THURSDAY", SEPTEMBER 5, 18C7. REPUBLICAN TICKET. PFPREME JCDGE : Henry YV. Williams, of Alleghany co. , - " ASSEMBLY : Zr. Samuel Singleton, of Ebensburg. SHERIFF : Lt.-Col. Richard Kyckman, Johnstown. TRKASI.'TtER : Lt.-Col. TV sr. A. WcDermitt, Clearfield. COtSTY COMMISSIONER . Copt. Francis M. Flanagan, White. JURY commissioner: James Cooper, Taylor township. roon house director: JSergt. John S. Oopen, Johnstown. AUDITORS : JonN Van Scoyoc, White, 3 years. Ciiaules Uuxton, Jackson, 1 year. CORONER : Capt. Geo. B. Stineman, Richland. Head tho address of the Republican State Central Committee, published on oar first page. It is the ablest appeal of the campaign. . ELSEVTnERE in to day's psper will be found the full proceedings ot the Repub lican County Convention. The ticket nominated, though possibly not the best available, is still gooJ, and ought to be elected. Let us go to work with a will and elect it. TnE rebel papers have a story in cir culation to the effect that John Wilkes Booth is Btiir alive, the report of his death having been invented by the detectives, they aay, to secure the reward. An ex change says that there is only one phase in which the story can be believed, viz that John Wilkes Booth lives in the per son of Andrew Johnson ! Says the Ilollidaysburg Standard: "Judge Williams stands pledged to make the Supreme Court a 'fearless exponent of the equal rights ot man' in other words, to give the negroes in this State equal civil and political rights with the white citizens." Says the Ilarrisburg Union : 'It must be evident to every voter in Penn sylvania tat, every ballot cast for Judge "Williams, and fot Radical candidates for the Leg'slftture, will be a square vote for negro sulTrpge in this State !" After the election, Judge Williams being the successful candidate, wo hope these papers will be equally loud in decla ring that the people are in favor of negro suffrage. The United States Supreme Court have actually declared by repeated decisions that the Union is reconstructed, and' that the r"f"i are all sovereign nowas thev,,wet-o Before th . iy IU xiffaicaJ Hump could not follow the decisions of the radical Supreme Court. Freeman. You are too fast, Freeman. The United States Supreme Court have declared that the Southern States are Fa the Union, but the question of reconstruction has been left to Congress. Independent of the question whether or not the Southern States arc in or out of the Union, Congress assumes the truth of President Johnson's repeated assertion that their State govern ments are destrovedand should be restored. Grant. For a brief space, like the sun in eclipse, the lustre of Grant's name was obscured, and those who lacked patience to wait for events were ready to declare that the conqueror of Appomattox had surrendered to Conservatism, alias Democracy. Not only impatient Radicals, but anxious Dem ocrats alike deceived themselves. The one was sure they had lost, the other sure they had won, him. But Grant-has heen neither lost nor won. He stands to-day higher in the estimation of the people than at any former period, and his reti cence, which 6ecms not to be assumed, but rather a part and paicel of the man, instead of detracting from, adds to the people's estimate of his virtue?. He is the General of the Unionarmic?, sworn to execute the laws, cod cujjht from the very nature of his high position, to keep hime!f fiee from Icing considered a mere partizan or a co-operator with either of ih? great political parties of the country. But while this ehnuld be his studied aim, he should not shrink from the faithful dis charge of his duty. When the President appointed him to a place in his Cabinet, he then bicaine an adviser of the Presi dent, and it was not only his privilege, but obligatory on him to communicate his views ( duty and policy. Ileuco Grant, plainly, tersely, and without parade, made known to the President his convictions of what ought and what ought not to be done. His words are not the words of party ran eor, but the expressions of what an unbi ased officer considers due to the laws and the people. The tendency of a govern ment like ours is to demagog ism, but here is a anas whose 'convictions of duty record with the sentiments of the people, yet who, amid flattery and temptations of being made the Chief Magistrate of the Nation, for the sake of his duty refuses eteadily to promote the chances of his cxahlon by making known his agreement with the