THURSDAY, APRIL 15, ISCO. TIlC 2VC1TS. Gold is quoted at 133. Oi R State Legislature will adjourn to r:rr y. Tin: dedication of the Mexican SoMiers' ?!ot:nniC!it ha.s been indefinitely postponed. Gi:. Longtrect was confirmed Survey or f New Orleans by the Senate by a vote of 27 t 2'). The two Pennsylvania Scn vVr.i voted my. I'or:i houses of Congress adjourned tine ('. on Saturday. The Senate will continue to hold executive sessions, in pursuance of a Lica-ige of the Frcsdeut. TllE Pennsylvania Legislature passed v.i :!' allowing the Governor the privilege tit commuting the death penalty to im prisonment for life or a number of years. 'Iln Governor vetoed the bill. Tiis contested election in Hid Penna. ligressienal District, has been decided by the House in favor of 3Ir. Meyers, the .Republican claimant, who has been sworn nr.d taken his seat. T'.IE Republican county Committer of" Indian- -uvaeu o udge J. K. Thomp son and Dr. J. L. Crawford as delegates t the State Convention, with instructions to support Gen. Harry White for the nomination for Governor. Ocu other Johnson is next to be dis p;s'J of. It is said that the President has tA giaphed, requesting his resignation; and ih-i gentlemen anxious for diplomatic h'liju.'s are giving it to be understood that tis and the other Foreign Missions are to bj filled soon. Si '.iiET.VRY Routwell is largely reducing th.' clerical and working forces in the dif-n-Tcnt bureaus and printing establishments of the Treasury department. Retrench ment is the order of the day under the Grant administration in all the depart ments of the Government. G:;rk.VLi Eaton, convicted of the inurdfT of Timothy Ilccaan, was hung in Phil idjlphia on Thursday, protesting his innocence to the last. George S. Twitch c !l. convicted of the murder of his mother in daw, Mrs. Mary K. Hill, who was to have" been executed the same day, com iiiittxl suicide early in the morning by taking strychnine. Pi hods Island follows Connecticut! In thi A ection a year ago her Republican majority was 4,309. In 1SG7 it was -1,-li'l. Now, in spite of the general .imthy of the year following a Presidential clec- t'u n, and with a vote only about one-half as heavy as last Fall, we have carried the State by 3,SC3. In Connecticut, Jewel, Republican can didate fur Governor, is elected by 1,000 ma jority, while two out of the four Congres si - A Representatives are also Republican. So we have a net gain of one in the delegation half of it instead of a fourth. Too Legislature is Republican by a small majority, securing the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment, at least so far as Connecticut is concerned. The Republi c.i:i triumph seems complete. It is now definitely settled that Hon. L tthrop Motley will go to England, Gov. Curtin to Russia, and General Sickles to M?xie-". Gov. Geary is pressing Louis W. Hall for a resident mission with all his strength. Mr. Watts will be relieved from Tic. ma. Mr. Sanford will stay at Brus sels. Mr. Dudley asconsul at Liverpool, and Mr. Marsh as minister to Italy. John Hickman's name has been presented for a foreign appointment. Confidence is universally felt that the re? Hat ruction of Virginia, Texas and Mis sissippi will be completed, by their respec tive elections, at an early date, under the law of last week, and by the Congressional approval in December. Under the power conferred unon the President, each of their C agitations will be submitted to separate vjtej upon their controverted sections t'l ' eTjit of which will be to secure the ad pti.'n of the main body of each instru nor.t, by the respective peoples, and the transfer of all questions concerning dis fV irvhi-euient to Congress fur a final set tlement. The recent news from Cuba is exciting deep interest in Washington, not only in p. iiric.d, but diplomatic circles, and is iVee'.y commented upon. The large num d.T of Cubara now in Washington express the i::-t unbounded confidence as to the fT-cce?-i of their caue. and assert within a t-h'-rt time enough men will be under firms t tliivo the Spanish forces from the inte i li-r i-dir.d to the forts on the pea shore. When till? i-3 :K'?orj!p;.