Tlio .llosliaiiiaii, TnURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1867. REPUBLICAN TICKET. SI PRRMK JI DQE : Henhy W. Williams, of Alleghany co. ASSEMBLY : Lt. Samuel Singleton, of Ebcneburg. siiERivr: Lt.-Col ElCIJAItD Ryckman, Johnstown. TREAH'BEH : Lt.-Ctl. Wm. A. AIcDermitt, Clearfield. rocsTV cosimissionkr : Copt. FitAKCis M. Flanagan White. ji:by commissioner: James Cooper, Taylor township. TOOR HOl'fK DIRECTOR : Sergt. Joiin S. Ocjden, Johnstown. ArniTOFS : John Van Scoyoc, White, 3 years.' Charles liuxTOX, Jackson, 1 year. CORCXER : Capt. Geo. 13. Stineman, Richland. Will flic People Heed ? We believe that the coming election will result in the advancement of Judge Williams to a seat upon the Supreme Rcnch of the State. Rut it 13 not enoush that ho should be elected. lie should have a majority that would plainly show the absence of any change in the senti ments oflthe people. Any considerable reduction from our majority of last. year will be used by the desperate Democracy to prove what they would style "the waniag power" of the Republican party. Neither the result of the election nor the liigoe's of our majority is a mere matter of pride. It is much more. The present canvass involves vital questions, upon Lich the people of our State have here tofore emphatically decided, and mutt decide again and again, until the princi ples they involve shall be unquestionably established. That the chief contention is over a seat upon the Supreme Rcnch, which, according to the general voice, fehould not be badgered about arnonrr ordinary politics, only brings the issues of the moment more closely to practical affairs, for though the judiciary is furthest removed from the sight of the people, and the last of any of the three great branches of government to respond to any change in public sentiment, yet it is really the most far-reaching and most insidious of them all in its influences. Should the Democratic party be successful, through tl.o apathy of Republicans, in electing its candidate to the Supreme Court, the political complexion of that high tribuual would be as completely determined as though Wm. A. Wallace had nominated every Judge of the uvc sitting upon the liench. In ncminating Judge Sharswood, the Democratic Convention knew his tegal opinion of the draft act and tbe greenback and .National note net, and they gave him the nomination becau-c they wished to riidoise his opinions as being in accord ance with their own. If elected, he will carry oul those views which got him his i omination. The triumph of Democracy vould be hailed by that party everywhere us a reversal of the verdict t.f the people in the diction aiid re-election of ex-Gov. Curtin ar.d Gov. Geary, and Justice Acncw. It would be proclaimed that the people were returning to their reason, us though by their course through the war they had vio'ated that reason. We pay agaic that we are confident of Judge Williams' election, but it fchould be by an increased, not a diminished, majority. Our Candidates. It is not often that we meet with any thing in a Democratic paper deserving of pptcial commendation; but the following xiract Irom last week's issue of the Eb ctisburg Kidman, from an article review ing the proceedings of the late Republican Convention ot Cambria county, is so fair and generous, and contains information so entirely suitable to the demands of the hour, that we have occluded to transfer it to our columns in lieu ot anything we curself could say on the euljiet. The IVcmuiu ia the acknowledged organ of the Democracy of Cambria county, and the measure of prai.-e it bestows on our candi dates ii therefore free from all taint cf prejudicfc or partizauship. It says: 'Samuel Singleton was nominated for Assembly, lie served in the Union ar my, is a lawyer of very respectable attain ments, and is of irreproachable character. "Mj. Richard Ryckman was nominated fur Sheriff. He is, we believe, a compe tent, as we know he is a clever, man. "Licut.