uu Iff fillip CJJSM fiSC " 'IT v 'm' '. i ti . T. Ill' I 7 Dl TORS - mm -m t c m'' x mi. JAMES, J VOLUME 9. WILLIAM IviliiiiJi, Attorney ai Law. Ebensburg, Pa. August 13, 1808. ' JOHN FENLON, Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Ta. jf2T OHice on High street. augl3 EOlUiK M. 11EADE, Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. Q Office in Colonnade Row. angl3 ILUAM II. SECIILEll, Attor ney at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. OCice in Colonnade Row. aug2C GEORGE W. OATMAN, Attorney at Law and Claim Agent, and United States Commissioner for Cambria county, Eb ensburg, Pa. aug3 OHXSTON S: SCANLAN, Attorneys at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. ZZzT OHice opposite the Court House. E. L. JOHNSTON. ailgl3 J. K. SCANtAN. AaUJEL SINGLETON, Attorney at Law, Ebensburg, Pa. j&ftjr OHice on High street, west of Fos ier'siIoleI. nugl3 J AMES C. KASLY, Attorney at Law, Carrolltovvii, CHinbrin county, Pa. XT" Arhitectt;ral Drawings and Specifi cations mad. Aug 13 -X71 ,). WATE US, Justice of the Peace and Scrivener. fJ" fll c adjoininc dwelling, on High St., Ebensburg. Pa. " L:U1? 13-Cm. 1 A. S 11 OEM AK Ell, Attorney at ; Law, Ebensburg. Pa. Particular attention paid to collections. Cilice on lliah street, west of the Di--liuoud. " agl3 A. KOi'KI.I.N, J 'ohnstv trn. r. w. I KK, TOriSLIN & DICK. Attorneys at IV Law. !:;;en;l.::r-, Pa. ii-if Office in Colona-le Row, with Win. X-.ttell. t et. 22. TM.SEi'II STRAY Kit, Justice of r H 1 i j e Pence, JohnMoivn, Pa. k Oilice fu Market street, corner of Lo- c.i.;t strt-ct e.vt'inre'!, ad one door eouth of late oi'ice ci V'ni. M'Kce. jauglO T "iEYEiUAI;X, M. D., T'hysician JlV c.t,--i Sr.r-re.--n, f-'-.:p; tr.it. P i. -..-." ';V;.-(. v-t ..t' M;in;;coi House, on Rail- -OH'l ttrrt-t. -.. V.t ( -:.; j-.roiiitit attenu?.i 'O, K.L l' CI'. " Tii- ie v.Ti T zi-:h;i.E!;- 15 a. inI i' r'.i::i:u '.'..v loi.-ated in E'ocns- ii;r '. o.Vrs t:is l-r.' '-'(. ::k: -er o to the Itirrns oftuwa ci r i v. f)xiif or L n.jhbl'j t,r.r. Roocti ad iolni n.;r Huntley' store, El ret t. " augl 13 E NT I ST HY. The inidf r-iu'Ded, Gradv.at cf t'.te Ral- iif-v Colh-gt.- of Heutai f-.ui-g.y, rospc-ctfully ClTers hi prof'.:-":cn!l st rvi'-c-? to the citizens of Et.i-!iP!irg. Jfe b:is Fpnn -l no im-iins to titni ottc'-fy nrq;:a::;t !: imoI;' .vith CTcfy if.t- :-.)Wi!)ei:t in hi? art. To many years ofper 'ial erperince, lie ha sought to add the : .:.::rtc! experiTHC? of llio highest authorities :' l-cinal Scktne. He eiioj.ly ask 3 that an i rt u ii i ty- may be given 1'or his work to -:.: t k its own praie. S A M U EL B E L P O R P, 0. P. S. E-r;TVill beat Ebensburg on tbe fourth Vniiday of each iuoiith, to stay one w iek. August 13, ISO. T EOYD ilC CO., r.aukcrs A A Eir.-.N-iii iir,, Pa. C iEr Li!d, Silver, Govcn-.rr-at Loans and rthtT Securities bought and sold. Interest allowed on Time LYposils. Collections made 'n nil accessible points in the United States, I'm. I a General Ranking Rusiuess transacted. .V-.gust 13, 1S08. r M. LE()Y1 & Co., Bankers V Y Aitodsa. Pa. lH-i'.iV: or. the principal cities, and Silver and ;:'.. for snle. ColtectionP Mai!". .Mcn- rcn-ivp 1 on ilei'os;? jyable on demand, v hl w.-M.t iircvv.-it, or upon time, with interest tU fair rav.v . iugl3 rjvivl HIST "n7vTK)N AlTTtAXKlI I- Or Jou.vsto w.v. P':v.. J'ui.l i.f Crpi'al CO.C'J!) DO ii'iYf'y.' to ihcrcafc lo -. 100.0'.") 00 We buy and sell Inland and Foreign Drafts, Gold and Silver, and all chu?ej of Govern ment Securities ; make toliectiins at home and abroad ; receive deposits ; loan money, tol do a general Ranking business. All btisiress entrusted to us will receive prompt attention and care, .it moderate prices. Give '-.s a trial. l)ircctotx : P. J. Moit;:F.i.i., jJonx Hinr.tlT, l-AAC KaIKMAN, JacOU Li.VKIUlOOD, 'U'O'i M. Cami'Ski -t, '!'1iv'ij. Y. Towxskxd. 