-!icd they say that 'p;iin wRl Le forced to acknowledge the independence of the T.sl.md. Our Govern ment h evidently fully advised as to the 'i nportar.5 of protecting Americana on the l!a:id and' American vfscfci which hap pen t ; b: in-Cuban wsfuv. TIsc Teci iterance Question. Tj the EHiort of Ths AUejhanian : In the last issue but one ot your paper you make, as it strikes me. an unwarranted attack upon the cause of Temperance and its vindicators. In a subsequent article you not only reiteracc the former sentiment, but attack the Temperance men of our community, for letting so vile and black guarding a sheet come into their families. You say it is unworthy of the support of genuine Temperance men. I presume your unprovoked attack upon the Vindi cator, and your uncalled for advice to the fifteen hundred intelligent subscribers of that valuable paper, will have a salutary effect unon their minds, and will cause them to take the matter into consideration, whether the Vindicator shall longer be supported by them or whether it shall meet with an untimely death. It seems to m3, Gentlemen Editors, that you are wholly inadequate for the task you have undertaken ; that of convincing ths Tem perance people of tHis place that they arc supporting a paper not fit to be read. I think that the old and tried veterans of the glorious cause of temperance will not feel bound to abide the decision, or heed your youthful advice. I think, Gentle men, that prudence is the better part of valor, and that young men, when they are about to assume great responsibilities should not strive to make themselves too conspicu ous. . . . iL iraving once been the proprietor ot tne Allcjluinian, and having long been identi fied with the glorious reform of Temper ance, which is second only to the regener ation of the heart, I beg leave to occupy a little space in your otherwise valuable paper. Let us for one moment look at your charge, that "the different Temperance organizations have proved Votally inefficient to do more than deliver some from the flames while the fire burns on." God has so ordered things that great and sudden leaps are contrary to nature. Every ad vance in the general must be made by ad vances in the particular. The trees and the corn do not leap up suddenly into ma turity, but they climb upward little by little, and after the minutest possible in crease The orbs of heaven, too, accom plish their circles not by one or two extra ordinary starts or springs, but by travel ing on through paces and roads of the sky. It is thus and only thu3 that any organ ization or any man will become efficient in 1 . 1 "I 1 any great undertaking, raying uown great plans, they can only be accom plished by great industry, by minuts at tentions and bv making small advances. It is a great fact of history and of obser vation that all efficieut men, while they have been men of comprehension, have also been men of detail. And this is equally true of organizations. In corrob oration of this fact, look at our noble Pres ident who, while General of our armies, was the most effective man in modern times some will say of all times. The secret of his plans was more vast, more va rious, and of course more difficult than at the same time, to fill them up with per fect promptness and precision, in every particular of execution, to be a solid and compact framework in every part. At this particular time, when all things looked encouraging to our urave oenerai, many who were timid, and others who wished to retard the forward movement of our noble General, cried out, he has proved himself inefficient to do more than causo small de feats of the enemy, while the rebellion will continue to go on ; yet his armies were together only one great engine of destruc tion, of which he was the head or brain. Numbers, spaces, times, were all distinct in his eye. The wheeling of every legion, however remote, was mentally present to him. The tramp of every foot sounded in his car. The numbers were alwajs sup plied, the spaces passed over, the times met, and so the work was done, and the most gigantic rebellion ever conceited com pletely reduced. We may in the main reason of any community or organization as we would reason of an individual. The same great laws regulate its moral and spiritual progress. The same high Jus tice, pure and stern, sits in judgment upon all its proceedings. A like glorious crown rewards its fidelity. Never may it be forgotton, then, how, as the first pioneers of Temperance went forth, clad in the panoply of truth, there was a stirring among all -the dry bones of the valley, bone came to his bone," life Vas infusod where there was nothing but death and putrefaction, and the reformed and reclaimed stood upon their feet an exceedinir trreat army. The crisis had come. Four of the six inebriates with whom it commenced went to the house of God to hear one who, in God's name, was to oppose the sin of drunkenness and the drunkard's doom. They were pricked in their hearts. On their return the