popular voice. And at last, the fact reaches the cars of the people, thro' an agency not hL, but the President's. "Blessings." "In the room of the blessings of peace, they have gicen us hate, discord, and mis ery," are the words that 6ome of the Democratic papers clip from their State address and blazon in capitals at the head of their columns. The words are power less, for though they make a broad and terrible charge, they utterly lack in the one essential of truth. No Republican either docs or need fear the people to see them, for it is not possible that any asser ted fact should be more fully known to be utterly and shamelessly false. Even tho' wo lay out of view the disturbed state of affairs, the discord and misery that have ever marked the track of the slavery agi tation, as surely as blackened ruins and vanished wealth follow the track of fire, yet the course of the Democratic party since the closing of the war furnishes a sufficient answer to the asDersion, and casts upon it au odium of which it cannot soon rid. itself. Since that time, it has pursued the policy of a faction rather than that of statesmanship. It promoted discontent among the people of the South at the action of the National government, en couraged dissatisfaction toward the con stitutional amendments until the Southern people finally rejected them, held cut to them the hope that they would be sus tained by the Northern masses, only cruelly to disappoint them, and now sus tains Andrew Johnson in hit mad at tempts to thwart tho will of Congress and the people, to prolong an unsettled state of affairs at the North, that can only re sult in their continued exclusion from the halls of Congress, and perhaps in making the terms of their restoration still harder. Democratic Sophistries. Democratic addresses do not ignore the rebellion and its horror3, but they believe it is put down, and now they want peace. We admit that the close ot Buchanan's adminis tration was unfortunate ; but, thank God and President Johnson, Buchanan's counsellors, Stanton and Holt, are removed from the power of doing further mischief! Freeman. The Democratic State address says : "The Republican party has controlled the government for six years, and we accuse it before you, because: "la the room of the blessings of peace, it has given us hate, discord and misery." It also declares : "Tlie people are denied the attribute of sovereignty ; the military subverts the civil power ; generals remove governors elected by the people, and a despotism reign3 in tec States:" n ow, we would like to know how the first accusation quoted can be justified. Rebellion was inaugurated under Buchan an's administration, crime upon crime was committed, either under the sanction of law or winked at by its officers, and if the Freeman's paragraph and the Democratic State address do not ignore these facts, then how can any fact be ignored f The people spoken of in the second paragraph are rebel people, a fact kept uniformly out of sight by the address, which also assumes that "hate, discord and misery" have sprung into being within six years, an assumption that is notoriously false. Certain Democrats of Cambria county of late years have been loud in asserting that our Poor House business could not bo successfully managed unless at least one of the Directors was a resident of Johnstown. The late Republican" Con vention appear to have been of the same opinion, and nominated a Johnstown man for the office. If the Democrats before spoken of will turn in and give us a lift, we think we can elect our candidate, and then, and not otherwise, Johnstown will be represented in the Directory and there will be a chance for our Poor House. A Washington dUpatch says that the President has now under consideration a new amnesty proclamation to rebels in the South, and that it will be submitted to the Cabinet this week. Those who pre tend to know say that the new proclama tion will give amnesty to brigadiers ; none above the rank of coluuel were included in the first proclamation. Cabinet rumors still lly about as thick as pigeons. Seward must go out, it is positively asserted, and the latest on dit is that Ileverdy Johnson, of Maryland, has been offered the place. It is also said that General Grant wants to get out of the War Department as quickly as possible. Owing to illness ot General Thomas, the President lias assigned General Han cock to the command ot the Louisiana district. General