-Cul. Wmj. A. iicDcrmitt, can didate for Treasurer, has also been in the service of the country, and U a respectable young man. "Capt. F. M. Flanagan, the nominee for Coin mitf-io tier, is a clever man and a gallant soldier. ".Col. James Cooper is the candidate for Jury Commisbioner. lie is a worthy and competent man, and will make a good officer. '"Sergeant J. S. Ogden was nominated lor l'oor House Director, lie is a deser ving young man, and would no doubt make a good officer." Ho mau Catholic Council. Recen t telegrams from Europe announce that .the Pope has summoned an cecumen ical or general council of the Cardinals, Archbishops, and other dignitaries of the church. The first general council of the Roman Church was called and presided over by the Emperor Constantine, Dot a great while after he had made the Reman faith the religion of his empire by a union between it and -the State. This council met on the 19th of June, A. D. S25, and adjourned on the 25th of August of the same year. It met in the city of Nice, Rythinia, and has since been known as the first council of Nice. It was attended by 318 bishops. Its purpose was" to condemn and extirpate the Arian hefesy, which denied Christ to be co-etcrnal and co-sub stantial with God. The last general council was held at the city of Trent, at" the call of Pope Paul the III., and was, we believe, the first council ever summoned by an occupant of the holy chair. Its deliberations lasted through several years, beginning in the year A. D. 1550. Its purpose was to condemn the teachings of Luther and his co-laborer?, and to prevent their spreading among the people. Neither the first council nor the last had the happiness of realizing the con summation of its wishes. Arianism flourished after the council of Nice scarcely less than before it, and at one time was even adopted as the religion of the Roman Empire. The whole dispute was censured by Constantine as totally unnecessary, as not involving what was taught in revelation, but an abtrusc ques tion, beyond human grasp, i. e. whether or not Christ eternally existed as the begotten son of God. The efforts of the last council were equally futile in stopping the work of the Protestant reformers. One notable difference can hardly fail to be observed between the results of the council Koon to be assembled and those that followed the councils of othsr ages there will be no persecution for con science' sake. If sometimes men incline to doubt the progress of the world, surely this turning away throughout Christendom from persecution to torture and death ought to be proof of a forward movement. The allying of Church to State and the spirit of persecution are two things which, we doubt not, were almost imperceptibly impregnated by Paganism into Christianity during the close contact of the two under the early Roman Emperors. The latter is as legiti mate a result of the former as is the hatch ing out of a chicken the result of the incuba tion of the hen. Persecution because of opinion is a sin with which the skirts of both Protestantism and Catholicism are stained, not because men were heedlessly and designedly cruel, bet because the adhe rents of both parties regarded religion as a thing to be enforced by legal means. Last "year, many of the election boards which considered the Jaw ditfranchLin deserters to be binding on them, were subjected for their action to suits in the county courts. In Bedford, eleven of these were instituted against the boards of as many election districts. At the last court in that county, one of these, that of Koontz vs. Ritchie, wa3 brought to trial and ended in the triumphant vin dication of the election boards, the jury returning after an abeence of less than five minutes. Judge King charged the jury that the constitutionality of the law had nothing to do with the case, that the election boards were bound to o.bey the law as found upon the statute book, and were not liable to action for obeying it, whether it was constitutional or not. In olher words, an election board was not competent to pats upon the constitution ality of a law, but were bound to obey it until a judicial tribunal had declared it nugatory. President Johnson, urged on by desperation, and made by it almost utterly reckles) to the consequences of his actions, pecks to thwart the will of the people, so often and decisively expressed against his "policy," and to fasten upon the country his own method of restoration. To this cud, he has