Democrat and sentinel. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1853-1866, August 19, 1863, Image 1

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EBENSBURG, PA. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1863.
fEMUUKAT it o.V TIN EL,
V is published every Wednesday
.D- at One Pollar and Fifty Cents
ar. mi. payable in aJvance ; One Dol
. jV9 Seventy Five Cents, if not paid
, t iiioutlis : ana lvo Dollar if
Xi liti ti I tiie termination of the year.
,j iiiisi-ripti'in will be received for a
peri.Nl than sic months, and no
,-iH.r will be at liberty to discontinue
vr until all arrearage's are paid, ex
..jjil.e option of the editor. Any per-
. M.. . f ,- ...II I n -I
use Dollar, unless the monev
;i in advance.
iilierllsin? Rales.
One insert n. licodo. Three do
..r.j:e, 12 lines $ 60 $ 75 $1,00
.res.flM lines J 1 00 1 00 2 00
.vjires.fSu lines 1 50 2 00 3 00
1 3 months. 6 do. 12 do
-ojorW, $1 50 $3 00 $5 00
: .ire, 12 lines I 2 SO 4 60 9 00
'(res 2i lines 4 00 7 00 12 00
:; lines J 6 00 9 00 14 00
fao'iunm, 10 00 12 00 20 OC
.jinn, UU VZ 00 35 IH
Mrcular tlioae Wlrtf-Awake to
TUEIK OWN INTEREST.
Cheap Casli Store!
T; cii'wi-i t.;-r woliM restieetfiillv an.
;i. e to the public that he has returned
zi i!.e East with bis large and well as
: -1 -t ok of goo-is, bought at the lowest
A rices, which be will dispose of at bis
'.I n advance.
1 1 11 .Vi ) l l u. l ne iiimbie uaue bet
r.i.xn tl;e slow dollar."
I One oiio, come all, and' be convinced
i it rasii systemic to your Advantage,
iv u'.vi lg) away with the revive that
' i t- Aii ini)i-i.t is Hie place to save money.
. Call and ex
t 1 I . .11 t il IT
11 fc
I r. rvtiY.li y invite your attention
try il lected assortment of
.AL'IE"' AND MISSES' DRY GOODS,
:.ia..!.i .ill the latest and most desirable
.'s ..f-.'rr.-s to be found in the Kastern
rk.t.a:i 'tis w hich toav be bad M.izam-
KiMarnay C'l.ecl. Union
S.i;..tus Ft. ids. Linen I.i.-itres.
I' i s. a (..ill and complete stok of
of i;o cents per pound upwards.
W. W. MAIR. JOH1J g DAVlsoJJ
M A I R & D AVISOS,
IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN
SADDLERY, CARRIAGE AND TRUNK
HARDWARE & TRIMMINGS
SADDLES & HARNESS,
Xo. Wood Street,
PITTSBURGH, PA.
PAD SKINS, BEST OAK TANNED
HARNESS, SKIRTING AND BRI-
DLE LEATHERS.
June 17, 18G3 ly.
"jVTotlee.
7T . . To John Kaylor,
trancis A. Kaylor, Rolert Kavlor. John
DriskeH, James Driskell. and Michael Dris
Kell heirs and legal representatives of Jacob
Kaylor, late of Allegheny township Cam
bria county, deceased.
TAKE NOTICE, that by virtue of a writ
of partition or valuation is.ued out of the
Orphan's Court of the County of Cambria
ln.the ,SWe of IV-nnsylvania, an inquest
will be held at the late dwelling bouse of the
said Jacob Kaylor, in the Township of
Allegheny, County aforesaid, on Monday the
24th day of August next, at one o'clock in
tiie afternoon of that day, f,,r the purpose of
making partition, of the Real Estate of the
said deceased, to, and among bis children
and representatives, if the same can be done
without prejudice to, or spoiling of the
whole or otherwise, to value and appraise
the same, according to law at which time
and place you are required to attend, if you
think proper.
Gi JOHN BUCK, Sheriff.
Sheriff's Ofnce. July 1, 18G3.
'or Sale.
