire in Mexico. A prince of the oldest royal house in Europe and brother of the reigning emperor, supported as well by the power of hid own as of the French natiou, seeks to enthrone himself over a people who owe him no allegiance, who are bound to him by no ties, who hold nothing in common with him, save religious faith. To this project, that ordinarily would seem hazardous in the extreme, and worthy to spring only from the brain of the wildest of fanatics or the most hazardous of mere adventurers, an appearance of sober calculation and a fair prospect of success are given, by the distracted and feud-torn condition of the nation over whom he would force himself the ruler, us also by the prevalence of a gigantic civil strife in the only nationality likely to interfere for the prevention of bis dazzling scheme. So opportune was the moment, so vig orously was the design pressed toward consummation, that every important city and post in the heart of Mexico had fallen into the hands of the invader, the city that was once the capital of the He public became the capital of the monarchy, from which the usurper denounced as worthy only of death those few who composed the shattered remnant of the Republican army and those other few who sympathized with it in its struggles, and gave it what ever aid lay in their power. The con queror felt secure upon his throne, and the world was settling into the conviction that the establishment of a monarchy upon the borders of the United States was a consummated fact. But the bright vision has vanished. The newly robed empress, foreseeing disaster, fled to her own and kindred people to beseech aid for the throne then tottering and now fallen. Disappointed in her hope?, her reason left her, and now she is a maniac in close confinement. Her husband is a prisoner in the hand? of those whom he wronged, and if bis life is spared, he will owe it to the magnanimity of his captors, and the interference in his behalf of those same United States whose expected and much desired dissolution presented to his view the golden moment for the estab lishment of his dynasty. In all this is a lesson no less for Europe than America. Fiction is not so strange as truth proves itself to be in this instance. The Democratic Convention which re cently assembled at Harrisburg arraigned the Republican portion of the late Legis lature for violating pledges made to the people. The Convention seemed very conveniently to forget the part taken by Democratic members in defrauding the popular will. The notable instance in which the desire of the people was shame fully thwarted was tbo failure to enact a free Railroad law, to the defeat of which Democratic members contributed no small share, and among the opponents of which, if wo mistake not, was Col. Linton, repre seutative from Cambria. Jf the Demo cratic convention really intended to favor such a law, why did it not put itself on record by a resolution. It virtually re solved treason to be no crime ; it denounced the men who prevented the existence of two republics within the limits of the United States ; it declared itself inflexibly opposed to the enfranchisement of the negro in Pennsylvania, although there is 00 such issue beiore tho people; and surely, had it. been in earnest iu the matter, it could have found words and paper enough to have framed and recorded a resolution favoring the enactment of such a law. COL. T. F. Gallagher ha? been re nominated for Assembly by the Rcpubli cans of tho Westmoreland district. He was the leader of the 11th. Pa. Reserves. Tiie Washington correspondent of the New York Tribune says that letters and telegrams have been received by the Union Congressional Executive Committee from enough members of Congress to insure a quorum in July, so that a short summer session is a fixed fact. A number of the letters received from Republican members state that they will come on condition that the session shall not last over two weeks, or three weeks at the furthest. They do not wish to proceed with the regular business of Congress, but