Thomas remains where ho now is. General Sheridan proceeds at once to the department of the .Missouri. General Grant has issued an order forbidding district commauders to rein state rebel officials suspended by them selves or their predecessors in command. So good-by, Governor Wells. The President has removed General Sickles, and appointed General Canby to tho command of tho second district. Plain Facts for Taxpayers. It should be bbrne in mind by every taxpayer of the nation that the enormous burden of debt under which the country is staggering, was fixed upon it by a rebel lion inaugurated, fostered, and strength ened by the Democratic party. It should be borne in mind that this debt was enormously increased by the aid and comfort given to the rebellion while in progress, by the Democratic party, whereby the rebels were encouraged to prolong the struggle against the Union armies, after all other reasonable hope of success had been extinguished. It should be borne in mind that the debt of the nation was still further in creased by the efforts of the Democratic party to cripple and destroy the public credit, in the midst of the struggle for national existence, and that the national bonds were thereby forced to heavy dis count in contracting loans with which to carry on the war, and the national cur rency was thus largely reduced below its true value in gold, thereby adding enor mously to the cost of all material purchased for the use of the government. It should be borne ia mind by every taxpayer of the nation, that the Demo cratic party stands pledged to secure compensation to the slaveholding rebels for every slave set free by the Emancipa tion Proclamation and Constitutional inenduaent, thus adding an unjust bur den to the already onerous taxation uuder which the country groans. It should be borne in mind that al! the Democratic members in the House of the Fortieth Congress have placed themselves upon the record, by their votes, in favor of the monstrous proposition that the National Governmaut is liable, under the Reconstruction laws, for every dollar of the State debts of all the States in rebel lion. It should be brne in mind by every taxpayer that the Democratic party, thro its orators and writers for the press, is committed to the unheard of proposition that the Confederate war debt, contracted in the iniquitous struggle to overthrow the National Government, is justly charge able against tho Government, and that this party only waits the success of its insidious attempt to regain power, to fasten this debt upon the people of the United States. It should be borne in mind by every taxpayer, that the Democratic party has made persistent and private efforts to briDg on a financial crisis, such as will make it impossible for the nation to meet its obligations promptly, thus carrying wide-spread ruin throughout the country, and reducing to beggary thousands of widows and orphans and other worthy persons whose littlo all is invested in government bonds, for the redemption of which the faith of the governmont io Dlederd Sliarsivood vs. Jackson, In his famous proclamation against the South Carolina Nullifiers in December, 1832, General Jackson said : "I consider, then, the power to annul a law of tho United States, assumed by one State, incompatible with the exiftence of the Union, contradicted expressly by the letter of the Constitution, unauthorized by its spirit, inconsistent with every principle on which it was founded, and destructive of the great object for which it was formed." This was in 1832. Many yet living remembar how the country rocked wiih excitemeot and trembled with alarm at the audacious pretensions and the trea sonable measures of John C. Calhoun and his followers; and they remember how all parties exulted when Jackson crushed that incipient treason under his heel. Democrats and Whigs clasped hands and united their voice3 in support of the brave old man and his proclamation. But there was, even in Pennsylvania, a small band of politicians who drew their inspiration, not from Jefferson or Jackson, but from John C. Calhoun,' and of this small band was Judge Sharswood, now a candidate for the Supremo Judgeship. After nullification was crushed he re mained the same, and in an oration deliv ered in April, 1834, he re-affirmed the cardinal doctrine of nullification, secession and rebellion in the following emphatic term3 : "We come back to our starting place ai.d finding nothing