THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1863; ilUl'L'ULICAX TICKLT. FOR 1'IIESIDEST : GEN'L. ULYSSES S. GRANT. FOR TICE PRESIDENT : HON. SCHUYLER COLFAX. FOR AUDITOR GEXCHil, I GENE11AL JOHN F. IIAUTKANFT. FOR SURVEYOR GENERAt ! GENERAL JACOli M. CAMPBELL. FOR congress : HON. DANIEL J. MORKELL. FOR STATK 8ESATOR t HON. HARRY WHITE. COUNTY TICKET. A ssembly J AM ES MORLEY, Johnstown. J'rothonctaryJ. M. CHRISTY, Gallitzin. Commissioner J03. CROYLE, Crovle tp. P. II. Director CEO. SETTLEMO YER, Sum. A uditor G EO RG E L. GLASGOW, White. Surveyor E. A. VICEROY, Johnstown. Graud 21 ass Meeting! The Republicans of Cambria county are invited to meet in Mass Convention in Eben3 burg, on Wednesday afternoon, September Oth, instant, at 2 o'clock, to hear the issues in volved in the pending campaign discussed, fairly and impartially. The following named speakers, among others, will be present and addre33 the meeting II. BUCIIER SWOOPE, of Clearfield, HON. HARRY WHITE, of Indiana. A Silver Cornet Band and a Glee Club will be in attendance. Come one and all come for Grant, Colfax, and the Country ! Alex. Kennedy, Chairman Republican Co. Committee. Coflcc. The Freeman, in adverting to our arti cle of two weeks ago relative to Democratic coffee-colored corruption, says that it was useless and unkind, insinuates that we made a personal attack on certain parties named therein, and undertakes to read us a lecture on our duty as a journalist. To all which we reply : 1. The article was not useless, inasmuch as it seems to have been of enough impor tance to have called forth a very elaborate reply from the Freeman ; neither was it unkind, fir the truth in politics, aa in all other matters, is never unkind. 2. We made no personal assault on any one. If wo chronicle an item of current news, whether political or otherwise, it does not follow that because the name of a man appears therein iu an unenviable light, we make a personal attack on him. This is not "unwonted," nor aa '-'uiiuiual course." 3. As to our duty as a journalist, we would merely remark that the Freeman can teach us nothing on that point. Nei ther do we stand in need of any patroni zing from that source at present. We notice the article of the Freeman further to say : 1. The Legislature did not base its ousting of Shugart on the "testimony of two witnesses." A cloud of witnesses were examined, and their combined testi mony established clearly and irrefutably the existence of the fraud alleged. " 2. The witness O'-deara did not ''admit that the cause of his testifying was that Wallace refused to give him $2,000." "We subjoin a portion of his testimony, to show what he did say "I received of Rev. Father Tracy $500. The $500 was given me two week3 ago last Tuesday to prevent my beiug a witness. 1h priest came and told me that my evidence would be hard against the Democratic party, and that he had 500 he would give me if 1 would leave. I told the priest I would take my family and go for $2,000 ; Father Tracy told me he would let me know in a few days, -and when we next met the priest told me that he had written for advice, and that Wal lace thought that $100 per month was enough; I supposed it was Yv'allace, the Clearfield county lawyer; I told the priest 1 would take $500." 3. The murdered Casey swore that he "voted on a forged naturalization paper," but he further swore that this forged nat uralization paper was furnished hini by one Mark Leddy, a Democrat, who took him to the polls and directed him how to act. Casey's testimony is brief and to the point, and we subjoiu it entire : John Casey, sworn I wa3 working on the railroad for Mr. Collins at the October (1867) election ; was boarding iu Philipsburg, where I voted with the other men ; Mr. Lede took me up to vote and gave me the naturalization paper, and I put it in ; cannot read ; am as ignorant as a baste : I put the papr in my pocket ; cannot tell what became of it ; I was never natuialized ; never was in a court be fore this ; Lede toll me to vie ; I was work ing near Mr. Collins store ; camo the day that O Mer; did to Philipsburg; I voted Democratic The Freeman docs not dare attempt to deny the charges of fraud and corruption brought against the Democratic party. But it seeks to withdraw attention from these charges by special pleading. It will not do. The people have got their eyes open, and cannot be gulled. We shall from time to time during the current