merely to fix definitely the Reconstruction Act, so that President Johnson and Mr. Stan- bery will be prevented hereafter from giving any more trouble and hindering reconstruction. It is evident also from the tone of the other letters received that an attempt will be made to have Speaker Colfax announce the committees immedi ately, so as to be able to go right to work. This plan is favored by those anxious to impeach the President, and by others who are opposed to Secretary M Culloch's present financial policy, espec ially in respect to the present system of National Banks. Those who are in favor of a long session say if once a quorum is obtained the session will be kept up, long enough to settU definitely the question of impeachment. Tiie colored men of this State have organized an Equal Rights League, and published a sensiblo address to their brethren throughout the State, urging them to combine and form associations for securing "equality before tho law, and a fair chauco in the race of life." "Let us be a uuit," they urge, 'in this great mora struggle, and do not let either friend or toe imagine that wo are indifferent spec tators to a sceue that so much concerns us, or so little enlightened as to be inca pable of organization and systematic effort.' They have taken for their motto, Indus try, Frugality, and Education. The next annual meeting of the League will be held at Reading on the 1-ilh of August Owing to a press of other business, the Republican Executive Committee of Cam bria county failed to convene on the 13th instant, to choose a delegate to the Wil- liamsport Convention. An informal meet iog was subsequently held, however, and Georgo M. Reade, Esq., of Ebtnsburg was selected to represent tho county in that body. We presume he was instructed to support Hon. Geo. Taylor for Supreme Judge. EDITORIAL ETCHINGS. JG6y Gov. Cnrtin is in Paris. J6gT The heated season is here. Look out for mad dogs and -copper heads. ? The broken Atlantic cable has been repaired. y It Is said Secretary SUnton Is going to resign. - A mere on dit. ' Col; E. G. Roddy, editor of the Union- town Genius of Liberty, ia dead. jgggf Gen. R. B. Hays has been nominated for Governor of Ohio by the Republicans. J A shad was caught, one day last week, in the Juniata river at Huntingdon. j&Sy The Republican State Convention will be held in "William sport to-day, Wednesday. J62? The President has gone to Boston, to participate in a Masonic celebration in that city. The Burgess of Johnstown has re- resigned. The people of that place are re signed. , JSS? An anti-popery riot prevailed in Bir mingham, England, on the 18th. It was suppressed. ' JSSgy The body of a man was recently caught in a net, in the Susquehanna river, near Selinsgrove. Jefferson Davis was born in Tod county, Kentucky, and was sixty years old on the 3d day of Jute. , The American Varieties theater in Philadelphia burned down on Wednesday. A number of lives were lost. Xy Another prize fight between Aaron and Collyer, for $5,000, is said by a Balti more paper to be on the tapis. Egg Santa Anna has turned up in Mexico. He wants to be Dictator, but thus far has signally failed to achieve his desire. Jggf Hon. St. D. Campbell, our Minister to Mexico, h.13 resigned. The President has appointed Marcus Otterberg to the position, but who Marcus is, is not known. JJg Monoghan, the man who wrecked the passenger train on the Pennsylvania Railroad near Latrobe on the 7th April, has be&JUad- judged insane and sent to an asylum. JGSs?" The Scranton Republican hoists the name of Ulysses S. Grant, the great soldier, for President, and that of Andrew G. Curtin, the soldiers' friend, for Vice President. jBgy Delmonico, who addresses the palate of New York, returns an income of $206,504 ; Dr. Bushcell, who addresses the intellect of the country, returns an income of $400. jggy- Ethan Allen and Dexter trotted for $1,000 on Fashion Course, N. Y., on Friday. The former won in three straight heats, ma king the fastest time on record a mile in 2.15. General Sickles, commander of the second