in the Constitution establishing any final judge of the enu merated power?, prohibitions, and reserved rights, it must rest upon tho admitted principles of general law, in cases of compact between parties having no com mon superior. Each State has the right to judge for itself of the compact, and to choose for itself the most proper and effi cient remedies." Is it sane at a time like this to entrust supreme judicial powers to a man who entertains such opinions as these Y We graut that he may hold them honestly and tiucerely ; but the more honestly and sincerely they are entertained the more dangerous they are. Jackson was honest and sincere in his opposition to such views, and his honesty, more than any thing else, gave him power to put those down who attempted in 1832 to carry them into practice ; and had Jackson been where Buchanan was in 1860 we should have had no rebellion. The American Industrial League, of which Peter Cooper is President, I. D. Russell Treasurer, and John Williams Secretary, will publish, about the 8th instant, "The National American,' a monthly journal, devoted to the interests of homo production and domestic com merce. The best editorial ability of the country has been secured. Price, five cents a copy. Orders may be sent to John Williams, Secretary, No. 9 and 11 Park Place, New York,' or to D. J. Mor rell, Johustown, Pa. A Colored Candidate. Ellick Mahaly, a colored man, of Craw ford county, Georgia, offers himself as a candidate for Congress. In doing so, he gives the principal points in his history, to wit : . "I was born a slave on tho plantation of Benjamin Lockett, Warren county, Miss issippi. 1 remained with my old waster until 1864, when I was brought to Geor gia and sold to Mr. Isaac Dennis. My old master raised me as well as slaves are usually raised, giving me the rudiments of a common English education, and instil ling into my mind. the principles of hon esty and virtue. And I will say here, that I have never departed from them' lie promises, if elected, to do all he can to reconcile the two sections, and that while his greatest efforts will be directed, to the interest of his own race, he will do his best to ameliorate the condition of the whites ! He also favors a repeal of the cotton tax and universal amnesty. On these points, he says : "I shall do all in my power to repeal tho unjust discrimination against the pro ducts of my section, to wit : The tax on cotton and tobacco. I will give one in stance of the hardship of the tax on cotton. Last year, I rented a small farm of Dr. Simmons, of this county. After paying him the rent, I had five bales of cotton. On them I paid a tax of $15 a bale, ma king $75. It is needless for me to tell poor men how much I have needed that money this year. It would have breaded my family the whole year.- I have felt its hardness. I wish it repealed. "You may wish to know my position on reconstruction. I am in favor of reconstruction under the military bills; though, if I am elected, I shall use my influence to have the disqualifications re moved from all." The Macon Telegraph publishes Mr. Mahaly's card, aud observes that "if Georgia should be reconstructed under the military bills, he will doubtless prove ao acceptable representative of a majority of her people in the Congress of the Uni ted States. m m m A Worthy Candidate. The loyal voters of the Commonwealth ask no higher tribute to the worth and character of Judge Williams than the following: neat compliment paid him by the only daily Democratic paper of Western Pennsylva nia, the day following his nomination : "The nomination of the Hon. Henry W. Williams as a candidate for Judge of the Supreme Court is a good one. He was the best man. named before the Re publican Convention, and possesses legal and moral qualifications for the responsi ble position to which he has been nomina ted. Both parties have now presented their candidates. An important duty h Uxu faithfully discharged by the respective conventions. The campaign may now be4 conducted without personal aspersions, ard decided upon the princi ples of the two great parties. This is as it should be. It is an auspicious sign of the times, and if the couuty conventions aro equally fortunato in the selection of legislative candidates, there will be a stop put to the deplorable corruption at the seat of government under a new reign of honest men and conscientious legislators. Pittsburg Post, June 28th, 1867. . A