pardoned by his recent un authorized proclamation nearly every unrepentant rebel, in the land. To this end, also, he removed Sickles and Sher idan, and foreshadows a remodeling of his cabinet. Yet he trembles to move further in his wicked course than he has done. Let Pennsylvania awake aud give her worthy standard-bearer, Judge Williams, such a majority as will be a warning to the apostate Johnson. Tiie Union Republican State Central Committee give notice that they will pre sent an elegant flag to the county which, at the ensuing election, shall show the beet return for Hon. Henry W. Williams as compared with the vote of last year for Governor Geary. Let Cambria county "go for" that flag ! Desperation. The address of the Democratic State Committee recklessly asserts that "the revenues of the government are less than its interest and expenses, and the financial ' omcer foreehadows an increase of the public debt' and ch arges the responsi bility for its asserted state of affairs upon the Republican party. It is not a new fir Sfr.n n rrp Ihinir fnr tha I)Amnritiii ..ij, to mako reckless or even false assertions, but nothing but desperation could have induced an assertion so utterly void of truth, or so easily refuted, as the one. we uTa nAfori 7?:, : , , c AvwU. ui iuc declaration of this address cornea the monthly statement of Secretary M'Cullocb, who certainly will not be suspected of partiality towards Radicals. Says the emocratie addrpss "the roronnoa rvf iVick , guvciuuicm tie icsa luuu us lnicresc anu expenses, and the financial officer fore - shadows an increase of the public debt." Says Secretarv M'Culloch "The Nation- al) debt has decreased an last month - - v ugu&i; ?io,o,vuu.yu, eignteen mil- lion five hundred and twentv-three thou- sand dollars and ninety six cents.") Since the 1st of September, 1SG5, the debt has K 1 .1 to- 4 r, , . uueu uyuu,-uu as, (two nun- dred and sixty-four millions, nine bun- dred and six thousand two hundred and tlx dollars and thirty-eight ccntO or more tyn WD t . . . . rapidly than was ever known in the history uu-v oluer nation, inus much for ;cniocrauc iruttitulncss. lt we continue m . . 1 a -W- to reduce our debt as we have been doin? CM tncentv years will see it entirch, tu.mnh,,! If the declaration of this Democratic n . . - n u,au"t"u " apimcu iu our oiare aeDt, it is equally false. Our State debt is a Drmocratio heritage. It was huilt n with the people's shoulders for its found- ation by Democratic Governors, and so a3 a Justic6 in the Supreme Court long as the State was under Democratic Woodward declared the raisin" of troops 1 to to . - ... . . - ruie, our aeot continued to grow, until it had reached in amount fortv-one million r.f nll-ira T?,if r.T. t x 1 j . : -u-wu ruie, n nas steadily decreased, until it is now uui niirij-iuui iuimons or aoJiars, and t -ii? . t i ii . within the past year, one million seven hundred and ninetv-four thousand ;x hundred and forty-four dollars of it have been paid. Keep It Before the People! The following is an extract from Judge Sharswood's opinion in the case of Rorie vs. Trott : 'On the whole, then. T am nf on;n;n w the provision of tbe act of Congress of Feb- ruary 25lh, 1862, declaring the notes issued f nnsmr thn nthpr rn made, as to the effect of the special agree- niprt t r r 'i xr 1 1 n-f n 1 envoi ---. ntr r Ka I United States. I am in favor of entering l'-J ll U Cltl VI UVJ KJ A fcUC I jii.igment for the plaintiff, but as a mnjority of the court are ot a difterect opinion, judjr- ,nf i, xrAt. , n?A r'l 4,. J'hiladelphia Ane of 23d of Februarv. 1SG4. where the opinion is published in full. It may also be found in the Legal Intelligenccr of March 18, 1804, page 92. T , , . wyj ut luu ,JC 13 a v.a.u- fully prepared eulogy of the Judge and this opinion, in which is the foliowin": : 1 "Judge Sharswood reasons upon and de- ciaes tiie case as it he were some lotty spirit 1 sitting far above and out of the contentions ana sirues or tne wona." i in not me noiuers or grccnnacKS anu Government bonds consider the Judge as nnita too elfvatpd and PfTiprJnl fnr Knh earthly honors as a seat on the Supreme IJench ? The Johnstown Tribune cf last week says that our county ticket was nominated and is being run, not with any expecta- tion oi electing it, but in order to "pre- I " ' r I in pursuance of the act to be lawfnl money, Harrisburg while the battle ot Gcttyaour- aD.m!!!.end'",'nfi"f'7!'5'fi u wa3 beiDS fouSh, and who, as it were, "Tins renders it unnecessary that I should -j . . -i , 11 tc.f irn Tl- hlf h ! o o Kon . "- ..nu-v-v u u uiiiii. serve and strengthen the party organiza- attempted, he upheld the government in tion." We don't know how it is in the its constitutional right to coerce a rebel south of the county, but up here the belief lious State. . i i . 