jeers of the bar room had lost their power. They signed a pledge, and commenced the work of reclaiming every inebriate in the land Some jeered, others mocked, saying doubt Joss "they will prove totally inefficient to do more than deliver some from the flame while the lire bums on." but many went from the meeting to pray. And if of the half million of lost men, who, in that great work of IS 10 -11, were reclaimed, a no in considerable number went back like the d'ig to his vomit, it derogates nothing from the operation as the wonderful providence ot G'd aud the power of sympathy and truth. It only illustrated the debased and unfeeling condition of society which should let them go baci; the horrid evil of the traffic, licensed in our midst; and above all, the folly most signally manifest, of re lying upon humanity and tho Htrc-ngth of man's resolution without help from above or devotedncss to the divine service. Rut it was a wonderful work, for which thou sands of families relieved and redeemed, exclaimed "Tho Lord hath dono great things for us; whereof we are glad." It was hailed as one cf the most wonderful and glorious triumphs of virtue over vie, the world ever witnessed; and it was eva then felt, that, should the cause prevd throughout the land, "blessings, mighty the rivers and cxhaustless as the soil, woul break forth upon the people and flow dow in ever glowing richness and variety to al future ages." It is evident, then, that ir single acts are bound up lona: 3'ears of re suits of character, and that from single acts, again, flow longvears results in char acter, for character is the root of destiny And now in looking at the present and comparing it with the past, we, as temper ance men and temperance organizations are not discouraged, not disheartened, al-j though we have not accomplished all thafl was desirable, for we feel assured that if wej faint not we shall yet reap what we sowi And what it there are obstacles to the further prosecution of our glorious enter prise. What if custom and appetite ant p)liticl wire pullers, and cold-heartel christians, and the rich in their volupti ousness, and the poor in their degradation are all against us. What if to defend them selves from us, and fill us with terror, tht twenty thousand distillers and brewen unite with the two hundred thousand ven- dors of liquid fire in our land and forml themselves into a '-Whisky Rir.e" and wreathe themselves together like tho wrig- gling pyramid of snakes in the swamps oi Guiana, where, we are told, thousands and thousands in s'f eience ,imir spirally on each other in one tremulous mass of writhings, with a thick array cf heads thrust out upon every side, with fiery eyes and venomous darts andj of the courts cf common pleas and quur horrible hissings, the cold, deadly saliva ter sessions of the peace of Cambria couu issuing from their fangs or what if the ' ty; Provided, That the presideBt judire wreath of the States and of the country is of the Twenty-fourth judicial district all displayed as too costly to be sacrificed shall be the president judge of this court, to our fanatacism ; still there is power in! and the associate judges of the courts of God, power in truth, power in humanity Cambria county shall be the associate to sweep them all away. If we work va- judges of this court. liantly, and have faith as a grain of mus- j Sec. 8. The said court shall be held tard seed, we may say to all these moun-l on the first Monday of July, third -Contains uRe ye cast into the sea, and it shall ! day of September, January, and April, in bo done." Faith, that virtue, shall tri- ' each and every year, and continue for one umph over vice, humanity over oppression, i week, if necessary, during each and every liberty over tvranny, and God over all that blots Jiis miasre from creation. I intended, Messrs. Editors, to have al luded more minutely to the charge you make against the Temperance Vidicator, styling it a '"blackguard sheet,"" but my communication has already grown too lengthy. Suffice it to say that the twenty eight subscribers of this place do not think so nor do they feci complimented when you assert and re-assert that this i3 the character of ths temperance paper which is taken into their families. These sub scribers feci that they are as competent to judge of this matter as you, "and are not willing that this indirect thrust at them should be passively received. As to the editor of the Vindicator, I have nothing to say more than this, that after a recent aud brief acquaintance with him, I feel assured that he is a gentleman in every