Tragedy. The Ilollidaysburg If hig says that on Friday of last week, great excitement was occasioned in that town by the report that human remains had been seen in a poud a short distance from town by a man engaged in fishing. lie gave the alarm, and the Coroner summon ed a jury and proceeded to the place to hold an inquest. A young sprig of the law was foreman of the jury, and a doctor went along to make a. post mortem exami nation. It appears that the man fishing bad hooked out of the water the skeleton of a hand, and upon this evidence of the presence of a body, had given the alarm. Upon reaching the ground, the M. D. above alluded to, pronounced the bones to be those of a child's hand, when the search for the body was commenced. After raking around through the water for some time the body was found, and upon being brought to the surface, it was discovered to be that of a dog tcith a stone tied to' his necJc ! m mm The end of the world was fixed by one Dr. Cummings to occur in 1867. The Doctor now comci forward to acknowledge that he has mado a mistake in his calcula tions, an announcement of great comfort to those regardless of seeing the end this year. lie says in revising the calculations on which he based the announcement of the world's ending in 1867, he discovered that he had overlooked figures which add something like a quintillion of years to the race which this mundane sphere has to run. This will be gratifying information to those of tho doctor's disciples who have been, setting their houses in order as a mark of preparation for the great event. A "quintillion of years" is a comfortably remote prospect, according to present reckoning, and as "distance lends enchant ment to the view," everybody can enjoy the soothing reflection. mm mm How it Came Out. The way the Grant-Johnson correspondence happened to be made public is explained by one of the most trusty Washington correspond ents in the following manner : "This has been a day of great excite ment in Washington, caused by the cir cumstances attending tho giving out, by the President, of a part of the suppressed Grant correspondence, and by its contents. Careful inquiry concerning the same leaves scarcely any doubt that the President fur nished it for publication while in a con dition similar to that in which he was when he took the oath of office. He gave it out early in tho day, sending for the correspondent of a Boston paper, and subsequently refusing it to the agent of the associated press." History op the Penna. Reserve Corps. This interesting book has just been published, and subscriptions will be received by Mr. Silas H. Davis, the agent for this place. It contains a complete record of the organization of the different companies, reg iments and brigades ; descriptions of marches, skirmishes and battles, together with bio graphical sketches of officers, and personal record of each man during his term of service ; and in fact; it contains a minnte description of every movement of this famous organiza tion from the time it entered the service until it was mustered out. The history ia well printed, contains 724 pages, and should find a place in every family. The great importance of Live Stock Insu rance is well exemplified by the following letter: Hartford, Conx., Feb. 1, 18G7. On the 22d day of January, I insured my entire stock of horses (twenty-five in num ber) in the Hartford Live Stock Insurance Company. Yesterday, one of my most valu able horses was kicked by his mate, and bad a leg broken, and as an act of humanitv was killed last evening. To-day I received a check from said Company in full pnyment of said horse. I have fully realized the impor tance of Live Stock Insurance, and recom mend all stock owners to insure in the Hart ford Live Stock Insurance Company. C. I). BOARD1IAN. Major- J. D. Hamilton, of Wilmore, has been appointed the sole agent for the sale in Cambria county of "Mackenzie's Ten Thous and Receipts" a very valuable publication, containing medical, agricultural, mechanical, domestic, and other receipts, together with a vast amount of other information on matters of every day importance. The book Las re cently been revised and improved. Major Hamilton will visit Ebensburg next week to solicit subscriptions. There is probably no part of tbe natural adornments of the human person the loss or deterioration of which produces a greater change Irom beauty to positive ugliness than the hair. Fw bald people like