7 rri 4 v i to be elected. That s what we are working ior, at any rate. It m Tiie proclamation by the Sheriff of this county in regard to the coming fall elections omits the law declaring that deserters, not being citizens, have no 1 right to vote. Why is this? Is the I Sheriff above the law? Last year ths same omission was made, but the liw Judge Williams ia pledged to the pay subsequently inserted. ment of the national debt, and is the , candidate of the party which saved the Washington dispatches state that the Government from destruction by traitors. President has determined to make Edgar u JuAdSe Williams is an original iriend of . . . " the American Mechanic, and always op Cowan his Secretary of State. President DOSed lhe 8vs(em of free traJe Johnson could hardly do anything that would take the country by surprise, but nothing -would come nearer to it than to make Cowan the successor of Seward. The Democrats could find room for only one soldier on their county ticket. ,. J . , . , . J "c'" Six of tho nine llcpublican candidates were soldier?. iUake a note ot this, you who wore the blue. Aue you assessed ? You must be as- I sessed at least ten days before the election J . . . or you cannot vote. Attend to tbe duty now. The Republican majority in Maine ia only 14,000. What Is Judge Sharswood's True I'ositloiit If the election of a Supreme Judge involved no other interest than the mere cv.., t j u H. i-i bupreme Judge, it would matter little whether Sharswood or Williams were - 1 chosen. Sharswood, laying aside his PnJcal disability, is about equally fitted Yith, Wil,ianw to discharge the duties I . . 3 court iiench. Williams is the younger, more vigorous and, of course, his mental I capacities being equal in all respects to lnose ot bharswood, the more acceptable T lu a55ume aut,ea. 60 au?U8-.liJJ"1 thJre arp grave questions which will be anected bv the pleot .inn nf Kiinromo -Tnrlo-o momentous issues which will be decided for good or evil by the triumph of either Partv wuh render the contest one of S7V P Tf," , I if. . . i J i nons at state : i uuage ibnarswood represents a nartv 1 whoso objects and principles he is sol- fmuv pledged to defend and support. . . "P""1"3. "ie r gni or secession, I TUIlinn i r inaf wAnWA.n U IT I tain and make3 blood war conditioD always impending over the heads of th people. JuaSe Sharswood, when the plavehold J!: iue.. ou, punuciy ae "O '" met.t to coerce a rebellious Statn bv fnrr of arms. As a Judge in the district court Philadelphia, Sharswood decided that the bll,s of creQlt ,ssued by the Govern- ment to sustain its armies battling in the pm ff. onPrtrn ;)o .K.ub resisting traitors, were illegal and worth I vnn. ' less. lt feharswood's logic and leal acumen were accepted as just and sound, &1 . i. . luu waue auuiaciures, agriculture ana LverwhlmPcl in Kt,- tt.: I Mlvv j i uw J IJ 1UU dissolved and the Government a wreck, Judge Sharswood and those who com I Posed lne convention which nominated - 7' '7-aueu au ine juii- 10 resist rebellion illegal, charging by implication that those who went armed to i i .i .. , 1Dvaae in coutu were roDoera and assas sjng He alp() jD . t d thafc h d . incurred bv the Government to sunnort I .i ... . ... ine armies were illegal. The soldier who votes for Sharswood, accepts an estimate of his service in the field, in defense of the Government, which degrades him beneath the level of a common assassin, while the creditor of the nation who votes for the same candidate, confesses that'the bonds he holds as evidence of his credits, nro Worth no mnre thtin ftio nonor nn which they are printed. According to Sharswopd's own logic there