campaign quote from the mass of testimony in the Shugart case, to prove, by Democratic witnesses, that the Demo cratic party is rotten to the core -and unfit to be trusted. Out of their own mouths we will condemn them. Rosecrans ami El is Mission. Tho full import of Gen. Rosecrans' mis sion to "White Sulphur Springs, Virginia, is out at last. He had now better turn his attention to Mexico. Wo take for granted that he is on pay for his mission to that distracted country, and whatever services he has to render her may be ren dered most efficiently by turning his face toward the land of tho Aztecs, rather than toward White Sulphur Springs. We hope he will have better fortune in the mission for which he is receiving Government pay than in the one he has performed without pay. It is but a few days since the gallant General declared that he had undertaken this labor on his own responsibility, but in his letter to Gen. Lee, ho speaks in the name of the union army and the people of the North and West. Rut the pith of Gen. Rosecrans' letter is contained in the fullowincr : "I want to know if you, and the gentlemen who will join in that written expression, are willing to pledge, the people of the South to a chivalrous and magnanimous devotion to restoring peace and prosperity to our common country. I want to carry that pledge high above the level of party politics, to the late officers and soldiers of the Union army, and the people of the North and "West, and to ask thorn to consider it, and to take the necessa ry action, confident that it will meet with a response so warm, go generous and confiding, that we shall see in its sunshine the rainbow cf peace in our political sky, now black with clouds and impending storms." The pith of the answer of Gen. Lee and those that unite with him in answering Gen. Rosecrans is as follows: "Whatever opinions may have prevailed in the past in regard to African slavery, or the right of a State to secede from the Union, we believe we express the almost unanimous judgment of the Southern people when we declare that they consider that those ques tions were decided by the war, and that it is their intention in good faith to abide by that decision. At the :lose of the war the South ern people laid down their arras and sought to resume their former relations with the United States Government. The idea that the Southern people are hostile to the negroes, and would oppress them if it were in their power to do so, is entirely un founded. They have grown up in their midst, and we have been accustomed from childhood to look upon them with kindness. The change in the relations of the two races ha3 wrought no change in our feelings toward them. They still constitute the important part of our laboring population. Without their labor the lands of the South would be comparatively unproductive. Without the employment which Southern agriculture af fords, they would be destitute of the means of subsistence, and become paupers, depen dent on the public bounty." Just what constitutes a "'chivalrous and magnanimous devotion to restoring peace and prosperity" is not much clearer than mud, nor does Gen. Rosecrans or Gen. Lee aid our vision. The latter, with his friends, says they accept two facts as set tled by tho war the extinction of slavery and the . right of secession. That. must have been a stunner for "Old llosey." Only those two facts settled by the war ! Says Gen. Lee, "the Southern people are not hostile to the negroes and would not oppress them. The change in the rela tions of the two races has wrought no change of feeling toward them." Exactly so, and that is just what is the matter. The Southern blacks are ignorant, but no more ignorant than tho landless Southern whites. What both poor whites and the blacks want is not kindness so much as justice, not favors so much as their legal and natural rights and a voice in making the laws by which they are to be governed. These, Gen. Lee and his friends are not willing to grant, and hence the trouble. Ueal ! The following is the fourth article of the Democratic platform : "Equal taxation of every species of prop erty according to its real value, including Government bonds and other public securi ties." Let us see the operation of this in case of Democratic success. The farmer and workingman say to the bondholder that the bonds mu?t be taxed according to the platfurm. Agreed, says the bondholder, but don't you know that