to have their misfortune and its artificial remedy, the hateful wig, noticed, yet how few there are who take the proper means to prevent bald ness, grey hairs, and diseases of the scalp. "Barrett's Vegetable Hair Restorative" is a panacea for all such misfortunes. m- i . Tiswake ! You can buy it at T. W. "Wil liams', High street, very cheap. Mr. W. has now full possession of the big store-room oc cupied by Mills k Davis, and, having room to spread himself, intends carrying on the bus iness on an extensive scale. Give him a call ! TO THE CITIZENS OF CAMBRIA COUNTY. I offer myself as an Independent Candidate for Jury Commissioner at the approaching election. JOHN POUTER. Susquehanna Tp., Aug. 2, 1867. WAGONMAKING, &C The subscriber would respectfully inform the public that he has opened the shop formerly occupied by William Leigh ty, and is now prepared to mane and repair wagons on the shortest possible notice JACOB FULMER. Ebensburg, August 29, 1867-3t W ANTED MONEY ! Alt persona who know themselves to be in debt to the subscriber, either by Note or Book Account, are requested to call and make immediate payment, otherwise their accounts will be left lor collection. V. S. BARKER. Ebensburg, August 8, 18G7. E STRAY Came to the premises of the subscri ber, in Washington township, in June last, a light brindle STEER, about 2 years old. The owner will come forward, prove proper ty, pay charges, and take it away, or it will be disposed of according to law. FREDERICK GEORGE. Hemlock, August 22, l8C7.i5t LICENSE NOTICE. Petitions for Eating House Licenses have been Hied in the Office of the Clerk of Quarter-Sessions of Cambria County, by the following persons, to be presented to the Judges of said Court on the first Monday of .September next. Adam Biershank, Johnstown borough 3rd Ward ; Thomas Downs, Millville boro. ; Ja cob Feud, 4th "Word, Johnstown. GEO. C. K. ZAHM, Clerk. Aug. 15, 1SC7. THE AMERICAN WATCH Is ihe best tirae-riece that yon can carry. They are now put in a variety' of Casc-3, 2, 3, 4, 5, or G oz. in weight, having, in addition, EXGLES' PA TEXT DUST-PROOF AU RA X GEM EXT. These cen be bought of C. T. ROBERTS, Ilicn Street, Kbensbckg, Who ia prepared to sell the American WtUch with the above Patent Case, at very low fig ures. Call and see ! Butler & M'Carty, 131 N. 2d st, Phil adelphia, General Agent for "Engles' Patent Dust-Proof Watch Cases.' au8-tt WOMAN'S WORK IN THE CIVIL WAR. A work of real value, absorb ing interest and universal popularity. The press and literary people everywhere commend and endorse it. It records the consecrated work of woman ir organized and united effort, and the names of nearly COO of our country's noblest women, with what they did for hu manity and for the nation in its darkest hours. Beautiful steel portraits of a number of these ladies adorn the work, and it is acknowledged to be one of the finest works ever published. Clergymen, Teachers, Experienced Agents, and Ladies will find it to their advantage to canvass for this work. Address ZEIGLER, M'CURDY k CO., 5ol Chestnut St., Fhiladel delphia. Pa. je!3-3m FIRST PREMIUM Of a Silver- Mdal WAS AWARDED TO BARRETT'S HAIR RESTORATIVE 1U Fair, holdcn ia Kuhua, Sept. 20, laCU. nAKUETT'S Vegetable Hair Restorative Kestores Gray Hair to Its Natural Color pro rootea the growth of the Uair i rhangrs the jQkeates Dandrun' and llumora x prrrcnta iair 1 ailing out 1 ia a superior Dreuing, " 1 . An : . : i i : . It contains no injurious IncrdienU, muu is uio mu popular ana reu- a. a k &ble article throughout the Juaat, Wfit, North, and y WO mi. n. DAnnc. i i o wu.t proprietor, MANCHESTER, N. H. Sold by Druggists Generally. REKS J. LLOYD, Ebksbbukq, Pa. May 30, 1867. 4a 9m w m mm m am . gnoE storeTshlSFt The subscriber begs leave to infr. people of Ebensburg that he has in,t , tij from the East and has cow otenV his store-room, the P a m LARGEST and BEST ASS0RTvrY OP WOMEN'S AND CIIILDpl?.? BOOTS asd SHOES OF ALL ever brought to town. The stock expressly to order by the 1 BEST SriOE MANUFACTORY IX ln the subscriber having gone to the ir i.' ana expense of visiting that citv pJ " to order it. The worlfis warnS? np if it ripi, it will be 0 REPAIRED FREE OF CHARGE' A visit to his establishment will eat'sfr one that he can not only seI a bwtm ? Hbo seT com'ti, but that he CHEAPER THAN THE CHEAPEST ! He also continues to manufacture ? ami Shoes to order, on short notice inT' the most workmanlike style. :" A VERY SUPERIOR