'illoEl.i: 1'llITZ, I DANIEL J. MOPJIELL, Prni'hni. II. J. Roblkts, Cashier. sep3ly u ii.oYD T'lfs't. joiix lloyu, Csf.icr. 57111ST NATION' A3, EAXK -i- (JF ALTO ON A. GO VEItXMEXr A GKXCY, 'XI? 'lCXATED DEPOSITORY OF THE UNI TED STATES. rr'- Corner Virginia and Acnif ts., North V'' Ahoona, Pa. A: Ui-.itizr.t Caimtal c'3i;0,';03 00 'au 'n,AL I'aih IX IoOjOOO 00 '" -siaess pertaining to Ranking done on ti.voritbif fiir,. I n' cm; k1 Revenue Stamps of all denominate;.-, alwav.s on hand.. XXJ purchasers of Sv.uups., ' percentage, in h;iJ,Il'-S will be allowed, as foUows : $v.O to 2 per cent.; $100 to $200, G per cent.: S-wu and upwards, 4 per ccr.t. augI3 Q A:i U J-7siXOL17ITiX, Notary PuIT- lie, Ebensburg, Pa. v.acc on ll'gn street, west of Foster's Ho- fan; J l 1 1 r .... - " H'JiiU ot. all kinds done at THE ALLEGHANIAN OFFICII, IhoK t'r ; "iTr.sscKc, Pa. ' . : - ...... " - ; I EBENSBURG, PA., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1868. November The chill November wind is sighing Across the meadows bare ; And clouds of murky spray are flying Through all the dreary air ; . And leaves of many-colored hues Descend with noiseless tread, Or rustle with a wierd-like sound On the branches overhead. How 6ilent is the Woodland now ! No not? of song is heard From robin, wren, or linnet gay, Or joyous mocking bird ; Rut the cheery voice of chanticleer, Like some lone clarion shrill, Rings through the dull monotony, Afar o'er field and hill. Across the barren stubble-field The lowing cattle stalk, Or move among the forest tree?,' O'er many an ancient walk ; The ploughman from his weary toil Lifts oft his anxious eye And marks again the gathering clouds That sweep along the sky. Rut darkness closes in the scene, The hour is cold and gray, The ploughman leaves the fallow gf61ind', And homeward plods his way; And at the rosy milkmaid's call The eager cattle come, And man and beast the comforts feer, The blessings of a home. Tiachirt' Advoeatt. THE FABLES0F HISTORY. Tin: colossus or kiiodes. 3h Octave lolcpicrre, the learned Sec retary of Location to the King of the Bel gians, has jiublishoil a book entitled His torical Difficulties ami Contested Events." The llit delusion to which lie addresses hiielf L the Colossus of Ithodes. . In the eh 'Jiientary works in use in the English and the Aniorican schools, the Colossus of Iiliudes is rejire.-onted as a statue with gigantic JiuiL, c ieli log resting on the enormous rocLs which face the entrance to the principal port of the Island of Hhodos,"' and ships in full sail passed easily, it is -viid, between its legs. This is the narra tive of the historian lloiiin, of several French dictionaries, and even of some en cyclopedias. The real truth about the Co-lt.---i, aeford'ng to Dr. Delepierre, is that about tho year o)0, 15. O., the llhodiaus, after success fully defending tLciuselves. tigaiiir-t a year's iege, commanded Chares to ri'cct :i memorial statue to the lionor of their deity, and this statuo was erected on an open space of ground near the great harbor, wlitre its fragments were seen and admired by travelers for many years after its destruction. Toward the end of the second century after Christ, the Colossus was reconstructed under the Emperor Ye.-puaao, but of smaller dimensions. Tin: fable of the ancient statue, between v- hoe gigantic limbs ships in full sail were believed to have passed, originated appar ently at the time of the Crusades, when the inhabitants of Rhodes amused them selves by relating to the new-coaiers all sort, of incredible stories of their past grandeur. ISKLlvSAKIUS. The romantic tale of BelWriu?, the con queror of the Vandals, deprived of his sight by the Emperor Justinian, and corn jailed to beg his bread in the streets of Coniranti;iop!e, was meofioucd by no con temporary historian, but it has been re peated aire after aire, and Marciontel's novel propagated the fiction in every lan guage of Europe. The real fact, as stated by Cibbon. is that Belisarius was guarded for a year as a prisoner