our platform says "equal taxation for every sjccies of prop erty." Now, tax our bonds, but tax also your farms and everything else you own. Don't you see what the resolution says ? But if you ak to be released, we ask it also. D'ye see the resolution "every species of property ?" Exit farmer and workingman, muttering something that sounds like curses not loud but deep. The news from Ohio is cheering, and the most cheering bit of all comes from Democratic George II. Pendleton, who turns back from Maine saying that the "condition of the canvass" in his own State requires his presence there. Sunset Cox gives another statement that lets ad ditional light into Pendleton's sudden return. Sunset gives up the fight in Maine, and openly concedes the State to the Republicans "by a reduced majority." Deeming Ohio cure, Pendleton thought to help win Maine. Rut his own State shows such signs of going overwhelmingly for Grant and Colfax that he hastens homeward. Seeking to grasp both, both are lm. CJritnt from n Rebel Staud We havo noticed, from timo to time, articles in tho Democratic prints charging General Graut with having refused to sanction a general exchange of prisoners between the North and the South during the war, and severely censuring him for such presumed course. 'And probably no Democratic paper in the country has failed to publish, with all the embellishment of big capitals and glaring head-lines, Mr. Ex-Rebel Agent of Exchange Ould's let ter, wherein he attempts to shift tho re sponsibility for the horrors of Auderson villc and other rebel prison-pens from his own shoulders to General Grant's. Let us see what Mr. E. A. Pollard, himself an ex-rebel and a most vehement advocate and defender of the "Lost Cause," says in his "Southern History of the Wax" on this subject. Vol. 2 p. 43G : In connection with the history of the prisoners of the war, Jhere is something of tribute to be paid to the conduct of General Grant. This high officer, however profuse of the lives of his men in buttle, had certain ly an unaffected sympathy and interest.-" tne imprisoned soldier. It was throu" offices that, in the later months of an agreement, first proposed by GeneraULee, was concluded, to the effect, that, without releasing either Government from the obliga tion of affording due provision to its captives, each should have the right of furnishing to its own prisoners, in the possession of the other, under the direction of officers among them to be paroled for the purpose, such ad ditional supplies of necessary articles a3 it might deem expedient to send. We may add here, in advance of the order of our narrative, that General Grant, having been subsequently empowered with the duties of exchanging prisoners, and put in a position to overrule the behests of such men as Stan ton and Butler, did himself immortal honor in instantly authorizing a general exchange, and breaking by a stroke of the pen all the tissues of falsehood and cunning in which this matter had been so long entangled." The Democratic papers never weary in ringing the changes on Grant's presumed "tyranny" and "brutality" as a soldier. We quote from the same authority as be fore vol. 2 p. 513 : "It is to be fairly and cheerfully admitted that General Grant's conduct, with respect to all the circumstances of the surrender of Lee, exhibited some extraordinary traits of magnanimity. He had not dramatized the affair. He had conducted it wr.h as much simplicity as possible, avoided "sensation," and spared every thing that might wound the feelings or imply the humiliation of a van quished foe. Such conduct was noble." In a Sea of Troubles. Seymour gives it up. To use his own expression, he is in a "sea of troubles," plunged into it by his friends, and his friends on the other hand plunged into a like sea by himself. Under both plat form and candidate, his friends first fiitxr and then niuat fall. Read the letter : "Utica, July 24, 1866. "'It Dear Sir: I have not been able until this momeut to answer your kind letter of the 13th inst. lam gratified with the kindness of my friends ; but they have plunged me into a sea of troubles. I do not know how the canvass will go ; but, now that J am in the fight, I shall do the best I can. I see the Republicans are trying to dodge the financial issues, aud to sink the election into a mere personal con test. Our papers must not allow this. They must push the debt and taxation upon public attention. If you get time I hope you will run up and see me. Mr3. Seymour joins me in asking you to give our respects to Mrs. Ingersoll. I shall be glad to hear from you at all times. Truly Your?, "HORATIO SEYMOUR. "Hon. C. M. Ingersoll, New Haven, Conn." TiTe Meet Fug.