re spect, aud perfectly able to take care of himself. Hoping that the AUyli(iniin in the circulation of which you. know I have al-i,vv-u a.j)ij luouii 'not tiuuj pecu niarily interested, will contain no more reflections upon the cause of Temperance, I remain yours truly, A. A. Barkeh. Ebensburg, Pa., April 12, ISCi). TIic Xcw Court. Following is the bill to establish an ad ditional Court in Cambria county : Section 1 Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Com monwealth of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met, and it is hereby enacted by the authority ot the same, that from and after the passage of this act, it shall be lawful to hold a court of record within the borough of Joht stown, in Cambria county, under the name, style and title of the dis trict court of Cambria county. Section 2. The jurisdiction of said court shall extend to and embrace the bor oughs of Johnstown, Gonemaugh, Mill vi lie, Cambria, Prospect, Franklin, ar.d East Conemaugh, and the townships ot Yoder, Richland, Taylor, and Conemaugh, Sr.c. 3. The said court shall have and exercise all and singular the powers and jurisdiction of the court of quarter ses sions of the pace of Cambria couuty, and have originally civil jurisdiction in all cases where the defendant shall be a res ident of any tf said boroughs or townships and the plaintiffs demand shall not exceed two hundred dollars, and also of all amica ble actions where the parties shall by wri ting institute the s.imc in sail court, and that it shall be lawful for any person hold ing bonds penal or single bills, notes in writing or any writing obligatory whercia is contained a confession of judgment, or which m;ty be accompanied with an au thority to eo:ifej judgment on the same, to enter the same of record in said court as is provided by law for entry of the same in the court of common pleas of Cambria county, and with like effect wi'hin the said district, and with like powers andju risd'C'ion over the same, and the reme dies, powers, pleadings, and costs in all eases shall hz t-imibr to like proceedings in the several courts of quarter session ol the peac? and common pleas of Cambria county; 1'rovided. That the limii of two hundred dollars shail not apply to confes sions of judgment or to any wiitten au thority to confe-s judgment. SEC. 4. The said court shall have juris diction of all mechanic's liens and lieus for materials furnished in the erection of any building or buildings within any of said boroughs or towuhips, for materials fur nished and work done iu the laying or paving and completing any sidewalk in any of said boroughs, and said liens shall be entered by the clerk of said district court for the fee now provided by law, in a book to be provided by him for that pur pose, and all and every such lien or leins shall be proceeded on in said district court o judgment and final seeu'ion, in the atme uTauucr, to all intenli and purpos, and with the like effect as if the same had j been cutcred in the prothonotary's offieo and proceeded on in the cours of com nip n pleas of Cambria county. Sec. 5- The jurisdiction of said curt shall also extend and embrace all appeals and writs cf certiorari in alleuil case3 from the judgments and proceeding? of the jus-ices of the peace within the limits and bounduie3 of the eaid district, and they shall be removed, heard, tried, and determined in the same manner and un der the like provisions and restrictions as are provided by the laws of this Common tih for rvKos of anneals and writs of certiorari to the several courts cf Cambria county. Sec. 6. The transcripts of all judg ments of alderman and justices ot the peace of the district shall, when duly au thenticated, be admitted to rtcord in the said court, and shall thereupon have ail the incidents of judgments of said court, and tho record of any judgment of said court, when duly authenticated, shall, upon application to the propar officer of any of the courts of record within the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, be enter ed upon the records, and thereupon shah have all ths force and effect and incidents of a judgment regularly outatnect in any of s'lid court. Sec. 7. The powers and jurisdiction of the said court shall be vested in and ex- .. -iiiiiotitr;.?.:.! Ur r- 1 J - 4 j auuo icdincd in the law and two associates, like manner and with like effect as the said powers and ju risdictions are now exercised by the judges term, and adjourned courts may be held as often as the business of the said court may require. Sec. 9. The judgments of said court, when