in his own palace. His innocence of the treasons of which he had been suspected became then acknowl edged, and his freedom and honors were restored ; but death removed him within a year of his liberatiou. He wae never blind nor a beggar. THE ALEXANDRIAN LIRIt.iRV. Whether tho Alexandrian Library con tained 54.000 volumes or 400.000, it is tolerably certain that this immense collec tion made by the Ptolemies was not, as i,-5 commonly supposed, destroyed by the Arabs in the seventh century, but became a pvey to the flames when Julius Cojsar, who was beseiged in tbat part of Alexan dria in which the museum stood, ordered the fleet to be set on lire. One story has it that the books were ordered to lie dis tributed in the various buths at Alexan dria, to bo burnt in the stoves, and that they lasted six mouths but it would have puzzled the Egyptians to heat baths with parchment! Another fiction was that at tho taking of Babylon the books were thrown into tho river Euphrates, and the number was so great that they formed a bridge over which foot passengers and horsemen went across. POPE JOAN... Is it true that a woman succeeded in deceiving her cotemporarie to the extent of elevating herself to "the Pontifical throne '! According to the widely-spread crsion, a female Pope, disguised as a man, was elected in the year and assumed the name of John VllI, and subsequently died in giving birth to a child. This ia 1 i clearly a legend, the most probable expla " I nation of which is, that l'ope John XII, amongst many concubines, had one named Joan, who exercised such an empire over A. II W U J U IbA X 14 1k JJ XII i.blVJ XX X. X XX XX 11 I T P. 1 I I H -V. l 11 u -t tt I. . him that for some time it might be eaid it was she who governed. Ilia love for her went so far that he. gave, her entire cities, and despoiled the Church of St. Peter of crosses and of golden, chalices ; in order to lay them at her feet;' and we are told that she died in childbed. ' ' ' ABELARD AND ELOlSA; The history of the two lovers, Abelard and Eloisa, Dr. Delepierre takes to be true as a whole, but he contends that the celebrated letters imputed to Eloisa, were not written by her at all, and that tho tomb in Pere la Chaise, at Paris,; is. alto gether a modern construction. ' " :. WILLIAM TELL. " line tale oi n imam xeu is Jfronojancex, k n htmi' m tt 1 I to be nothing more nor less than a northern saga tnai nas ueen uuopieu uuu iepoau;u. from generation to generation. The rev olution which took pi .ice in Switzerland in 1407 gave rise to the legend of the Swiss hero, and from that time to tho present writers have continually endeavored to ex pose its unsound basis, but the public, equally pertinacious, have insisted on be lieving in its truth. The stdfy was not known until two centuries after the sup posed event, and the chronicles of the Middle Ages, so eager after extraordinary facts and interesting news, are entirely ignorant of it. Toll's lime tree in the centre of the market place at Altdorf, and his cross-bow preserved in the arsenal at Zurich; are not more valid proofs than the pieces of the true crass which aro exhib ited in a thousand places. PETRARCH AND LAURA. Petrarch was a great poet and a great politician, but he was not altogether the Platonic lover some have represented him to bo. With regard to Laura, all is doubt, obscurity, and hypothesis. All traces left of her were so faint, even in the century in which she lived, that doubts were en tertained of her existence. Baldelle, a very partial commentator on Petrarch, is obliged to confess that the poet was by no iufeaus faithful to his divinity; but that another whom he loved after a less ideal fashion presented him with a daughter, who afterwards became the consolation of his old age. Laura has made far more noise in the world during the past four or five centuries than ehe ever did durlmr her own time. JOAN OF ARC .1 A 1 - 1- .1 i ..1 1 I We are now