- The Democratic mass'inoeting Tuesday night was addressed by R. M. Speer, of Huntingdon, General Kerr, of Pittsburg, Cyrus L. Pershing, Esq., of Johnstown, and Col. J. P. Linton, of Johnstown, the Democratic nominee for Congress. The speeches were a repetition of the usual Democratic argument against everybody and everything save Democrats and the Democratic party, and were stale, fiat, and unprofitable. The attendance was small. No enthusiasm was manifested. In fact, the meeting was not a decided success. When a respectable Democratic meeting cannot be gathered together in Eberiburg after a month's notice given by advertise ment and handbill, and on Court week too, may it not be said to betoken Ft for that party at the elections ? The Campaign. Crack ! crack ! boom I boom ! comes the echo of the guns from N ew l ork. Twen- ty-seven thousand majority for Vermont will' do. It was a square, etand up fight, and all see the result. The rurht win" has moved and the enemy is overwhelmed. In a few days Maine will speak. Demo crats have been telling us that a ground swell was coming, and sure enough it is here, but it has come in a different way from that predicted. Before the middle of October there will be another ground swell in Pennsylvania that will shake the dry bones. Notiunq could more thoroughly show the falsity of the assertion that the late Southern rebels had returned to loyalty aud patriotism, than the recent declaration of the rebel general N. R. Forrest, that there were 40,000 Ku-Kluxers in Tennes see alone, and 550,000 in the entire South, and that they do not mean to kill blacks, but whit-a radical. EDITORIAL, ETCHINGS. Q Gold i3 quoted at 143. Town is crowded with strangers. r3 New subscribers are pouring in oa us. jCSf Of course you will attend the Repub lican mass meeting to-day Wednesday. ; Good speeches yill be delivered af ternoon and evening. Look out for the torchlight proces sion at night. jfcSTEx-Gov. Thomas IT. Seymour, of Conn., died on the 3d inst. J6g3 Grounds for Republican complaint Center county coffee-grounds. jggy" Hon. John Cessna has been nominated for Congress in the iGth Penn. District. QT The "Wickedest man in New York" has teformed, and turned his dance house into a prayer meeting house. ftcF" They arrested a woman in Pittsburg the other evening for being out after night fall. Well governed city, SSf John T. HoITman :3 the Democratic nominee for Governor in New York, against John A. Griswold, Republican. J&tS A Democratic exchange says that Seymour and Blair bonnets are the latest nsation. They should be seen under a veil. "" The Fenian3 are reinforcing the De mocracy of Cambria county, but the Democ racy of Cambria county never reinforced the Fenians. J6yThe Democracy of Cambria county turned out last night, and before the meet ing adjourned a good many turned inside j out. i JEPsJ The value of the hay crop of the Northern and Western States i3 estimated at $200,000,000, the crop being the largest ever produced; JkEJF' The Hon. John Covode is making a vigorous canvass in his district, and all the indications are that he will secure his re election by a handsome majority. JESf-Robert, son of the late Stephen A. Douglas, delivered his maiden political speech at Raleigh, N. C, a few days since, in behalf of Grant and Colfax. JUSf" The Democratic Conference for this Senatorial District met in Indiana, for the second time, on 31st ult., but agsiin adjourn ed, and sine die, without making a nomina tion, Jif "Every election that his been held since Mr. - Seymour was nominated has resulted in a Democratic triumph." Johns town Democrat. Vermont I On Monday of list week, the Athlet ics of Philadelphia beat the Atlantics of Brooklyn in a game of base ball at Philadel phia, and on Monday of this week repeated the performance in New York city. jggg The Postmaster General has, in con formity with a recent act of Congress, issued his order to his subordinates to send tar the Dead Letter oince all letters, circulars, &c, relating to lottery, gift concerts, and similar swindles. tfST William A. "Wallace, Chairman, &c, 13 out with another address, in which he says: "From every section conies the glad