military district, who considers his hands tied by the late decisions of the Attor ney General, has asked to be relieved from his command. The latest report about the Paris Ex position is that it is a failure pecuniarily. A daily attendance of forty thousand is neces sary to pay the running expenses,, and it hjw thus far fallen short of that figure. JCS-The Freeman complains that the "Dem ocratic masses'' of Cambria county are not reading men. Our neighbor ought to be content. If those spoken of were reading men, they would not be Democrats. The President has issued a proclama tion informing the country that the treaty concluded between the United States and Russia, concerning Russian America, has be come a law. Just iu time for the Fourth of July ! "Whenever a President of the United States visits Boston, it is the invariable: cus tom of Harvard College to confer an honorary degree on him. President Johnson's present visit will therefore probably procure him the. degree of LL.D. SF The grasshopper army is steadily gaining strength in Kansas, and the papers of that section express much alarm for the growing crops. At Leavenworth, a diy of fasting and prayer will be held to beseech from the Almighty an early deliverance.irom the plague. J8P It is reported that James Buchanan has sent $200 to relieve the starving people of the South. He should have sent all be U worth. He, more than any other man, is responsible for the desolation of 'the South and the weary burdens borne by her people Two hundred dollars, indeed 1 $3?" In the Democratic State Coavention, a resolution offered by Alfred Schofield, com plimenting General Sheridan for his treat ment of Governor Wells, was declared out of order, and never heard of again. "When was a resolution complimenting our heroes ever in order in a Democratic Convention? EST" The Surratt trial drags along slowly. A large number of witnesses have testified most positively to seeiDg tho prisoner in Washington, in the vicinity of Ford's theater, in company with Booth, on the night of the assassination. Tho defense, however, claim that they can easily establish an alibi. fiST Robert C. Schenck, Chairman of the National Uepablican Executive Committee, has issued a circular letter to Republican Congressmen, urging them, in view of the late decisions of Attorney General Stanbery and the action of the Administration with regard to reconstruction, to hold a session of Congress in Jul jggy- At the request of General Grant, and of other distinguished Union men, the Pres ident has pardoned General James Long- street. This pardon is a fitting sequence to .the General's lorcible and well-timed recon struction letters, which, so far, it is worthy of remark, no Democratic paper iu this State has dared to publish. -JES?" A freedman lately fished up a torpedo from Stone river, below Charleston, S. C and trying to break it open with a hatchet it exploded, blowing him to atoms. A smal pieco of one arm, lodged in a tree, was al that was found of him. Two other negroes were blown into the river and killed, and two more mortally wounded. Leading Rebels In England. Col. Forney, in a recent letter, gives the following personal information : "But the most significant of all these indications is, as I have said, the fate which has overtaken the Confederate cause and the Confederate leaders. The failure of Frazer, Trenholm & Co., the great house at Liverpool through which the rebels carried oa their enormous transactions in cotton, constructed and sent out their iron-clad navy, and paid their agents in Europe and Canada, will ead to some rich disclosures. Uur Gov ernment, under the sagacious counsels of Hon. Charles Francis Adams, the Ameri can minister in London, bad anticipated this catastrophe, and will tako care to receive, with the aid of the British courts, whatever may be left from the wreck of this once proud and all-defying organiza tion. Not less significant is the present condkion of the most of the Confederate eaders in London and Paris. John C. Breckinridge is frequently seen at the Langham