is no escape from these conclusions. Judge Sharswood has accepted tbenora- inatiou of a party the representatives of which were sitting in convention at Union men on that bloody field, pa rpCn iiTirtnQ n crm nof hn nrit h I .an n n v ri w " -VVV VJ -AJ fJ fc - J II 11 A A XiV, V kj U A UJ W f declaring the War for tho Union lincon- 6titutional, and denying the right of n ' r u -n j i Congress to vote supplies for the Icderal amilCS battling With traitors. Judge Sharswood is now the persistent advocate of amnesty to the men who mur- dered Union soldiers in cold blood who starved Union prisoners while they were 61ck: ana hejpiesg ia Southern prisons tclio stole the relief eeut to those prisoners by their iriends in the JNorth Judge Sharswood was and still is a free trader or xritisli proclivities, lie is opposed to protecting the labor of the :und-opposed to a development of its energy and enterprise, and like his model in Democracy, James Buchanan, in favor ot rewarding the workmen ot America as they are paid in Europe, at the rate of Ten Cents per day. here does Juoge llhams stand od all these Questions ? Judge Williams has always been the steady friend of Union aud Liberty. As a judicial omcer, lie denied the assumed .i 1T - j , lrnm thf nmn. nun whpn scppssinn wns J udse W imams delended and sustained ne credit of the country, by establishing ;. , , - , . . , ..au Z its lesal right to issue bills or credit to w carry on a war against traitors. Judo v uliams supported with zeal and patriotism the great measure which rendered tho administration of the lamen- tea ncom aistioguisnea ana enecuve T j nr-ir t t t j ti.Tol; (nnAitro un in the field defending the life of the nation. sought to subject American labor to unfair competition with tho pauper labor of Europe , Such is ih of the candidates ior oupreme juage iu i ennsy ivania. 1,nose w" vote cannot De m.staKen as to -.. c .t. supporting either of the men named. The friends of loyalty and the friends of treason will be as fairly represented in the election of October as they wero in the battle of Gettysburg. 1 7" m, k vT k, CU IOr ana will probably obtain a new court mar- tiai t0 investigate his career in tho army duriner the late war. Ex.-Governor Curtin ia rnnfio5itincr at Saratoga. Gen. Griffin is dead. Betting on Elections. At the last term of the Lancaster county Court, a case of rather singular character came up for trial. The Directors of the Poor brought a auit against one Philip F. Hath away for the recovery of two hundred dollars, wagered on the result of the Pres idential election in 1864. The facts ot the case are as given below. One Evan Mishler, of Readiner. made a bet of one hundred dollars during the canvass of that year with Hathaway, that M'Clellan would have a majority on the "home vote," that is, on the total number of votes cast in the State. A large number of soldiers happened to be at their homes during the election, and so when that time came around, Mishler evinced a desire to with draw his bet, contending that their votes should not be included in the calculation determining which candidate should have the majority. Hence the real home vote could not be well ascertained and a referee decided that the bet was a "draw;" Hathaway, who had been allowed the use of both stakes in the interim, refused to look upon it in that light, and stated his intention of holding on to tho money. Mishler then gave information of the affair to the Directors of tho Poor, and thev brought suit for the recovery of the two hundred dollais, under the provisions of an Act of Assembly which gave them the authority to do so. The case had been : put off from term to term until Thursday, when the jury found for the plaintiffs to the full amount iucludincr the interest. We believe this one of the first cases of the kind ever brought into court. The law governing the matter has been in exister.ee for some thirty y ears, though, from its non-enforcement, it has been regarded as obsolete. m m . It does seem idle to point out any of the inconsistencies of Andrew Johnson, yet we cannot forbear to quote his speech in March, 1861, and contrast it with his actions to-day: "Show me the man who makes war on the Government, and fires