asked to believe that Joait of Arc was not burnt at lloucn, as is com motily said, hutJtbat Rome Lannkjo'-v:jx creature was 'sacrificed in her stead. ' This is the weakest of all Dr. Dclepierre's posi tions. He takes as his principal authori ty some professed "discoveries by Pere Zignier, according to which the contract of marriage between one Itobert des Ar- moJse has b , chevalier, with the Maid of Orleans ten discovered. When the victim was led to the stake, a large mitre was placed on her head, which concealed the greater part of her face, and a huge frame covered with insulting phrases was carried before, and completely covered her person. CHARLES V. The generally received belief of Charles V. is that, after his abdication, he retired to a convent, adopted the habits of a monk, and occupied himself solely with the mechanism of clocks and watches, and ot last personally rehearsed his own fune ral. All this, says the Belgian savant, is in fact nothing but a tissue of errors, clearly disproved by existing authentic documents. Charles V. did not live with the monks j he never wore the habit of the order, and he never ceased to wield the imperial scepter de facto and to con trol the affairs of the State. He had, moreover, a residence built for himself, detached from the convent, but communi cating by passages with the cloister and the church. Par from adopting an ap pearance of poverty or limiting his atten dants to twelve in number, his household consisted of more than fifty individuals, whose annual salaries amounted to some .4,400 sterling of the present, day. . The profusion of plate takori by the Emperor to the monastery was employed generally for the wards of the establishment, and for his personal use. Courtiers were continu ally arriving and departing, and the Ern- leror was almost as mv.ch immersed in public aflairs in his retreat as he had been while actually on the throne. Although he had delegated tho official authority, he retained the habit of command, and was Emperor to the last. OA LI LEO. Dr. Dclapierre denies that Galileo ever uttered the celebrated words. ''But still it moves." No doubt, this protestation of truth against falsehood may, at the cruel crisis, when, at the age ci' seventy-seven, he pronounced on his knees a form of re cantation, have rushed from his heart to his lips, but if these words had actually been heard, his relapse would infallibly have led him to the stake. It is denied that he was subjected to torture at all. ITe became completely blind after his re cantation, hud was attended. dn his soli tude bvhis two daughters from a convent. One of them was taken from him by death, but she was replaced by other af fectionate relatives, who endeavored to amuse and console the lonely captive. His letters breathe a poetical melancholy, a quiet irony, an overwhelming humility, and an overpowering souse of weariness. A BATCH Or FALLACIES. l)u Par, in his 'Researches sur les Amcricains," says that Montezuma sacri- ficcd annually twenty thousand children to the idols in the temples of Mexico. In such assertions, the improbability and ex aggeration are so self-evident that it is needless to dwell upon them. Books tell U3 that the Duke of Alba put to death by the hands of the executioner, in the Low Countries, eighteen thousand gentlemen, while the fact is that scarcely two thous and could have been collected there. 1 .Even in the time of Tit lis Livius, there Jvas so much doubt as to the truth of the legend of the Horatii and the Curatii, that he Writes one cannot tell to which of the two contending people the Horatii and the Curatii belonged. Yet this . C .Listonan related- in another place that riLafinbal fed his soldiers on h'timati" flesh , .1 ... ' to give thdm energy and courage ! 