news of a defiant and united Democracy, and of a torpid and dispirited foe." Yhen he wrote that, he could not have heard from Vermont. jfcSy A miner dug through tertiary clay, And stooped and picked his fossils o'er, Until he came, one July day, Right down upon the rocky floor, And there a copper lode he spied, And clapped his hands and gaily cried : "I've found at last the true Seam ore .'" At Harri3burg, the Capital of our Commonwealth, in a leading Democratic drinking saloon, frequented by the chiefs of that party, hang in handsome frames, the portraits of Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee, Beauregard, Buckner, Bragg, and, to crown all, of Wilke9 Booth. Gen. John Ross of M'Veytown has had opened and tested a bank of fine sand suitable for the manufacture of glassware. He has, we understand, some tumblers made out of it in hi3 possession, which the manu facturers pronounce a very superior article. He is offered $D per ton for its delivery in Pittsburg. XgJ" A new gun, superior to either the ueedle gun or the barrel gun, wa3 lately tested at Johnstown. We read in the Johns town Democrat that at ft Democratic meeting held in that place on Saturday evening week, D. M'Laughlin, Esq., succeeded in throwing rjlSTLot into the Disunion ranks for one hour and a half at a stretch- and without bursting! As a tough, serviceable, and de structive piece of ordnance, Daniel may be said to be unparalleled. There died at Valley Forge, Pennsyl vania, on Saturday last, an old woman, known as Grandmother Posey, the widow of a revolutionary soldier at the advanced age of one hundred and two years. She remem bered tho revolution well. She was followed to the grave by gray-haired descendants, and was th6 ancestress of the following progeny: Ten children, eighty -one grandchildren, one hundred and nineteen great-grandchildren, thirty-three great-great-grandchildren, and five great-great-great -grandchildren. Reverdy Johnson, away from the as phyxiating atmosphere of slave Maryland , ex pands aud grows patriotic, as becomes the Senator and representative of a free Republic. At the annual feast of the Sheffield cutlers, reviewing the causes and consequences of our late war, Mr. JohoOu is reported by the Atlantic Cable as perorating with the follow ing effective sentence : "None but free men now tread the soil of America, and history will say that all was well spent in erasing this btot, transmitted from a common ances- i f rr tarniclnnrr rtur famo c nil V 1 1 t i r -r fl-ij. Declaration of Independence." Letters of ccpfance of the Republican IVoxiiiiieea. GENERAL GRANT'S LETlEtt. Washington, D. C, May 20, 18C3; General Joseph R.IIavcley, Frcsidcnt Xat. Union Jiepullican Convention : In formally accepting the nomination of the National Union liepublican Con vention of th9 21st of May instant, it seems proper that some statement of views beyond the mere acceptance of the nomi nation should bo expressed. The proceedings of the convention were marked with wisdom, moderation, and patriotism, and I believe express the feel ings cf the great mass of those who sus tained the country through its recent trials. I endorse their resolutions. If elected to the office of President of the United States, it will bo my endeavor to adminster all the laws ia good faith, with economy, and with the view of giving peace, quiet, aod protection everywhere. In times like the present it is impossible, or at least eminently improper, to lay down a policy to be adhered to, right or wrong, through an administration of four years. New political issues, not foreseen, are constantly arising j the views of the public on old ones are constantly chang ing, and a purely administrative officer should always b a left free to execute the will of the people. I always have respec ted that will and always shall. Peace, and universal prosperity, its se quence, with economy cf administration, will lighten the burdeD of taxation, while it constantly reduces the national debt. Let U3 have peace. With great respect, ycur obedient ser vant, . " U.S. GRANT. MR. COLFAX'S LETTER. Washington, May 30, 18G3. JLm. J. li. ILitcUy, Frezidcnt 2sat. Union FepvLHeau Convention: Dear Sir : The platform adopted by the patriotic convention, over which you presided and the resolutions which eo happily supple ment it, so entirely agree with my views as to a just uational policy, that my thanks are due the delegates, as much for this clear