Hotel, where 1 am stopping, wolully changed in appearance, if not in opinions. A. gentleman who conversed with him a few days ago says that Breck inridge did not hesitate to declare against the good taste of the defeated rebel lead ers claiming any rights under the Consti tution which they had repudiated and the Government they had vainly sought to destroy, and that, whatever others might do, he proposed to submit to fate. Judah if. Benjamin is a practitioner at the London bar, and, unlike Breckinridge, does net entertain the slightest hope of being restored to the rights he has doubly forfeited by his violated oaths to the American llcpubhc, and now oy his new oath to the British Government. Mr. Benjamin is the counsel of the celebrated C. K. Frioleau, of Liverpool, the financial head and front of the Confederate cause during the rebellion, and now heavily involved in the overthrow of Eraser, rf i, i i r tt - i :.i u the American editor of the London Tele graph, and the writer of the articles that now delight the Tory readers of that pretended Liberal paper, eulogistic of Jefferson Davis and the "Lost Cause." The well-known George N. Sanders is also sojourning in London, and has just passed through the courts of bankruptcy for cer tain individual obligations. The violent Lewis F. Wigfall, of Texas, also here, is engaged in the precious business of col lecting the lists of tho victims who inves ted in the celebrated cotton loans of the Confederate government, and in the other securities of that miserable conspiracy itself. His hope is that the British courts will decide, and that the American Gov ernment will abide by the decision, that the rebels enjoyed belligerent rights in the recent war, in which event the credu lous holders of these bonds are told by Mr. "Wigfall that they will be reimbursed by the conquering Government of the Union. Bobert Toombs, of Georgia, was recently in London, not less vehement than ever, though greatly reduced in physical proportions." mm A Queer Story. A writer in an English paper gives the followiug account of a singular supersti tion connected with the steamship Great Eastern : "She is a ship with two cases, or skios as they are called ; that is, she is almost like one ship fitted inside another. Be tween the inner and outer skin, workmen can crawl for repairs. Dreadfully dark and sepulchral, of course, it ia in there, for, from the nature of the spaco, the workmen must be completely closed in, excepting at the spot at which he enters. Very few smiths or shipwrights would care to work in her alone, lor two terrible specters are supposed to haunt the place. Almost all the men who were engaged in the construction of the vessel believe that, somewhere there in the darkness and thick air, lie two skeletons, which can never be found till the vessel is broken up. These are the remains of a smith and his riveter, the latter being a lad. During the construction of the vessel, these two worked all through the week, keeping full time, and their work lay in between the skins. The smith was an elderly man, of a moody temper, who made no f rienos, and was not popular with his mates. No one had seen him leaving work ; nobody was interested about him. But one pay day both he and his lad failed to appear at the pay table to draw their money. They never were heard ot more by any one who worked on the Great Eastern. Of course their absence had been noticed by the time keeper and other official ; but the missing men being, as I have said, unpopular with their comrades, there had been very little inquiry about them until it was found that their money was not claimed. It was then soon noted that the last time they had been seen they were at work in the "case" of the ship, and before long it became a fixed notion that by a fall, or by the effect of some vapor, the two had been killed, or stunned until closed in : and all the host of men who worked at the great ship believed that somewhere in the vast hulk there lay two skeletons, which for some reason could never be found ; the prosaic idea that the old fellow and his helper had left without warning for a better job, finding, of course, no favor. It is thought that Archbishop Spauld ing; of Baltimore, will be honored with a Cardinal's hat while in Rome, on the occasion of the eighteen hundredth anci versary of the martyrdom of St. Feter. If so honored, he will be the first Cardina in America. The Southern Orphans Gift Enter prise Belief Association has come to grief. Palmer & Co., the proprietors, have been prosecuted for violating tho laws of Mary land prohibiting lotteries. The number 0 tickets sold were 30,000. 