31. do Ilumbolt set himself to disprove some of the anecdotes of Christopher Co lumbus; the fable of the egg that he is said to have broken in order to make it stand upright; and the account of his anxiety, amounting to agony, among his mutinous crew, to whom ho had faithfully promised alight of land. In tho history of England, the Duke of Clarence was for four centuries believed to have been drowned in a butt of Malmsey, but the author of '"The Historic Antiqui ties of the Tower of London" claims to have entirely exposed this as ail error. According to the Abbe Bartholemy, at the memorable battle of Thermopyke, Lc ouidas, instead of resisting the Persians with three hundred men, commanded at. least seven thousand men. The learned Spon ridicules the pretended wit of Diog enes, and explains it in quite another way. Alfred Maury endeavors to convince us that Gttsar never said and never would have said to the pilot, ''Why do you fear? Y'ou have Ceesar and his fortunes on board ?" When he reflects on the innumerable errors daily propagated by books, Dr. Del epierre gets alarmed at the strange confu sion ia which ho foresee-,? ail literature may find itself a few centuries hence. It is very possible that historical events will be more difficult of proof than before the in vention of printing, which may conse quently have served to augment disorder and perplexity, -rather than to have assis ted in the promotion of truth and ac curacy. Clvilizin; Influence of Guit nowdcr... Buckle, in his History of Civilization in England, ascribes the entire intellectual progress of the pat five centuries to the changes wrought in the organization of so ciety by tho invention of gunpowder. He Savs otl thi? subject : "'Gunpowder, though a warlike contri vance, has in its results been eminently serviceable to the interests of peace. This important invention is said to have been made in the thirteenth century ; but was not in common use until the fourteenth, or even until the beginning of the fifteenth century. Scarcely had it come into oper ation when it worked a great change in the whole scheme and practice of war. Before this time, it was considered the duty of nearly every citizen to he prepared to enter the military service, for tho pur pose cither of defending his own country or attacking others. Standing armies were entirely unknown ; and in their place there existed a rude and barbarous mili tia, always ready for battle, and always nnwillin" to engajrc in those peaceful pur suits winch were "then universally despi sed. Nearly every man h ;ing a soldier, the military profession, as such, had no separate properly, existence; or, to spea more the whole of Europe composed nun rrO!t arlllV. in which all other prolcs- sions were merged. Tb this the only ex ception was the ecclesiastical profession ; but even that was affected by the general tendency, and it was not at all uncommon to gee large bodies of troops led to the field by bishops and abbots, to most of whom the arts of war were in those days perfectly familiar. At all events, between these two professions men were necessarily divided : the only avocations were war I.' A W. mj I . and theology ; and it you reiuseu io cuiei tho church, you were bound to serve m the army. Ae .a natural consequence, e-crythitv- oi' real importance was altogether neglected. There were, indeed, many priests and many warriors, mauy sermons and many tattles. But, on the other hand, there were neither trade, nor com- 1 merce, science nor iuauuiai,imio , - - no literature ; the useful arts were thpre. was no entirely unknown; and even cue ma rank of society were unacquainted, not only with the most ordinary comforts but with the commonest decencies of civilized life. i i "But as soon as gunpowder came into uee, there was laid the foundation of a great change. According to the old sys tem, a man had only to possess Avhat he generally inherited from his father, either a sword or a bow. and he was ready cquip r. ba fiphl. According to the new system, new means were required, and the iminii more costly and more difficult. First, there was the