aud auspicious declaration of princi ple asftr the nomination with which I have beea honored, aud which I gratefully ac cept. When a great rebellion, which imperil led the national existence, was at lastover ihrown, the duty of all others devulving on those intrusted with the responsibili ties of legislation evidently was to require that the revolted States should be read mitted to participation in the government agains-t . which they htd warred only on such a basis as to increase and fortify Dot to wCaken or endanger the strength of the nation. Certainly no oneoughtto nave claimed that they should be readmitted un Jer such rules that their organization aa States could ever again be uscJ, as at the open ing of tbe war, toiefv the natioca! author ity, or to destroy tho national uiiity. This principle has beea the pole fctar of thoe who have inflexibly insisted oa the con gressional policy your convention so cor dialiy endorsed. DafHed by executive op position and by persistent reiusald to accept any plan of reconstruction proffered by Congress, justice and public safety at last combined to teach us that only by an en largement of - suffrage in those States couid the desired end be attained, and that it was even more safe to give the ballot to those who loved the Union than to those who had sought iaefieeiuall y to destroy it. Tho as?ur.'d success of this legislation is being written on the adamant of histo ry, and will be our triumphant vindica tion. More clearly, too, than ever before does the nation now recognize that the greatest glor' of a ropublie is, that it throws the shield of its protection over the humblest and tho weakest of its people, and vindicates the rights of the poor and the powerless as faithfully as those of the rich and the powerful. 1 rejoice, too, in this convention, to find in your platform the frauk and tear less avowal that the naturalized citizens must be protected abroad, "at every hazard, as though they were native born." Our whole people are foreigners or descendants of foreigners. Our fathers established by arms their right to be called a nation. It remains for us to establish the right to welcome to our shores all who are willing by oaths of allegiance to become Ameri can citizen?. Perpetual allegiance, as claimed abroad, is .only another name for perpetual bondage, and would make all elaves to the soil where first tbey saw the light.. Our national ceme teries prove how faithfully these oaths of fidelity to their adopted land have been sealed in the life blood of thousands upoo thousauds. Should we not then be faithless to the dead if we did not protect their liv ing brethern in the enjoyment of that nationality, for which, side by side with the native born, our soldiers of foreign birth laid down their lives ? It was fitting, too, that the representa tives of a part' which had proved so true to national duty in time of war should speak so clearly in time of peace for the maintenance untarnished of national honor, national credit, and good faith as regards its debt, the cost of our national existence. I do not need to extend this reply by further comment on a platform which has elicited such hearty approval throughout the land. The debt of gratitude it ac knowledges to tho brave men who paved the Union -from destruction tho frank approval of amnesty based on repentance and loyalty the demand for tho most thorough economy and honesty in the Government tho sympathy of tho party of libe'rty with all throughout the world who-long for the liberty we here enjoy and the recognition of the sublime princi ples of the Declaration of Independence, are worthy of the organization on whoso banners they are to be written in the com ing contest. Its past record cannot be blotted out or .-.0 . uau IieeQ hcan party, slavery would to-da-baleful shadow over the republic ?S had been no Republican party' and free speoch would be a from the Potomac to the Ki0 r! , ' ten years ago. If the llepuUic, could have been stricken from when tho banner of rebellion wasir! and when the response of "no n'?' was heard at the iNorth, we w0u5y had no nation to-day. But for re publican party daring to risk the" of tax and draft laws, our fia C,-,C'-'S have been kept flying on the field V long looked for victory came. AVi-i, liepublican party, the civil right b;' guarantee of equality under tnelawj" humble and tho defenceless as wt' 1" the strong, would not be to-day V""-.'