entered in the court of common pleas ot Cambria county, shall be liens upon all the real estate of the defendant or defend ants i)ing withiu said county, and the fee of the prothor.otary cf Cambria county for entering the judgments of said district court shall be twenty-five cents, aud the writs of fieri facia3 and venditioni exponas for the purpose of selling any real estate of defendant or defendants within said dis trict shall issue out of the court of com mon ideas of Cambria county as hereto fore, and that there shall be but one gen eral lien docket and extension docket, which dockets shall be kept iu the said court of common pleas of Cambria county as i3 provided by biw ; Provided, That tho plaintiff io any judgment in said dis trict court, his attorney, executors admin istrator?, or assigns shall have power to is sue any writ of fieri facias or execution natiist iite personal pnpttty of i'iu de fendant or defendants lying within said district. Sec. 10. That it ehall be the duty of the sheriff of Cambria county and he is hereby authorized and empowered to act ns sheriff within the jurisdiction of said county, with like powers and with like ef fect as the said sheriff of Cambria county, so far as the jurisdiction of said couuty ex tends, and with full power to appoint a suitable person to act as deputy sheriff withiu said jurisdiction ; Provided, That in case the s:ui sheriff of Cambria county refuses to perform the duties enjoined upon him by this act, or to appoint a dep uty sheriff to perform the same, within thirty days after notice is given him of the passage of this act, then ths judges of paid district court, or any two of them, shall appoint a person to act i;i place of said deputy sheriff, who shall be called the rnarshall of Said district, said sheriff or rnarshall to give bond to be approved by the court for the faithful discharge of his duties, sai 1 bond to be approved by the court or aoy two judges thereof, in vacation, they having power to fix the amount. Sec. 11, That it shall be the duty of the district attorney of Gambrii cmuty to act as district attorney of the said court, and he is hereby authorized and empower ed to prose cute on behalf of the Common wealth in the quarter sessions of the peace of said district; court and to perform all acts with all the rights, privileges, powers, and restriction 3 and under the same paius and penalties as are now provided by the laws of this Commonwealth regarding the rights, privileges, and duties of the di.-trict attorney? of this Commonwealth and should the said district attorney in case ot sick ness or any other reasonable cause be un able to attend said court and perform the duties of his office he shall have power to appoint any attorney of said district court to perform the duties of said oQce for the time being, aud on failure to appoint in such case the court may appoint. Sec. 12. That it shall be the duVy of the prothonotary of Cambria coucty and ho is hereby authorized and empowered to perform duties uow required by law of the prothonotaries, clerk ol court of quar ter sessioti, and the ccurt of common pleas of Cambria county, so far as the bus iness aud jurisdiction of said court extends, and on failure or refusal of the prothon otary of Cambria county to perform said duties or appoint a deputy, then in such ca-c the court (diall appoint iu the same manner as provided for in section ten re garding the appointmenut of deputy sher iff, notice of thirty days to be given to said prothonotary of tho passage of this act, in like manner and with like effect as provided for relating to the appointment of a deputy sheriff for said court, and it shall bo made a part of the duties of paid prothonotary or deputy and clerk to take charga and custody of the recordi and teals of sail coatt aud keep the sum.; iu tha place ot holding said court, and in the apartments provided for the purpose, and tho fees of said clerk or prothonotary shall be the same as now provided by law for the prothonotary, clerk of the court of quarter sessions and e'erfc rf the court of common pleas of Cambria couuty for like services; he ehall :dso pc bond in the same form' to be approved uf iu like man ner; Provided, That the amount of said bond shall be fixed by two of the judges of said court, the president judge being one. Sec. 13. That the grand and traverse jurors for said curt be selected, drawn, and summoned iu and from said district in the same manner and with the same restrictions and penalties os are provided by the laws of this Commonwealth in such case., except that the jurors shell be se lected and drawn by one of the associate judges of said court, in connection with tho sheriff of the same, and the said sheriff shall supply a wheel aud take charge and custody of the same for the depositing in and drawing of said jurors therefrom, and the sheiiff of Cambiia county shall, with in thirty days after the passage of this act, supply a wheel as hereinbefore provided, and notify said deputy and one of the as sociate judires to meet in tho borough oi Johtistown on a certain day, to be by thtm fixed, for the sa!ec:ion and drawing of rand and traverse jutors, which day shall not be luer thau tho ihtnl Monday in May next, at which meeting they will draw the pannel for the ensuiug year, ar.d the like pruceediips shall take place for the drawing and selecting of jurors with in the time mentioned every succeeding year hereafter, and the first curt of said district shall be held as herein provided on the first Monday of July text. Sec. 14. That the fee bill provided by law for Cambria couuty shall be extended to and adopted in said court, so far as the same may be applicable thereto, with the exceptions hereinbefore and berec'ter mentioned, for which fees are provided by his act. Si:c. 15. Jurors drawn ar.d in attend ance for the hearing and trial of causes iu said court shall receive one dollar aud fifty cents per d:iy, and witnesses subpoen aed and i:i attendance on the ttial of causes or before the grand jury in the said court shall receive cue dollar jjer day, and mileage at the rate of three cents per mile circular when residiug without the juri-diction of said court. Sec. 16. That the president iude cf said i-onrt shall receive in addition to his present salary five hundred dollars per annum, aud mileage for traveling to and from said court same as now allowed by law ; that the associate judges shall receive in additiou to their pre-e:it salaries and mileage two hundred dollars per aurum aud mileage for traveling to aud from said court same as now allowed by law, aud that said salaries aiid mileage for travel ing be paid out of the State Treasury. Sec 17. That all expeuses of said court that are incident to the several county courts of this Commonwealth, and tow by law payable out cf the treasuries cf tho sever-1 couutic-s therein, shall be paid out of tho treasuay cf Cambria coun ty upon orders drawn upon the treasurer thereof by any two of the said judges, and attested by the clerk of said coutt iu favor of th fdieriff theivof. ivlio H-.ttv it I Sh,ll h in rPn,iv, n,.rf r.ul nnr .U to the person or persots entitled thereto, and for that purpose the suid sheriff shall provide and keep in his etca a book in which regular entries s'lall be kert of the moneys so received and paid our, and all tines, forfeitures aud forfeited recogniz ances ; the moueys received and recovered thereon shall be paid by said sheriff into the treasury of Cumbria county, and aho the jury fee of four dollars, which may be taxed with other costs in any case tried in said court, and iu acsount of such fines, forfeitures, aud futieitel recognizances and jury fees said sheriff shall keep in a separate book for such purpose, which said beok thall be open to the public ex amination of aay person or persons inter ested therein ; Provided, That the said sheriff shall receive lor his services in that behalf two per cent, on the amouut to received from and paid to said treaurer, and the said deputy sheiiff shall be re quired to iive a boud to the Common wealth lor the faithful dichargc of his duties in paying out aud receiving said moneys, the amount of said bond arid the security thcteou to be j-'iven lo be fixed and approved by the judges of the said court or any two of them ; And provided fntJier, That the said sheriff shall 6tttle annually with the auditors ot the couuty of Cambria for all moueys so received and paid out as aforesaid. Six. 13. It shall be the duty of the said judges, or any two cf them, to lease a suitable building in the borough of Johns town, in which the said court at.d offices shall be held arid kept, the rent thereof to be paid as provided for the payment of the expenses incident to said court. Sec 19. That it shall bo lawful to use thejail of Cambria couaty as the jail for said district, and it shall be tho duty ol the jailor of Cambria county to receive and keep all such persons as shall be given him in charge by the deputy sheiiff or constables of said distrie:, until discharged by due course of law or the order or di rection of said court ; Provided, That it shall be lawful to e the . lock-up in Johnstown for jail purposes so far as the same can be done with safety. Si:c. 20. That the said court shall be long to aud constitute a part of the West ern distiiet uf -he Supreme Court ot this Commonwealth, to which appeals, writs of error, certiorari, et cetera, shall lie from the said court, in the same mauncr as is provided for by the Jaws of thU Common wealth in and for the several courts of Cambria county. Sec 21. That it shall be the tlut" cf the several justices of the peace and con stable within the limits nnd jurisdiction of said uisrnct toinako returns of all such matters and things a3 are now bv law re- turrable to the courts of cmin, , T of the peace of Cambria county to sVfj'?n trict court. " Sec. 22. That the parties to any cir'c . pending in the said dutrict court' arbitrate the same in like manaeraaj like effect and subject to the same regulations, and restrictions, and with?' same rights of appeal, as if the sau.e ? pending in the Cuult of common rkJ'' I fimhrii r 11 n t ir c. 23 That all acts anJ nar'-s r,f ,.. iinuMMniui im iu:s ac: are iitrtb- pca led. HOLESALIJ and KETail CONFECTIONERY ! WEST END CAMBRIA 110 Vhe EBEfiSBURG, FA. A. II. FALLER, I ronctcr. BARGAIN'S! of the citizens of Ebensburg and vielnhv. mi the traJe generally, to bis LARGE AND EXTENSIVE STOTS OF CONFECTIONERY ! embracing every variety of ean Jic tured, such as GUM DROPS, STICK CANDIES, FANCY CANDIES. L(JZKNGI-:s f-P , w v., tCVj., xC. together with an extensive StOi. suen as RAISINS, ITtUXEf.LE?, C All TO OX FIGS, MALTA DATES, CURRANTS, APPLES, &C. All of t'ue Kl.ove goods win be sold At GREAT BAUUAINS SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS WILLUK given to the trade, and a tr''. will fv :ny and all th.-it iuy frnoJ; are of t!:4 bit quality and at mice 3 that DEFY COMPETITION! sat:s attention of the public is c:"e'l to at in connection wiih uir cou.Vcti fact t! cry is u first-claf3 PES T A UR AXT : where will be served at all he ars OYSTERS, stewed cr fried, ' HOT COFFEE, PIGS' FEET, TRIPE, SARDINES, DRIED REEF, ScC, C. U FISH keckived EVERY T11URSDA F CALL AND EXAMINE GOOHS BE- FORE GOING ELSE V 11 Eli E. XjJ I hope by fair dealing nd strict tt teniion to business to merit the i.at:cn. :e of the public. J.iu. 7, 1809. A. II. FALLER. T L- LANGSTROTH'S PATENT 1J MOVABLE CO Ml) BEE HIVE ! Pronounced the best ever yet ir.tro-iuf-! in this county or State. Ai:y person l-t.yi: a family right can have their Bees trnnsVt: ed from an old box to a new one. Ia tvf-r instance in which this has been dune ti e re sult lins been entirely satisfactory, aE'i l first t;ike of honey Las invariably paid a" ti penses, nn.i frequently exceeded them. I':-: of the superior merits of this invention be found in the testimony of every man -? n-iti.n it trifl n n .-1 f!rnro- ll. nrr:.':' ari the peailemen named WiOv, r.nJ the ' esneriorsce should induce every cue interes't. in Bees to IU Y A FAMILY RIGHT ! t T T 1 . 1 f 1 . I'm iienry ivirspairicK, or arron towns..;' took 10G pounds of surplus honey fro'.u tJ hives, which he soil at 35 cents per pouni Adam Deitrich, cf Carroll township, too from two hives lCO pounds of surplus hor- James Kirkpatrick, ot Chest townsnip. i GO pounds of surplus honpy from one L ve. Jacob Kirkpatiick, of Chest towr.!::p f:i:nril T'l tiounds of sumlns hont-v fiV'J hive, worth not less than $21, aul tLe r.j-' cost him only Peter Campbell from one hive ohtj:-! pounds of surplus honey at one tiue. fCi? Quite a number of similar .i:.'.,..T authenticate I by some of the best c i:;' vt Cambria county, could te obtained '".I'j of th superior merits ol Lungftroth's i"'-e-Movable Comb Bee Hive. m ; hr Persons wishing to purchase fanu'y r:-J should call on cr address PETE P. CAMFDLLi., Nov. 2G, lSGS-tf CarroUto . i YOU WANT A HARUAlXf The subscriber offers at private si followiiiff described valuable proacr..., ate in Stronjrstown, Indiana county: OXE LARGE UOl"l . , Two stories hi-h, L-s!u.pe, cue L feet lor.'jr, and the other 40 fed. .t '.l"a.i some d) rooms, and is well li;SJ. li.is Korulni'.irn hf-pn used aS. a Hotel. ted ia th e business portion of ?,)vn; OXE SMALLER JI-jV cf ' Two stones hiih, 40'2'1 feet, c' commodatiuir two families. .,7..-n THRKE ACRES OF !R0l Upon which the foregoing desen- ; situate. The propertv was formerly owne , cupkd by Barker & Litziuger. who bolvcd partnership. TERMS : CjXl u $1,300 for tho uitire property. -$303 in hind; the balance iu p rf'V session given the 1st cf Apnh it ..5. Sa. For particulars, apPO j,,.,-, marltf Villi AVE YOU SUlt" 1! :V v 1 A ' ' ' $2.00 PEii YE AK, IN