fcuppty ot fmnnowdcr : then there was the possesion of muskets, which were expensive weap ons and considered difficult to manage. Then, too, there were other contrivances to which gunpowder naturally gave rise, Fuch as pistols, bombs, mortars, shells, mines, creasing the complications of the militarv in- art, increased the necessity of discipline and practice; while at the same time, the change that was being effected in the or dinary weapons deprived tho majority of men of the possibility of procuring them. To suit these altered circumstances, a new system was organized ; and it was found advisable to train up bodies of men for the sole purpose of war, and to separate them as much as possible from those other employments in which formerly all soldiers were occasionally engaged. Thus it was that there arose standing armies ; the first of which were formed in the middle of the fifteenth century, almost immediately after gunpowder was generally known. Thus, too, there, arose the custom of employing mercenary troops, of which we find a few earlier instances, though the practice was not fully established until the latter part of the fourteenth century. "The importance of this movement was soon seen, by the change it effected in the classification of European society. The regular troops being, from their discipline, more serviceable against the enemy, and ulso more immediately under the control of the government , it naturally followed that, as their meriLs because understood, the old militia should fall into disrepute, then be neglected, and then sensibly di minish. At the same time, this diminu tion in the number of undisciplined soldiers deprived the country of a part of its war like resources, and therefore made it nec essary to pay more attention to the disci plined ones, and to confine them more ex clusively to their military duties. Thus it was that a division was first broadly es tablished between the soldier snd the civ ilian ; and there aroc a separate military profession, which consisting of a compara tively small number of the total amount of citizens, left the remainder to settle in some other pursuit. In this way, immense bodies of men were gradually weaned from their old warlike habits, and being, as it were, forced into civil life, their energies became available for tho general purpose of .society j and for the cultivation of those arts of peace which had formerly been neglected. The result ws, that the Eu ropean ndud instead of being, as hereto-' fore, solely occupied cither with war or with theology, now struck out into a mid dle path, and created those great branches of knowledge to which modern civilization owe? its origin- In oration itii.7 jcacn Uoee.v.;ivc fe:i- organization was mote marked ; the utility of a division of labor became clearly re cognized ; and as by this means knowledge itself advanced, the authority of this mid dle or intellectual class correspondingly in created. Each addition to its power h-.-sened the weight of the other two clas ses, and checked those superstitious feel ings and that love of war on which, in aji early state of society, all enthusiasm is concentrated. The e idencc of the growth and diffusion of this intellectual principle is so full and decisive, that it would be ......;;Mn b7 fnmliiniii" all the branches of knowledge, to trace nearly the whole of its consecutive steps. At present k - is enough to say, that, taking a. general view, this third or intellectual class, first display ed au independent, though still a vague activity, in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries ; that in the sixteenth century, this activity assuming a distinct form, showed itself in religious outbreaks ; that in the seventeenth century, its energy, be coming more practical, vn turned against the abuses of government, and caused a scries of rebellions, from which hardly any part of Europe escaped ; and finally, that in the eighteenth