- national statute-book. With such inspirations from the and following the example of thefju- -of the republic, who called the vi-t ' general of the revolution to preside',, the land his triumphs had saved froa' euemies, I cannot doubt that our 1 C will be crowned with success. Atl will be a eucces3 that will bring rest hope, confidence, prosperity andror South as well as North, West as we11" -East, and above all, tho blessing im providence of national concord and le-" Truly, yours, Scuitleu Colfax To tlie Voters or Cambria" t, I announce myself a3 a candidate for office of DISTRICT ATTORNEY, and pectfu!ly solicit tho suffrages of tie at the ensuing election. JOSEPH MTOXALD. Ebensburg, Sept. 0, 1SC8. STPvAY COW. Came to the premises of the ?i:b?::'--' in Cambria township, on tbe 3d in;!., a H cow, slightly reddish on her sides, whh U; horns sawed off supposed to be TorSre: old. The owner is requested U coaje'fyr ward, prove property, pay charge?, lsi her away, or she will he uiivostd o a.or: ing to law. U ICiiAUD DENNETT. Sept. 8,-3t jq" E W TAILO 11 S II O PU The snberriber has removed his Tuf Shop into KEADE'S "EV UriLDIVG, Center street, near Colonaoe Row, and: spectfully informs his pH customers and the rest of mankind that ha is row prepr.Tt to manufacture all kin is of GEXrS A XD" VOL TIlS' Wf.'ARIXG Al, pare!, in the Litest styJe of the art, with I . ncafness f.ni dispatch, and upon tie most rcasonahle terms. Perseus needing work in my line are rpspee' fully invited to give a call. D.J. EVA.N3. Lbeushurg. Aug. 13, tf. ipAUTION : y JNolice is nc-rer-y piven thut 1 fir-i :. scli ctcr.er of the IlKIIIX to manutactiire !:. sell 'i!i:TLEV 50S-EX1'L021Y MET ROTOLITAX OIL" in Caral-ria county, which I have an assignment cf Letter lv; ent, and that any person or persons man: facturing cr selling it, or any imitation dr. by uh'ittifr name it may be known, wirlioi first obtainingauthority from me, will be r; ceeded against bj due course of law, end sub jected to euch penalties and fines a3 are iu nosed by law. The ioo-wrvv na.THed persons i&ie pij-. chased right 3 froxn me, and are authorize'.-. f manufacture and sell the Metropolitan O'-Wj Christian Reich, tor unimffvfre feorwc and Washington township: John Ruck, ft Carrolltown borough and Carroll, Chest at ; Susquehanna townships. Any otter parti- , making or selling the Oil, or any iuiitau'.-:' thereof, without producing written author;;., from me, are infringing upon my right, a: -they and those purchasing from them will t-t dealt with according to law Aug. 13, '6S-tf- M. L. OAT MAX. EBEXSBURG DRUG & BOOK STOZL Lemmon & Mceeat, dealers in Drugs, Medicines, Perfumery, Fancy Soaps, Patent Medicines, Pure Spices, Flavoring Extracts, Cap Paper, Post Paper, Note and Billet Paper Pens, Pencils, Penknives, '.Pass Books, ifilank Books. Praver Bookz, E; i Historic, iXovels, iSohool Books, Jewelry, Photograph All Pipes, Tobacco, nifars. and t-no" (Pure Liquors for medicinal purpo; ust 20, 18GS-3ia. Pocket Books, Ebensburg, Aug N T-.T-.- ntTP r rt en wtiIPF!. ' Tim ciil-iarifioT Yi-niilil infnrm the CU' -s of Rbensburg and vicinity that he keep:-'"-" stantly on hand everything in the GROCERY AND CONFECTIONERS .. line, sucu as t lour, lea, tonee, ou-: kinds of Crackers, Cheese, Smokitg Chewing Tobacco, Cicrars, &c. CAXXED FEACJIES AXD TO.YlTOP; Aiso, JJnrkskm ana w oo:eu uiuu--, -en Socks, Neck ties, &c, all of which win i sold as eheap if not cheaper than elsewUt.t .1 full assortment of Candies . EST Ice Cream every evening. augI3 R- R- TnoAa EEES J. LLOYD, j Successor of R. S. - Dealer in 1IVT; Pnnr: ntirr.3 AND MEDICINES, PAIV- OILS; AND DYE-STUFFS, PEllFCMfc- RY AND FANCY ARTICLES PL HE WINES AND BRANDIES FOR Jf CAL PURPOSES, PATENT MEDIUM,--i .rt - Letter, Cap, and Note Papers, Pens, Pencils, Superior Ink, And other articles kept by Druggists genera-. Physicians' prescriptions carefully covipo Office on Main Street, opposite tue Ji tain House, Ebensburg, Ta. . - i B OdT and SHOE EMPOIUL The subscriber begs leave to - the public that he ha3 opened out a Shoe Store in the rooms formerly oc.;; by Davis & Evans, on Center street, ; -burg, where he will carry on the busmen aii extensive scale. READY-MADE BOOTS asp SHOES-- For sale at City BOOTS ASD SHOES made to order f On slurtest noh-'i- ... . .. , ffif Q The public are lnvuea ib"' ... o!l T ;il coll OiPin the cheapp'-i , warrant uiv stock and make to give sat 'ft lion. Taugl3 JOHN O. EU-