on its vessel, and I will show' you a traitor. If I were President of the United -States I would have all such arrested, and when tried and convicted, by the eternal God I would have them hung." Now he removes Sheridan and Sickles for not letting these traitors hold office. m m m TnE Athletic Base Ball Club, of Phil adelphia, and the Atlantic, of Brooklyn, played a match game of ball on Monday lor the championship of the United States. Score, Athletics, 16; Atlantics, 2S. Decidedly Cool. The heated term is now over, and the cool winds of September are now with U3, necess:tat:ng the use of heavy clothing, and those persons who do not possess the aforesaid article should repair at once to V. S. Barker's clothing store and purchase a new outfit. - . Time ! The present age is decidedly fast, and in order to keep pace with the march of time, everybody should go to C. T. Roberts' and purchase a good watch from the unlimited supply which he keeps on hand. and which he 19 selling at panic prices. m m Know all men by these presents that the firm of Mills Ji Davi3 are now disposing of all kinds of dry goods, notions and gro ceries at very cheap rates. Give them a call and examine the late stvles of clothing which they have on hand. mi Going Vekv Fast ! Ours is an age of wonderful inventions. The minds of in genious men havi brought forth machinery thereby facilitating and making labor easy, and among the rest, the blacksmith has not been forgotten ; fori. C. SiDgerhas invented a machine which makes the procei. of beud ing heavy or light tires, bands, &c, an easy and pleasant task. This machine is guaged and numbered so as to fhow exactly where to place tbe rollers, in order to bend the de sired diameter. Hundreds of references can be given. To get the machine, address, R. II. Sincer, Ebensburtr. Ia. The rights in sell this machine in a few States remain to be disposed of.. None need apply for Penn sylvania, as the inventor is doing well selling machines, ar.d intends holding it for that purpose. Is. B. The place to get your horse well shod, wagon tire made and general black- smithing done is at II. H. Singer s Shop, near Isaac hvans tannery. m m m To Consumptives. The llev. Ed ward A. Wilson will seud (free of charge) to all who desire it the prescription with the directions for making and using the simple remedy by which he was cured of a lung af fection and that dread disease Consumption. His only object is to benefit the aniicted, and he hopes every sufferer will try this prescrip tion, as it will cost them nothing, and may prove a bleBsing. Please address Rev. Edward A. Wilson, Williamsburg, King3 co., New York. July 18, 187-ly. m m Information. Information guaran teed to produce a luxuriant growth of hair upon a bald head or beardless face ; also, a recipe for the removal of pimples, blotches, eruptions, etc., on the sk;n, leaving the same soft, clear, and beautiful, can be obtained without charge by addressing Thos. F. Chapman, Chemist, July 18. 823 Broadway. New York. DR. DE WITT ZEIGLEK Having permanently located in Ebens burg, offers his professional services to the citizens of town and vicirity. Teeth extracted, without vain, with Nitrous Oxide, or Laughing Gas. BSDr Rooms over R. R. Thomas' store, High street. seplO TO ALL wilOM IT MAY CONCERN, The property bought by me at a re cent Sheriff's sale, from James Myers, Sheriff of Cambria county, on a writ against W. R. Hughes, of Wilraore, has been leit with the said W. R. Hughes during my pleasure ; "viz : 1 Safe, 1 Melodeon, I Cow, Beds, &c, as per schedule. RICHARD J. HUGHES. Philadelphia, Sept. 9, 1867. IF YOU WANT THE BEST COOK ING or PARLOR STOVE in the world4 go to GEO. HUNTLEY'S and get "Shear's Anti-Duster." . aeplS gUOE STOBE1 SHOE sif) J ne subscriber begs leave to ; . people of Ebensbarf that he ha ?, '0r from the East -1 !Das iU o uuvv OftPn j his store-room, the oa LARGEST and BEST ASSOPTu. OF WOMEN'S AND cniife BOOTS and SHOES OF Au JJg? ever brought to town. The stotv expressly to order by the m BEST SEOE MANUFACTORY iS the subscriber having gone to ti I and expense of vi8itihat c?tv 1J to order it. The work i. "7 '4qJ rip n it rips, it win be "u , REPAIRED FREE OF ClliRG, Ci?othan all coWriVS CIIEArER THAN THE CHEAPEST. He also continues to manufaCfn, and Shoes to order, on short af the most workmanlike style. f Bd A VERY SUPERIOR LOT or Ttvii FRENCH CALF SKINS OX hajS t JCSf Stand one door east of Crfc Hotel, High street, and immediate- . sue v. . Uarker's store. eb21 JOHN D. TllOSi? SADDLERY AND HARNESS The undersigned keeps cons'aatv hand and is still manufacturing arj ar'- . in his line, such as SADDLES. 