1867. CHEAP STORE! NEW CASH 8PU1SG! NEW CASH 1867. CHEAP STORE ! NEW CASH The subscriber calls attention to the fact that he has received and opened out, at hit Store, on High street, (opposite the Bank,) the largest and best selected stock of groceries: eTer brought to Ebensburg. FLOUR, CORN MEAlTcHOP FEED, BRAN, BACON, CHEESE, CRACKERS, SUGAR, COFFEE, TEA, SYRUPS, MOLAS SES, RICE, SPICES, ESSENCES, HERRING, MACKEREL, akd COD FISH, CASTOR a CARBON OILS, DRUGS, MEDI CINES, PERFUMERY, SALT, CANDLES, SOAPS, WASHING SO DA, FAMILY DYE COLORS, LOG WOOD, BLUE VITRIOL, TOBACCO jlnd CIGARS best brands, EARTHENWARE and STONEWARE, IRON, NAILS, GLASS, PUTTY, FOWDER, SHOT, LEAD, avd GUN-CAPS, CLOVES, MACE, PEPPER, CINNAMON, AL UM, DRIED PEACHES, HOMINY, BAKING SODA, &c, &c. Arnold's Writing Fluid, Checkers and Checker Boards, Pen and Pocket Knives, Horse Brushes and Cards, Currycombs, Rope, Twine, Window Springs, Chalk, Chalk Lines, Horse Shoe Nails, Shoemakers Nails, Tacks and Thread. Wood and Willow Ware, Tubs, Buckets, Brooms, Wash Boards, Clothes Pins, Bed Cords, Stove Brushes, Scrub and Dusting Brushes. The finest stock in town of CONFECTIONERY. For the children : TOYS ! TOYS ! TOYS ! TOYS I The latest styles of HATS CAPS. ESP Keep3 constantly on hand Bologna Sausage, Sardines, Fresh and Spiced Oysters, and everything in the Eating as well as in the Drinking line. The public are requested to give him a trial. He pledges himself to sell cheaper, and to sell a better article, than any other dealer in town. GEORGE GU RLE Y. Ebensburg, March 14, 1867. ORETTO DRUG STORE! l The subscriber has opened out in Loretto, Cambria county, a large and well selected stock of DRUGS MEDICINES, CHEMICALS, LIQUORS, &c. A heavy stock of DRUGS asd PATENT MEDICINES, 'AINTS OILS, . FAMILY DYE COLORS, PURE WINES LIQUORS, for medicinal purposes, PERFUMERY akd TOILET ARTICLES, STATIONERY, WALL PAPER, WINDOW SHADES, HANGING LAMPS, SIDE LAMPS with RE FLECTORS, LAMPS of all kinds, BRACKETS, LAMP CHIMNEYS, WICKS, CARBON OIL, BRUSHES, TOOTH, NAIL, abd PAINT, PENS, PENCILS, INK, TOWDER, SHOT, CAPS, And a general assortment of other ankles usually found in Buch an establishment. Jfsf" Country Physicians would do well by calling on me before purchasing elswhere. Prescriptions carefully compounded at all hours. Store on Main street. je20.3m A. J. CHRISTY. Q.REAT REDUCTION 0I p" AT TBI EBENSBURG HARD WARE j . Jf URNISUINO STO& I return my sincere thanki and customers for their liberal tt the past twelve years, durincr h av fan in TmcinADn ? t. CJl ,. have been no doi that w, owing to the extensive bui;. 11 ing, I take pleasure in inforiafo 'v! at 1 have adopted the Kati Ready-Pay Systetnj by means of which there will be a on duction in mv nrofita. A W4HLi.. tour nivtrrTiOfro will cotiof. -t r ..... J uu IfiJt I be to your advantage to bny foriU5;, My stock will consist in part u fcj FOR THE BUILDER, Door Locks-, Cupboard Locks Baits, Hinges, ' Window Sp'ga, Shatter Hinges a Porch Irons, Window Gleg' Putty, Ac. LICENSE NOTICE. Petitions for License have been filed in the office ot the Clerk of Quarter Sessions of Cambria county by the following persons, to be presented to the Judges of said Court on Wednesday, the 1 0th day of July next: Tavern . Andrew Abler, Conemaugh boro. Mary Seitz, Conemaugh boro. D. A. Conrad, Ebensburg boro, W. W. David Jame3, Johnstown boro, 2d W. Thomas W. Michael, Millville boro. Thomas S. Davis, Johnstown bor., 2d W. Eating House: u Peter Rubritz, Conemaugh township. Frederick Krebs, Johnstown boro, 3d W. Julius Seich, Carrolltown boro. Peter Brown, Croyle tp. Joseph Shoemaker, Conemaugh bor, 2d W. Quart : William Gwinn, Loretto bor. je20 GEO. C. K. ZAHM, Clerk. FOR THE CARPENTER. Boring Machines, Augers, Chisels, Bru, Bits, Hatchets. Squares, CompaESti , els, Pocket Rules, Try Squares,!,,' els, Jack, Smoothing, and F Planes, Panel Ploughs, Bea- ding, Sash, liaising, 4 Match PlaneB, Hollow anj Rounds, Guages, Oil Stonei oaw ets, bcrew lriver9, E. 01-rcwB, vvioss-cui, .ranei, Kip, c0o, and Rack Sawn. PTinTT.