and nineteenth centur ies, it has extended its aim to every de partment of public and private life, diffus ing education, teaching legislators, con trolling kings, and above all, settling on a sure foundation that supremacy of public opinion, to which not only constitutional princes, but even the most despotic sover eigns, arc now rendered strictly amenable?." Seeing is DeceiVino. Here Is a row of ordinary capital letters and figures : . o..oo They are such as are made up of two parts Of equal shapes. Look carefully at these and you will "perceive that the upper halves of the characters area very little smaPei than the lower halves so little that an ordinary eye will declare them to be of equal size. Now turn the page upside down, and, without any careful looking, you will see this difference in the size is very much exaggerated mat tue reai top half of the letter is very much smaller than the bottom half. It will be seen from this that there is a tendency in the eye to en large the upper part of any object upon which it looks. We might draw two cir cles of equal size, and so place them that they should appear f.'quul. A BbbTCN paper in responsible for the following : A young man from the coun try went into a drug store tile other day, and seeing people freely patronizing the soda fouutain, at length stepped up and called for a drink or "that ar" for him self. After swallowing the foaming con touts of the glass, and laying his stamps ; with a satisfied air upon the counter, he ! said : ""lister, what do you call that that i bites so V On being told that it was so ! da watof, "Wall," said he, "I'm blamed iC i I didn't i-'po-c it was swerd Vmd '" and the like All these things In UO AUVASCE. NUMBER 14 List of Jurui N. B'ilow we give the names of the Grand and Traverse Jurors drawn to serve at the ensuing term of the Cambria county Courts, commencing Moudav, December 7th, 18GS : Grand Jurors. . Jos. S. Strayer, Foreman. Justice. Johnstowii, Adams Henry, farmer, Jackson township, Adam- 1 homas Yt. farmer, Allegheny two., Anna Anthony, farmer, CUcst township, Harues Hcurr B., plasterer, Johnstown bor'gh. Hole Laac C, farmer, Taylor township, Leynou Lewis, tailor, Ebtjnsburg borough, Collins Edward, prop iuspei-tor, Prospect bor , Edwards Robert, farmer, Cambria township, Kger John, tinner, Summitville borough. Garmah Peter, lumberman, Susquehanna twp.. Hoover Peter, farmer, Carroll township. Harrison Thomas, farmer, Jackson township, . Hayr.es John Y, carriage maker, Johnstown, llotTmtn, Gillian, blacksmith, Johnstown bor., Judy Aquilla, Jaoorer. Alillville borough, Kiper Jacob, farmer, Jackson township; Luther D. A., farmer, Carroll township. Long Joseph, jr. , farmer, Cambria tnwnshij?; McDermitt William, cooper, Clearfield twp., Mack Jacob, farmer, Cambria township. Parrish Francis, inn keeper, Oallitzin township. Sherry Jacob, farmer, Allegheny township. Sleep William, coal merchant, Johnstown 'bor. Traverse Jurors First UWL. Adams Silas, farmer. Clearfield township, Adams M. M , lumberman, Washington twp., Lutland Charles, plasterer, Johnstown bor'gh. Huithold Daniel, rail straigbteaer, Millrille; Ile irer Francis, lumberman. Carrolltown bor., Cartwright Charles, roller, Johnstown borough, Carmichael Samuel, laborer, Cambria borouh, Cunningham James, farmer, Carroll township, Cohick L. B., gentleman, Johnstown borough, Davis Da-rid It., farmer, Jaekson township. Dnrtia Aur;ust:n5, farmer, Munster township, Dishong Frederick, farmer, Jackson township, Drumtn Solomon, farmer, Carroll township, Epley James, laborer, ilillville borough", Kckenrcdc Joseph, carpenter, Susquehanna tp., Frederick John, roller, Johnstown borough, Fr.ibaui!i Charles, farmer, Plackliek twp., IVirren John, farmer, Summerhill township, Farabaugh Earhart, farmer, Allegheny twp., Graham Maik, carpenter, Conemaugh bor'gh, Gates Isaac, fanner, White township, Gibbons John, farmer, Clearlie'd township. Gore