11NE SINGLE AND DOUBLE HAPvr:; DRAFT HARNESS. BLIND BRIDLES, RIDING BP.in- CIIECK LINES, HALTERS, WHIPS, BRICHBANDS, 4C. t All which he will dispose of at lovr i for cash. h" j : ii. i - '"t ncutvu in iu- uusmess, ue usesonlvt'fV of leather. Thankful for past favor hopes by attention to business to merit i-l , , Peonage heretofore liberally extended to him. Shop above the store of E. Ni1(ri,0'i r: Persons wishing good and sustantaHWneJl nn n Via M A . AJAAAJ Tlt'n v . - 1 .u uc uituuiiuuuaicu. JJLUU A. M COY L OOK OUT FOR RARG AInIl Being desirous of retiring from b. 1 ness, 1 oner ior sale the EBEXSB URG FO UXD R Y, with all its appurtenances, including a!!:;. real and personal property theretob.;r; ing, the Engine, Patterns. Flasks, &c. Also, all the stock, manufactured and ur.nt.-iM,' tured, consisting of THRESHING MACHINES, COOKING STOVES PARLOR STOVES, PLOWS, CASTINGS of various kiDs. As I am determined to sell, purcba-e may rely upon getting any or all the abc named articles cheaper than ther can be bh anywnere else in Pennsylrania. 1VA.Y are invited to call and judge for thm?th July 18, ISCTtf E. GLASS. rriHE AMERICAN WATCH JL Is the best time-y-iece that you c carry. They are now put in a vurietv Cases, 2, 3, 4, 5, or 6 oz. iu weight, har:, in addition, LXGLES' PA TEXT JtUST-PROOF ii RAXUE31EXT. These can be bought of C. T. ROBERTS High Street, EnENsBrr,, Who is prepared to sell the American 1JV with the above Patent Case, at very low f- ures. Call and see ! 13" Butler & M'Carty, 131 N. 2d St.. TV. adelphia, General Agent for "Eng'.es Ta't: Dust-Proof Watch Cases.'- au:- HHEACHERS WANTED ! JL Four Teachers 'wanted to take ciur; of the several departments of the EbecstH Union Schools during the corainsr wintr.- Term, five months, beginning on the Is- Mondav in September, inst. Tbe cx:tEiii tion of. Applicants will take place ia wc- No. 2 of Union School building, i.berspnv, on Tuesday, September 24th, inst, clock, a. m. D. W. EVANS, Trest. ScLoolE S. Singleton, Secv. ?el- T RICKS ! 1JRICK3 ! n i? Tries' X The JOHNSTOWN MANCFACTUEP CO. have constantly on hand an1! for sn't very low prices, a superior article of COMMON and PRESSED BRICK! r Special rates of freight to all poir on the Penna. Railroad. Address O. N. RAMSEY, Supt., May 9-Cm. Johnstovrn, Fa. XTT A NTE D 31 ON E Y ! TT All persoa3 who know themselves be in debt to the subscriber, either by or Book Account, are requested to call make immediate paj-ment, otherwise tt--accounts will be left for collection. V. S. BARKER. Ebensburg, August 8, 1S67. WAGONMAKING, SiC. The subscriber would respectfn! inform the public that he has opened t shop formerly occupied by William Leigi.' and is now prepared to mate and rep&- wagons on the shortest possible notic. JACOB FULLER. Ebensburg, August 20, 18C7-3t FIRST PREMIUM . v Or n Silver Modal ffkW WAS AWAKDED TO RiRRrrrs HAIR RESTORATIVE V Eft Br the N. H. State AgrricultuTml Socif. "IU fair, holden in Nashua, Sept. 20,1 u u, n 12 s Tegetable Hair Restoratirfi Bestorea Cray Hair to Its Natoial Colori rt znotra the prowth of the Uaix ; chnc " A roou to tneir orimnai onranic n ctr Dandruff and Humors PrrT Hair fallinn out j is a mperior Pr1'' 3 ; i e b b V I. d Ik and is the most popular and rcu lJ able article thronphout tha t- i.t fvnrin. ana - mo J. R. BARRETT & CO., Propriete MAXCHESTXB, N. H. Sold ly Druists eiieraw' REES J. LLOYD, Ebkxsbcbg, 1 May 30, 1867. : TXffii;, Errors of lOblU. bw .... who suffered for years from Nervous Premature Decav. and all the effects o..1' ful indiscretion, will, for the sake off" " humanity, send free to all who nee . recipe and directions ior m.'"0 et:l remedy by which be was cureJ. - wishing to profit by the ""rftctf ence can do bo by .t, ' dence, Jons B. OoDtst 42 Cedar 1 I
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