LOT or rvAT FRENCH CALF SKINS ON IlAXDj JS55" Stand one door cast of Crayon .! TT.1 TT!l. . . ... ul.fc ji.jici, uipn sireei, ana immediately onv site V. S. Barkers store. h feb21 JOHN D. TnOilAS. i B TOOK AGENTS WANTED.' To solicit orders for a new illustr,., (complete in ove volume) This Dictionnrv embodies th most recent studv. research, fl n rl i ri ran:- tion of about sixty-five of the most emiX iiu uu'-ancea liioncai Scnolars now i;;-. Clergyrarn of all denominations approve -and regard it aa the best work of its kirj :. me jngiisn lancuage, ana one which or to be in the bands of every Bibl reaje-' the land. In circulating this Work. Agents will fr a pleasant and profitable -mpIovmenr 7- tS Will frf ment. k3 wiiln.. numerous oojecuens wmcu are us countered in selling ordinary worlj exist with this. But, on the contrary, enconrfi-ement nnA friendly aid will attend the Agtt-t, torVib Ilia IdKnpo Arrranalila iroTnl n.l 1... . aW0 Ciji a V. a KT It y UJtiUIj f UU lUCIuViYC Ladies, retired Clergymen. School Te;ic er3. Farmers. Students, and all ntWra ; possess energy, are wanted to assist in t.". vutfsmg every lown ana county in the cc. try, to whom the most liberal" induct-me; will be of'ered. For particulars, npplv to or addree PAR.MELEE BROTHEL. au29 722 Sansom st.,Ps!u. OADDLERY AND llAKNL'SS'.- k? The undersigned keeps cons'ant'v ci nam and is s-tiil nianufa;tunng all axu. in his line, such s SADDLES, FINE SINGLE AND DOUBLE BARNES DRAFT HARNESS. BLIND BRIDLES. RIDING ERIVLEd CHECK LINES, HALTERS, WHIPS, BRICHBANDS, fee, & AU which he will dispose 01 at low j,nc for cash. His work is all warranted, and Leinffi- rienced in the business, be uses otilv the!' of leather. Thankful for past favors. J hopes by attention to business to men: continuance of the patronage heretofore ltbpr11v PTteudfil to him. i':jr. Shop above the store of E. ITn?J;es & C r . . . - . - .j 1 ersons wisning gooaana substantial llarr can be accommodated. HUGH A. M CO). L OOK OUT FOR UAPtGAINSH Beine desirous of retiring from k; ness, I ofi'er for sale the EBEXSBURG FOUNDRY, with all its appurtenances, including Ruti real and personal property thereto bi! : ing, the Engine, Patterns, Flasks, ic. A . all the stock, manufactured and uncant tured, consisting of THRESHING MACHINES, COOKING STOVES, PAR LUR STOVES, PLOWS, CASTINGS of various kinds. As I nui determined to sell. t;ra&:'; may rely upon getting any or a!! ili liifjV named articles cheaper than they twU! anywhere else in Pennsylvania. Tie of Co ). 5 1 are invited to call and judge for thn.:-" July IV, ISO.tf U. t.LA HPIX AND SHEET J ION WAlJ JL A N D stove depot: The subscriber has just opened out, at late stand of Mills & Davis, High street.' ensburg, a Tin and Sheet Iron ami S' Depot. He will keep constantly on L? lull assortment of COE raa p?o upc tioi 1 the the il a ous oft ilUt TINWARE, STOVES, kc. which will be sold to all comers at market rates. Particular attention w.i- paid to the filling of all orders from COUNTRY MERCHANTS. Spoutivy done on short notice, and H ranted to give satisfaction. Jollixj Prom? attended to. 4 JEjf By strict aUention to business arl 1 te sire to please, be hopes to merit a lit I1' lea de share of patronage. aultf THOS. W. WILLI.U' 1ST TEW CHEAP CASH STORE- The subscriber would inform the e;t r of Ebensburg and vicinity that be keeps t stantly on hand everything in tee GROCERY' AND CONFECTIONERY line, such ns Flour, Tea, Cuffee, Sugary kinds of Crackers, Cheese, fcmofcin; Chewinsr Tobacco. Cisrars. &c. CAXXED PEACHES AXD TOMUi Also. Buckskin and Woolen Gloves, en Socks, Neck ties, ic, all of which --, sold as cheap if not cheaper tnan et .4 full assortment of Candies' I Hi of rin ere a th int JCj?" Ice Cream every evening "thosj; jani.4j 1. i. T ATEST ARRIVAL ! v, I J Tlio BiiVisrrilipr has iust rtC?''1! his store, on High street, Ebensburr, tio mi res eff int cor to An of 1 ( ide Da tiv tri Eri ce; Ge ne ies at and salable stock ot Flour, BacoD, Molasses, Tea, Table Salt, Barrel Salt, C-r t Cheese, iobacco, and everything in the t; Grocery, Xotion and Ccnfeetionr?'; Also, Boots and Shoes, Carbon - B3U All which vrill be sold "-p: cash. jan24 GW -wi)im.'a 1 TrTunKS! Y-r- Ji The JOHNSTOWN M AN I A CO. have constantly on hanJ very low prices, a spc"?,r,rrti r,Rl! V COMMON am. l'KES rJ,il r jBfir Special rates of freigt on the Penna. Rai ro' fgr, ju'nto. Mbv 9-6. 9' t oi
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers