THURSDAY NOVEMBEH 10, 1868. Tbanktiglvtiip. ComttllMWealth ojf Pennsylvania : Unto Ood, oor Creator, we tire Indebted for liTe and all Ita blessings. It, therefore, becomes us at times to render unto Him the homage of grateful hcf.rts; and in the performance of our sacred duties, to setupart ppecial periods to ''enter into His pates with thanksgiving and into His courts with praise." For this purpose, and in accordance with an established custom, I have designated Thurs day, TUB 2tiTH DAY Or XOVEMBKR NEXT, and I recommend that the people of this Common wealth on that day refmin from their usual avocations and pursuits, and assemble at their chosen places of worship, to "praise the name of God and mngnify Him with thanks giving;"' devoutly to acknowledge their de pendence, and lay upon His altars the cheer ful offerings of grateful hearts. Let us thank Him with Christian humility for health and prosperity, abundant harvests, the protection of commerce, and advance ment of scientific, mechanical and manufac turing interests ; our progress in education, morality, virtue and social order; the increase of our material wealth ; exemption from pes tilence and contagious diseases and the de structive lufluences of war ; for having Dies sed us aa a peope and a nation, and opened before us the brightest prospects tor the iu ture ; and for all other blessings, both tem poral and spiritual. With sure reliance upon Divine favor, let ns pray for the forgiveness of our sins king public confession of our epend'ence, that we may continue worthy 0f fij3 parental love and protecting cr? - " viva and icitgujus nner'.a And political rights may remain 'unimpaired; that we may remember with gratitude our country's brave defenders, and cherish with sympathy their widows and orphan children ; and that our paths through life may be directed by the example and instructions of the Redeemer, who died that wc might enjoy all the blessings which flow therefrom, and eternal life in the woild to come. Given under my hand and the Great Seal of the State, at Harrisburg, this twenty eighth day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-ty-eight, and of the Commonwealth the ninety-third. John W. Geaby. By the Governor: F. Jordan, Sec'y of the Commonwealth. Constitutional Representation. The XIV th amendment to the National Constitution, ratified before the adjourn ment of the last Congress, provides that when any State shall deny to any of its citizens the privilege of the ballot on ac count of race or color, the number of its representatives shall be diminished in the same ratio as the number so disfranchised bears to the population of such State. Certain States, Kentucky and Maryland, each contain a large percentage of popu lation to whom suffrage is denied for the causes mentioned in the amendment, and consequently are not legally entitled to the same representation in Congress which they have heretofore had. Delaware would be in the same predicament were it not she has never had more than one rep resentative, of which she cannot so long as she remains a State be deprived. In order that this provision of the amendment may be carried into effect, it is necessary that Congress make a new apportionment of the representatives among the different States. But this, Congress failed to do at its last session, most probably because it would necessarily have to be done at the close of an extra ordinarily long sitting. The last appor tionment made by Congress authorized to Kentucky nine and to Maryland five representatives, and in pursuance of this apportionment those States at the late elections chose the number allotted. It is evident that the number chosen is not in compliance with the Constitution. It is equally evident that they acted in perfect good faith. The question now comes up, shall these representatives be allowed to hold their scats in the coming Congress 'I It is argued by those who say they shall not, that the-number of representatives elected is in violation of her Constitution, and is therefore illegal, and as it is not proper for Congress to say which of these representatives should ana which should not retire, the only recourse is to deny the right of sitting to the entire delegations. We hold the proposition to be rotten in point of logic, and impolitic in point of practice. First of all, we maintain that no State should bo deprived of her repre sentation for light, or trivial, or mere tech nical, cause. Next, as a principle, we say tiat no person, real or corporate, should or can rightfully be held to the conse quences of violating a Jaw so long as the lawm iking power has left it impossible for him to obey it. If this is not the coiTcct view, then not only may States be de prived at any time of representation in the National councils, but fines may be impos ed, property confiscated, and the citizen biuibulf eabt into prison for not doing what he could not do. It is an old and long settled principle of construing laws that acts of the Legislature which command wh.it is iai possible to be performed are of no binding force. In the present case, it was utterly impossible for any State to comply with the amendment until Con gress had paved the way by a new appor tionment. How, then, shall a State be punished for its non-compliance ? Hut it. is no less against good law than aainst good comniou souse that while the culpa bility, if any, rests uron Congress. tlu penalty should be visited upon Keyi- ttfccfcy and Maryland. But if the principle is good against one State, it is equally good applied to alL Suppose, then, that the States representing a quorum of Congress had been placed in the same condition as Kentucky and Ma ryland now ore. Their representatives could not have legally taken their seats. Nor could the respective States have elec ted others, for it is the duty of Congress, not the States, to make the apportionment, the Constitution expressly so providing. There would then be this dilemma : The States could not elect under the old ap portionment without a violation of the Constitution. Nor could they themselves apportion representatives unless in viola tion of that instrument. As a conse- scquence, Congress could never again constitutionally assemble. It is useless to say this is an extreme case. It is a very possible case. But extreme cases are the tests of rules where the rules r,'t on principle. Where a law dyoS not sccurc its own enforcement is thc duty of tne Legislature provide for that enforce mo.Li; Dy proper legislation. Until it does so do, it can rightfully hold no person ac countable. It will be time enough to talk of excluding these States from representa tion when they shall have refused to abide by an apportionment made under the XlVth amendment. But if the argument is good for anything, it was just as good the day the amendment was adopted as now, and the delegations from Kentucky and Maryland should have instantly been ousted from their seats. There is no such law nor logic nor common reason that would exclude States from representation guilty of no wrong nor even of neglect. Test of Character. Each individual of every community must necessarily have some sort of char acter. It is possible for him to be with out reputation, but a character is as cer tain to be a consequence of his existence as that death should follow birth. More than this his character may be one sort, and his reputation another. Character is what the man is, and may be described as the sum total of his habits. Reputation is what he is reputed to be. It is possible that .a man be a scoundrel, and have the reputation of a saint ; or be a saint, and y et looked upon as dishonest. A man's reputation should accord with his charac ter, and it is important to the community in which he lives, as well as to the State at large, that it do so accord. Nor is there any agency by which the two may be made to harmonize other th?.n such as each community establishes for itself. The law is powerless in the case, for the plain reason that it could enforce no rule that it might adopt. But were it other wise, it should not prescribe a rule, for to do so would be to usurp the province of private judgment and to destroy all indi viduality of thought and action. The object to be attained by the adoption of a rule is the good of the State or communi ty. It ought to be such u One as would tend, in its application, to make sincere men and good citizens. Now, what is such a rule ? Let us suppose a case : A man of inquiring mind concludes, how ever mistakenly, that the Christian religion is false, but he perceives that if he openly avows his conviction, he will lose his re spectability, by which . term is usually designated the possession of an entree to "good society;" and if he is a man in business, he will lose a great portion of his custom also. As a consequence, he shrinks from the avowal, continues a profession which he regards as a mere superstition, and at last almost imperceptibly to himself becomes the chief of canting hypocrites. But would this be the case if a man were judged solely by what ho is and does, rath er than by what he professes ? In the days of the English commonwealth, when thc Puritanic influence had reached its hight, thc most sincere Furitan was put to the blush in all his professions and all his scriptural phrases and sepulchral tones by thc most graceless hypocrites and shameless libertines. So it will continue to be to the extent that men acquire" de ference and respectability by virtue of their professions. Adherence to a partic- i ular system, assent to certain dogmas, or .idhsion to particular forms, should weigh liPthing in our estimate of charac ter, or in the confidence or the lack of it which wc may show towards cur fellow". If a man dots well, if he love justice and hate wrong, if he is industrious in his hab its and upright in his life, the motives that move him must be good. The question is net, is his theology correct t or his philos ophy sound ? We yield to none in love of a correct theology and sound philosophy. But the very end and aim of these is pu rity of life, industry, cleanliness, and love of justice, It may be objected, and plaus ibly, too, that a community whose inquiry is directed to what a man is and does rath er than to what a man believes aud thiuks, undermines the foundation of religion aid encourages skepticism and infidelity. 3he objection does not weigh much with as, nevertheless we give it this answer : M,ny persons assume an air of religion an c as sent to Christian truth, because the ias3 of those about them do the same. , Bit if Christian truth, or any other truth, rere less taken for granted, it would be moe of ten accepted intelligently and more fre quently rejected, not because thoroug. in vestigation could lead to different reiilts, but because it would sometimes be neoher candid nor thorough, and very frequ'atly as crotchety as the investigator himscf. Yet this would result : Insincere 7xm9 having nothing to gain by profession of a particular belief or observance of foi would have no temptation to maV thoone or observe the other. Tnere wouljbe more sincere me- though fewer profssed 1.-1. V!.l... ' I uui, xiicK;vry saints. Intemperate Zeal. J I wo weeks ago, an article appeared in these columns relative to the alleged dem ocratic election frauds in the 21st Con gressional district f of this State. Tliii article contained, in the general specified tion of frauds charged, a statement to thetown -Williamsburg and Newry, is talk'ed effect that certain foreign-born inmates of the St. Xavier Catholic Monastery at Youngstown, Westmoreland county, voted at the October election without first hav ing gone through the formality of obtain ing naturalization papers. The article in ouestion was copied from the Uniontown Standard and duly credited to that paper, and was published by us as an item of current political report, and without a word of comment. But the editor of the Freeman, who imagined he saw a point to be made in his own favor, fished out the extract referred to above, and, maliciously assuming it to be our utterance, and en deavoring to make his readers believe it such, proceeded to say : "Now we will bet either of the editors of the Alleghanian $500 that not a "member of 'the Catholic Monastery of St. Xavier' voted unless he was either a native or naturalized citizen. Such stuff we would expect from Covode, a born Know-Nothing, and his toad ies, but the Alleghanian does not believe it, and ought not to publish it. It is pretty hard fare for its Catholic readers to charge that their clergymen and religieuse are guilty of perjury; and violation of the election laws." The editor of the Freeman is over anxious to display his zeal in his new-found faith. -We made no accusation against St. Xavier ; wemerely printed a news paragraph as we found it in an exchange. St. Xavier may be a very nice institution, three stories high, built of brick, and sup plied with all the modern c.rz?;f nces and on the other hand, it may be an hum ble, unpretentious concern we don't know which. Its inmates who voted may have all been legally qualfied to exercise the elective franchise ; and again, maybe some or all of them oujrht to have been non voters. We know nothing about this either, and it can scarcely be said Oi us that we particularly care. But we do know that the Freeman has resorted to a very low trick to injure us and gain ap plause for itself from a certain class of people. The ability to offer to bet $500 may be a nice thing, but the possession of at least a modicum of honesty and common decency is a nicer. The editor of the Freeman . may be largely endowed in the former respect, but we fear he is lacking in the latter. U. S. Senator. Our next Legislature will elect a Re publican successor to Hon. Charles A. Buckalew in the United States Senate. Who will be thc man ? The names of a large number of Republicans are mention ed in that connection all good men and true, and worthy and well qualified to -fill the office. But the name of Hon. John Scott, of Huntingdon, appears to loom up most prominently in the foreground.. Mr. Scott is everywhere known to be one of the ablest men in the State. We heard a gentleman say, not long since, that he had "listened to all the best speakers of either- party during the late campaign, and that John Scott was a head and shoulders above any and all of them in point of gen eral ability' This is high, but merited, praise. k Then, he is a representative Re publican -an advocate and' exponent of the adranced principles of thc great Re publican creed. We trust the State will honor itself by electing Mr. Scott to rep resent it in the upper house of Congress. He will reflect a higher measure of credit upon the State in that capacity than prob ably any other available man. A Democratic election board in Taw- amensing, Carbon county, Pennsylvania, on the 3d day of November last, received the vote of a negro, his ballot being for Seymour and Blair. How arc you, White Man's Party ? South Carolina and Alabama having gone for Grant, and Oregon for Seymour, the final count of Presidential electors stands as follows: Grant, 214; Seymour, 80. Grant's majority. 131. EDITORIAL ETCHINGS. jfQy New advertisements this week. 'JS? Thanksgiving next Thursday. , . " Egg" Ex-Got. Tod. of Ohio, is ded. v JC6f Altoona is to have a night school. JKaThe meteors were out Friday night. Baron James Rothschild, the great banker,.is,dea4-. .. - .,.,.-.-w"v--s.- - ----- r jggT Game is ;aid to - be plenty in this neighborhood. .. JGS? Admiral Farragut. has returned from his European tour. . ; ? t j , Egg" Rossini, the great composer, died in Paris on Saturday, . J63y Letter- carriers in the large cities are to be unifqimed. Jg Tke weather-wise predict a bard win ter and plenty of it. jggy The Pennsylvania Railroad last year carried 1, 080,723 tons of bituminous coal. XJSaJ- A filibustering expedition to operate against Cuba is said to be fitting out in New York. Since the new weigh scales went down, coal in our market is said to have gone up. . Egg Altoona had a torchlight procession, and Tyrone a barbecue, over the election of Grant and Colfax. JCjy A railroad from Huntingdon to Johns- of. J6gy We had some glimpses of Indian Summer the beginning of this week, but they have fled. Our coal merchants formerly s&ld coal by the bushel, but now they sell it by the weigh. . JSg A man named John Dearr was shot ind instantly killed by William Groves, in Temperanceville, Alleghany county, on Sat lrday. j J6"The newspapers are busily engaged ii constructing a cabinet for General Grant. The General will construct a cabinet to suit hmself in his own good time. jggy General Grant's first order as Presi dent elect is that all begging letters sent him fom cow till the 4th of March shall be de aroyed. JBS?" A druggist's clerk in Philadelphia put atrophia belladona into a prescription iistead of assafetida, one day last week. Result: a woman poisoned to death. Jggy Hon. Edward Mcl'herson has settled u) the estate of the late lion. Thaddeus Ste v(ns, and finds that about $100,000 will re miin after the payment of the debts. 52?" Colonel Drake, who sank the first oil weH on Oil Creek, and gave the world the beiefit of his discovery, is living in extreme destitution in Titusville. The National army, according to the last report of the Adjutant General, is com posed of 43,741 men, white and black, com missioned and aon-commissioned officers. l"-?JChi-nies of II. B. Strang, of Tioga, George Wilson, of Alleghany, and A. J. Ilerr, of Duph!n, are mentioned in connection with the Speakership of the next House of Repre sentatives. 4The newspapers hftTe yon married, as well as chosen Vice President," aid a frin to Mr. Speaker Colfax the other day. "Ilected, but not yet sworn m, in eituer cse," was the reply. pg?- Where, oh 1 where is Wallace 1 It is now some two weeks since the election, and he hasn't yt issued an address to the de mocracy, claiming large gains throughout the State. One blast upon hi& bugle horn might be worth a thousand men. gy A convention of Fenians is to be held in Philadelphia on the 24th inst. It is said that every State in the Union, Canada, Aus- tralia,- Central and South America, France, England, and Ireland will be represented thereat. - A New York Life Insurance Company has offered Gen. Robert E. Lee a situation as supervisor of Southern agencies, at a salary of $10,C00. Jefferson Davis is now a drum mer lor a great London cotton house. To what base uses may we come at last ! jQgjy Hon. Charles Francis Adams made a ludicrous mistake at the polls at Quincy, Mass., on the 3d inst., by voting a receipted bill instead of a written ballot. Being al lowed to correct, he voted the Republican Electoral and the Democratic State tickets. jjg A verdant youth, who desired to know how to become rich, sent tweuty-fiv' cents in answer to an advertisement, and received this valuable advice: "Increase your re rpints and decrease your expenses. Work L . eighteen hours a day, and live oa herring and oatmeal." jfigy A good example for American courts and juries to follow has just been given in the Papal States, where a sentence of five years to the galleys has been passed on the station-master of a railway terminus forgiv ing orders whertby two trains came in col lision, causing the death of five persons. jg-g Two weeks ago, the Freeman made promises of reformation, and threatened to metamorphose itself into not only a pleasant companion to mechanics, farmers, and labor ers, but r.lso and at the same time into a fit ting instructor to their sons and daughters. And here, only last week, its editor offered, through the most conspicuous column of the paper, to enter into a bet of $500 1 A pretty "instructor," truly I The report of the "Grand Radical Jubilee" in last week's Freeman reads very I much like the wail of one who, after having bartered away principle for the bread of place and power, had received in return the stone of disappointment. Pity the sorrows of a poor old man, Born, as was thought, some famous post to grace; Yet, though for office numerous times he ran, He uc cr was known to win a single race Pennsylvania. OFFICIAL VOTE FOR PRESIDENT UNITED . STATES 1868. Aud. Gen. President. o i SO o n 5 ' o Counties. Adams 2832 3174 14923 3459 2675 3019 13921 ' 3183 3SC3 7838 3292 3587 411 2772 3765 0653 2956 3u37 27G5 4058 6390 4433 4535 2764 1054 4531 4773 '4278 1113 348 '374 2498 2301 2094 1863 8579 1716 2&"8 6305 13420 5031 8u9 4177 1828 2789 8905 1683 7701 4146 2520 C0S03 1269 811 9533 1829 1342 846 3377 2051 1340 3761 1S82 4943 3397 6569 1765 9006 2917 25487 4082 3648 3170 14671 3412 2624 Allegbany 23880 2087 ..3540 2625 7413 3841 7612 C981 3723 2849 Armstrong.:..i. Beaver.: Bedford 26S7 .2898 7917 13973 Berks ...... Blair Bradford.. Bucks Butler Cambria.. Cameron.. 3986 7793 70S5 3803 ; 29155 508 2183 3429 9178 1993 1974 2066 2143 7322 4171 6507 4165 563 8G07 3792 4451 802 355 1800 3417 4809 2147 1473 15792 3889 4315 5004 10728 4713 1U23 4979 1816 S12 F033 J 269 4791 3825 2664 3066 3538 "7613 3256 3558 394 2745 3646 C490 2928 3096 2582 4022 5455 4594 4397 261G 1( 19 4555 4608 4171 1107 294 3301 2179 2223 2068 1753 8513 1647 2858 6321 14303 4839 730 4078 1S07 2915 ?S03 1697 7762 4240 2416 537 Carbon 2129 Centre 3388 Chester 8850 Clarion 1908 Clearfield 1895 Clinton 1992 Columbia 2077 Crawford.......!. 702G Gumberland...... 3801 Dauphin 6190 Delaware 4016 Elk . 508 Erie 7702 Fayette 3745 Franklin 4321 Fulton. . 782 Forest 352 Greene., 1722 Huntingdon 3473 Indiaua 4842 Jefferson 207G Juniata...! 1467 Lancaster 15313 Lawrence 3691 Lebanon - 4267 Lehigh 4733 Luzerne 0992 Lycoming 40SO McKean 983 Mercer 4793 Mifflin .. 1858 Monroe 735 Montgomery. ..... 7943 Montour 1194 Northampton. ... 4452 Northumberland 3694 Perry 2570 Philadelphia C0633 C0985 55173 370 1313 Pike 338 Potter. 1604 8192 1703 S707 3261 1925 473 4832 5549 2081 4759 302G 5051 2909 5285 1623 6449 693 9428 1778 1318 851 3392 1951 1277 3774 1757 4867 3539 6360 I 706 9094 Schuylkill. Somerset 3195 Snyder 1865 Sullivan 461 Susquehanna .... 4682 Tioga 5410 Union 2054 Venango Warren 'Vasuingtoa .... Wayne Westmoreland. Wyoming York 4431 2990 4946 2698 C335 1549 C053 Total 331416 321739 342280 313382 321739 313382 967 28898 Pedestbianism Extraordixauy The celebrated Edward Payson. Weston is preparing -for a pedestrian trip from 13an jror,.Me.t to St. Paul, Minn., and back to New York, a 'distance of 5,000 miles. lie will fctart Irom Bangor at i o'clock p. m., on Tuesday, Dec. I, and mnt reach the City Hall, New-York, on or before 4 p. m. oo the 11th of March, the actual walking time being, omitting Sundays, 86 days. Ilia route, as recorded in his time-table, is as follows : From Ban gor due west to Bulfalo; thence through Michigan to Chicago: thence to Prescott, where he will cross the Mississippi; thence up the river bank to St. Paul, which ci'y he must reach on or Deioro tne zjtn oi January. To makehislull distance of"5,- 000 miles, he will, on his return, make a detour through Minnesota and Iowa, and down to St. Louis, and thence he will travel through Tcrro Haute, Indianapolis, Cincin nati, Columbus, AN heeling, fcteubenville, Pittsburgh, lloliioaysburg, Iiarn?burg, Baltimore and Philadelphia, to Ncw-Yoik. All ferrv crossings are to be drducted from the measurement of distances. Mr. Wes ton must actually walk 5,000 miles within the stipulated time, or he cannot take the prize, which, in this trial, is JU,UUU. FJi'ht witnesses are to accompany him ii. carriatres from the beginning until the termination of his journey.'lle will walk through 17 States, 188 counties, 728 cities and towns, and take 9,794,96 steps, all within 100 consecutive day. rrUlUSTEE'S SALE OF VALUABLE 1 REAL ESTATE. By virtue of an order out of the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria couuty, to mo directed, there H ill be exposed to public sate: at ine courmouse, in theboroughof Ebensburg, on .MONDAY, DEC. 7th, 18C8, at 1 O'CLOCK, P M.: the following real estate; situate on Canal street, Johnstown Borough, and bounded and described aa fol lows : All that lot of ground known as Lot No. 62, in the general plan of Johnstown ex tended, bounded on the north east by Canal street, which is the front of faid lot, north west by lot of estate of Connor Clark, on the south west by an alley, and on the south east by lot of Kinley & Gageby, together with the buildings and appurtenances (except a strip four feet two inches wide off of the lower or north west side of lot.) Said lot having thereon erected a two-story plank bouse, a two-story frame back building and a bakery attached, and frame stable, wood shed aud otter outbuildings, and now in the occupancy of Frederick Krebs. Terms Cash. JOHN A. BLAIR, Nov. 18, I868.3t. Trustee. HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE. Mrs. Mary Owens offers fcr sxle her house, situate on the corner of Ogle and Mary Ann streets. The hoa3e ha3 lately been re built and fitted up with all the modern im provements. Terms liberal. For further information inquire of GEO. ii. READE, Nov. 18.3m. , Agent, TVSSOLUTION. JL The partnership heretofore existing the name of J. iloore & Son is dissolved consent, lue accounts will be settled by J. iMoore. J. MOOUE, Nov. 18, 18G8. T. BLAIR MOORE. (JilOO HE WARD. t) ul be paid to any person informing me who sells intoxicating liquors to my wife, Alary. D.V.VJD POWtiLL. QREATEST DISCOVERY OFt. j AGE! BENTLEPS KON-EXPLOSIVE METRb " rOLITAN OIL ! ' M. L. OaTMAS, Sole Agent for Camlria Ct The subscriber desires to call the attp ot the public to the tact that he has r.nr?1 I sed the right for Cambria count? t0 t "Bectley's Non-Explosive Metropolitan o-' which he claims to be the BEST, i CHEAPEST, . - SAFES! I Oil manufactured. The advantages cla: a for this Oil are : "e - . 1. It is clear and clean. 2. It is non-explosive and safe. i 3. It will not grease your hands, clothjn I furniture, or carpets. " 4. It is fifty per cent, cheaper than other Oil. Price, only 10 cents a quart ' TRY IT!I BUY IT! !! One and all who have used it pronounct it to give entire satisfaction. Give it atri I and be convinced of the above facts. I TOWXSIIIP AND BOROUGH RIGUTS, r T . . i ior taie at me store ot M. L. O ATM AN, Three doors east of Crawford's rfotcl Aug. 13 EnExstfRc, Pa. AGENTS WANTED " To 8ell vbe Eminent Women of the Are- written by Messrs.. Parton, Greek, JXn son HoPp,a Abbott, U'inter; Tiiton, MrTi ' C Stanton Fanny Fern, Grace Greenwood.! illustrated with fourt . i cji suppr or srpp pn. ST ,n"S-,T!1',S v,oIunie comprises 47 carefulh comprised sketches, written exprewlr