- n r-v.ii. f , - VUOi41;5( FOR THE BLACKSMITH. Anvils, Bellows, v ices, Shoe ITammera, Hand Hammers, Riveting Hammers, Horse A Mule Shoes, Iron, Buttresses, Pja:t. screw riates, Wrenches, Rasps, Files, Horse Nails, Cast Steel Shovt Moulds, 4c. FOR TIIE SHOEMAKER. Shoe Lasts, Shank Irons, Crimping Boards and Irons, Peg Cutters, Knives, Awls, Hammer?, Pincers, Tlaspi Rubbers, and Bend in peneral. Nails, Tacks, Thread, Was, Bristlw J FOR THE SADDLEB. Draw Guages, Round Knives, Chand!ers, Edge Tools, Punches, Hammers, Bridle Bits, Buckles, Rings, Halter Bolts, Snaps, Stirrups, Rein Web, Pincers, Awls, Rounding Iron, Iron and Wooit Hames, Pad Trees, Trace Hooks, Sp Ornaments, But Tacks, Girthing, &c FOR THE CABINET MAKER & VA2 Bench Tools, Table Hinges, Screw?, Castors, Bedstead Fasteners, Dr. Locks, KnobB, Coffin Trimmings c: descriptions, Gold Leaf, Bronzes, Pi Sash, and Varnish Brushes, Oils, TiL Varnishes, Turpentine, Colored dry and ground in oil. , FOR THE SPORTSMAN. Rifles, Shot Guns, Pistols, Hunters' Knives, tPM Powder, Shot, Towder Flastl Shot Pooches, Game Beg!. Also, Gun Locks, Main Springs, ; Pivots, Double Triggers, Hammer!, tc FOR THE FARMER. Plows, Points, Shovels, Forii, Scythes and Snathes, Rai Hoesf Spades, Sheep Shtav Sheep and Cow Bells, Sleigh Bells. K Brushes. Cards, Curry Combs, I1 Hames, Whip3, Bnt, Trace, Breas ter, Tongue, r ith Log Chaini, Barn Door Rollers, Sugar Ket tles, Steelyards, Cutting Boxes, NOTICE. All persons knowing themselves in debted to me by Note or Book Account of over six months standing, are requested to pay up within thirty days from this date, or they will find their accounts In thr hands of an officer for immediate collection. A strict adherence to this notice will save costs. GEO. HUNTLEY. Ebensburg, June 20, 1867. TVTOTTfyR! Th ncrisnn who left a Watch In m v charge last fall is hereby notified to call and gci. iun fcttm c, lusiuo vuo tuuuvu 11 um uaie, otherwise it will be disposed of according to law. UXTO HOELLE. Hemlock, June 13, 1867-3t. npHE RISING SUN STOVE POLISH. JL For beauty of polish, Btving of labor, durability, and cheapness, this preparation is truly unrivalled. Buy no other. For sale at GEO. HUNTLEY'S. FOR THE HOUSEKEEPER. Flour, Tea, Coffee, Sugar, Molasses, Hominy, Crackers, Dried Peathes, Rice, Cinnamon, Essences, Bacon, Fish, Salt, Alum, Indigo, Candles, Coffee Mills, Smoothing Irons, Wash Boards, Clothes Pins, Bed Cords, Bake Pans, Buckets, Meal Serves, Brooms, Brass Kettle3, Tinned Kettles, Enameled Kettles, Stair Rods, Japanned Ware Glassware, Wooden Ware, Willow Ware, Carbon Oil Lamps, Razors, Cloves, Mace, Nutmegs, Allsj: Pepper, Baking k WasV Toilet Soap, Familv Dye Co' Madder, Cudbe4 Cochineal, Lcf Camwood, Kec- Blue Vitriol, Solution of Til Clothes Wris?t: Washing Tubs. Table and T Table Cutlerr, Coal Buckets. Shovels and To Butter Prints, Butter Ladles, Stove, Scrubs Dusting Bra-5-"White-wash an Sweeping 2ru Shears, Scissors, Lubricating, Linseed, Neat's Foot, OILS. Carbon, Fish, Sweet, V Ci TO TQE TUBLIC GENERAL Cooking, Parlor, and Heating the best manufactories ; Tin and Ware of every variety, of my oj ture ; Gum and Hemp Packing; causes; irugs, , c.t'A Stones and Rollers, Patent iioW and Measuring Fawcets, &c, c- Odd Stove Tlaits, Grates, and J always on hand to suit Stoves so Well and Cistern Pumps and iw ufacturers prices. Spouting made, painted, ana fu rates. Don't AsU for '4 J gig- But remember the Fac save 15 to 20 per cent, on 7',. defy competition in WesteJ grjT'