Thomas, speculator, Johnstown borough, Heslop Gale, painter, " " Harris W. W., farmer, Jackson 'own-hip, nelsel Ch.ules, farn-er, ilichlar.d township, Ilerzo Thomas, farmer, Carroll township, Itle Francis, fanner, I mister township. Jones William M., eleik, KUi.t-ourg borough, Livingston David, roller, ilillville borough, Lawrtncc S. A., laboier, - a Lucas David, ?r., toamstcr. Conemaugh bor., Lnyron Win. I,'., carpenter, Johnstown bor'i.h, Jlciiough John, farmer, Summerhill township, ilcCloskey Hugh J .. farmer, Wroshin:rton tp., ' Alardis Jo-rph S , farmer. Hlackliek township, Masters Joseph, lumber agent, Alillville bor., Noon Michael, jr., firmer, Carroll township, Ptfer John, farmer, Haqueli:in:ia township, fr;!:Llh'ff.u?.n!rmtv:oio'i.i:ia borongnr ; l'lumnier James D., clerk, Croyle township, Kootn IJenry, carpenter, Johnstown borough, f?may Jac b W., farmer, Croyle township, Thompson Maj. John, ppjitloiaan, Ebensburg, Ui!j:iu Joseph, farmer, Chest Sjrif.gs borough, Viin Seovoc John, tanner, White township, Waters K J., justice, Ebensburg borough. Traverse Jurors Second U ceL. Anstadt Homy, farmer, Jackson town-hip, P.caringer John, Ltlper, MiLville borough; Buck Jacob, farmer, Allegheny township. l)enhocf Solomon, farmer, Taylor township, Bracken Thomas, farmer, Blaeklick township, Bailey William, laboret, Prc-peet borough, Burns John J., KsVj., merchant, Clearfield tp. Ciiste Joseph, farmer, Washington township Crosby James, laborer, Johnstown, Cameron John, lumberman, Blacklick tfrp , Davis David, rail straiglstener, Johustowii bor., Duncan Thomas, lumberman. Blacklick twp., Eldiidge .JiJui, houe agent, Johnstown bor., Fagan Jeremiah, chairmaker, Ebensbrrg bor., Flanagan Joi n, saddler. Johnstown borough, Fagan Simon, laborer, Cambria borough. Good Christian, farmer, Jackson towiirhip: Glass Joseph, farmer, Susquehanna township, Gallaher Hugh, tanner, Clallitzin township. Glitch Casper, machinist, Conemaugh bor'gh, Glass Edward, founder, Ebensburg borough. Haws A. J.,tire brick maker, Johnstown bor., Hogan Patrick, wagonmaker. Mill vllle bcr'gh, Hogue Thomas; laborer, Gallitzin township, Horner Isaac P., farmer, Richland township, Jcnes Alexander, clerk, Ebensburg borough, Kirkpatrick James, farmer, Chest township, Lloyd Benjamin; farmer, Camlria township, Ltither Levi, farmer. Carroll township. Little Daniel, lumberman. Chest Springs bor , Miller Moes B., farmer, Richland township, Miller Joseph, banker, Wiltnore borough, Murray Robert, laborer, Cambria tow nship, Miller Joseph, farmer, Blacklick towtiehip, Miller Philip, farmer, Chest township, 2Iealy Patrick, blacksmith, Loretto borough, Noon John, farmer Conemaugh township, O'Ftiel Francis, merchant, Loretto borough, Orr William, cabinet-maker, Johnstown bor. , Parrish Ed war J, farmer. Cambria township, Ryan John, merchant, Cambria borough, Smith David, farmer, Cairoll township, Sechler John, miller, Croyle township, Stall John F , farmer, Richland township. Snyder John, farmer, Carroll township, Williams W:n. J., c.ioentci , Ebensburg bor., West Emory, clerk, Coacmmgh borough. Wagner Mich'l D., justice. Chest Spring bor. "Come here, sissy," said young ger tlcman to a little girl, to whose sister he was paying his addresses ; "you are the sweetest thing on earth." 'No I ain't," she replied, "Sister says you are the sweet est." The gehUcman popped the question the next da. j ... An aged bachelor was asked If lie ever saw a public execution. "No,', he an swered, "but I once sr.W a public mar riage ceremony !" "I would bestow my daughter," said Theinistcx-les, "upon a man without mon ey, rather than upon money without a man." Dr. Holmes says that easy-crying wid ows take new husbands soonest ; tbore is nothing like wet weather for transplant ing. "5?AMno. did von ever see the Catskill I Mountains ?" "No, Ckm ; but I've seen 1 cats kill mice." A poor woman can :-o more sympathy in a sixpence thai; a ' tvoam f tears. I i u