for this oooi, anion; whom Lvdia" Maria Child. JenV"lTd Flc'ren " N.ghtinrrale, the Carr Sisters. Gail Hamilton, Elizabeth Barret Browning, Anna E. Dickin son, Riftori. Rosa Bonhcur, Mrs. U. B Stow Camilla Urso, and Harriet G. Ilosmer. The New 'iork Tribune speaking of tha Publish- i ers, snvs: So throughly bare they done I their work, that their volume, in paper, type, 5 binding, engravings, above all in the excel- lence oi its subject-matter, goes f.r to remove the reproach eo often urd ngninst subcrip- ; lion books, '-onW maiie to se." Arv f are meeting with unparalleled success nsel- ling this book ; one gent in New York ?oU 1 1 25 in one week; one agent in New Hampshire i sold 12 iu five hours ; one aptnt in Massa- ' chusetis sold 8 in seventeen calls. For descriptive circulars Rnd Famjle en- i grnvings address S. M. BKTTd k CO., Hart- f ford, Conn. " nov. 5. IN THE DISTRICT COUKT OvTttY. I UNITED STATES, for the Western Dis-r trict of Pennsylvania, James Henry a bank-j rupt under the Act of Congress of March 2I,V 1867, having applied for a Discharge from all his debts, and other claims provable un Jcr said Act, by order of the court. Notice ii hereby given to all persons who have proved their debts, and other persons interi-stel, t I appear on the FIRST day of DFA'EVRER, I 1808, at 10 o'clock, a. m., "before John broth- ( crline, Esq., Register, at his effice in Ilolli- ' daysburg, Pa., toshow cause, if any they Lave, why a discharge should not be granted to the . said Iiankrupt. And further, notice is Lcre- ; by given, that the eecond and third uicetinps of creditors of the said Bankrupt, required! by the 27th and 28th sections of said Act, will be held before the said Register at the sarao lime and place. nov. 12-2t S. C. M CAXDLESS, Clerk. TVTOTICE. "" 11 The partnership hereterr "istin betwen tb undersigned, i"ler lne ot E. HUGHES A CO., is tia dy dissolve motn.il consent. All debts aue iu cr i v. firm are to b settled by THOMAS J. LLOYD, who continues the Lumber business at vlie old stand. E. HUGHES, TIIOS. J. LLOYD. Ebeusburg, August 24, 1868. The undersigned will continue buying snJ selling Lumber. The highest market price will be paid, in cash, for all kinds of -yi Lumber. Particular attention paid to tilling orders. au!3j TIIOS. J. LLOYD. JEW CHEAP CASH STORE!!- The subscriber would inform the citizen! of Ebensburg and vicinity that he keeps cun--stantly on hand everything in the 1 GIIOCE11Y AND CONFECTIONERY , line, such as Flour, Tea, Coffee, Sugar,": kinds of Crackers, Cheese, Smoking sui Chewing Tobacco, Cigars, &c. k CAXXED rE AC HE'S AND TOMlTOES'-l "Also, Buckskin and Woolen Gloves, now ; en Socks, Neck ties, &c, all of which wiH; sold as cheap if not cheaper than elsewhere. "O A full assortment of Candies! ( iy. riS v . J ...... anglaj u. u. iiiu-n- . Boot and shoe emfokium:-; The subscriber begs leave to ie.V '., the public that he has opened out a Fouts:j tij Shoe Store in the rooms rormeriy octi-i - v by Davis & Lvans on Center street, tr?-; burg, where be will carry on the busia an extensive scale. HEADY-MADE BOOTS and SHOES j For sale at City J ricc . BOOTS axd SHOES made to order On shortest notice: . Em, The public are invited to give rce. call. I will sell cheap as the cnenpv . . r n lr n.ii vvi a L f III r ir r io-I TlUIV n r.YAs- lion. jiiuyioj - HOUSE AND TWO LOTS Kb SALE! - Thc subscriber offers at private sale House and two Lots, situate in Belsano.U-' l.ria ennntv. nine miles west of EbonS- back 200 feet. A good plank t rame ( ... . ..1. .:.!.. 1 1 1 (i fpfl. ieei, wim aucucu --f) noocearv nut lill lltllllOrS. A 00 id choice fruit trees of all water, a The property will be sold cn fair terms, ill exchange for a Steam Engine of ' Will KiCUUUKC IU1 - irtn fifteen horse power. T. S. hMi -: For terms inquire of George Yv. bin.; -.f- Celsano. LSel' i:,3.t X U0 beautiful and useful illusirr u 7,;o octavo nacres. Showing just wbate -? farmer wants to know: How to " j f.,r-m nv Send for circular giving ....... t j - - . jnc .. . criptiou. Farmers I farmers v enced book agents and others ntca;;r l in by this book to every larmcrin eu.;-- sea uusiness peimui-u. ij""v; - and Sni per month according te experience ? Ct- " ity. Address ZtilQLER, M'CCRD of f Philadelphia, Pa. Cincinnati, U., - tfJ : j III., St. Louis, Mo. Lautl I vl , l.Vii.; TTAVE YOU SUHSC1U1JMJ ;Jfi. XX TERM "TUB ALLEGHANIAN? S, $2.00 PER YKAH. 1 AD" At as "vl t 1- 1 7 hi. 1 Dr Th y.