F'
P..;v. rl'm.els and Shirtings, I
.nicy
.:;t, 31-isisn. IxItco' and Gentleman's
i ts ani.' J. s'rrv. arid a tremendous stock
;'Aitiii K'. iV V C. .'s Patent H-np bkirts.
;:i t. io r.i ufiy springs, which I can sell
: T.C-ttT-UVS Tr Cent iclna7 PSilartalnli;.
Prices.
AI.V. r; ;;n. - y;U U-ty ( f CLOAKING
i. :.ir-.-!i.g in price from 75 cts. to
- - : ' i' and the largt nss.ir(iiieut
' '": r"' "'locrts, Twccilx. Jeans,
h , ho m t.e c,,ntitrv.
' '.Ii'i'l-.llNG AND OIL CLOTHS in
: ;! v;v . 'y. ai ti.o lowest prices.
J"".' -My , k of GROCERIES are
'' - .!t ' vv '"''O's l.fl,,w my would be ri-
' " Cai.'t se it." Th3 cash sys
r;:; s til! range from 40 to 70 cts per
' Covcrnnifnt Coffee, lxuabt before
" i .fe lu-.ivy ;. ivnnees, I am selling at 22
I r !: . I: is suorior tn nil t)ip nt-n-.
:e! M;b;it;:tf. n,,w selling.
Bh!h iLix Our TEAS, ra-nge from the
!tfiO acres 11 rwrAiw on.l
il r . . . . . . 1
allowances, oi vamauie tUAL LAND. Mtu
ate near the Pennsylvania Railroad, at
Summcrhill Station, in Croy'e Township.
Cnmhria county, Fa. About 60 acres of the!
land bein$ cleared, and thereon erected a
dwelling house and barn, and other improve
ments, also an excellent orchard of fruit
trees. The above tract contains and abun
dance of coal of a supeiior quantity, (a
drift being opened,) and w ill be sold on rea
sfonable terms.
Apply to Poland. Jenkins & Co., TWlti
more, Md., or to J. W Sttatton, New York,
city, or to Wm, Kitteli, Esq.. Attorney-at-Law,
Ebensburg, Pa.
POLAND. JENKINS & CO.
J. W. STRATTON,
April 15. 18C3 tf. Owners.
ltirlfr,s Snle.
K X (' F. T. s; T f p
r WouP'.-he competitors stand aghast
TrU they know we hav t.l i V.pavipsit anA
T'OCKKliY, CHINA. GLASS & DELPII
WA1?F
If.wid in any establishment between
I, , i ...... - uuii.ii, aim Liiab
cp.cai cr t u,,,, n ti,
, . : w,vj ""J'
1 t'"rl, is the common exclamation on
5,C:'fni:, "r cbina Tea Sets, ranging in
r'e'r ,ni l- to -S20, which is lower than
7 he purchased in Pittsburg. We
:,uz to people from all the surround
"'Wi' s because we keep a large stock
111 Wl.ivll t. SfVrf iin.1 f,,
Tii:,,..- -,. , -....j..
iMMii win snllice to convince anyone
v;- 10t p,,ffing our goods.
,, k'i. Is of Ornamental Flower Vases,
4 '.a-W.Trp nn.l iii fi.f oil l-i'n.l
,K(-fy "vcr imagined, we keep on band.
:;ie ts f r .15,00, whb:h is 25 cents
. , . v ' ,nr can "e uougnt ior. in
i'.e,;.:,uf,r Pittsburg retail market,
cin't see how it is done ?" is the
'' T- Vfl' wn ...Til 1l t . 4
rv, , "tit ii-ii uu iiic iictiei
-s CAsiT nvtv t ii.: t
I.ji , v.j.i. i,y una iiit-Hiis i urn
.ei to increase my business and stock
..'''". "Li!e other establishments are glad
:oa,M i lnt?i""3. e are not compelled
;3i j i "e Prhtsto make up for losses by
-1' Wits nn.l i . i
r.. BHvu uy paying casn ior
; Vr,'ea(5 of buying on time and paying
-'o1Crfi;rUre-
OTHERS AND MOTHERS,
. . ot Children's Carriages and
tj. ti J 1 ine tnmg ior those who
tl.e . ealth of thcir children more than
Tnosema11 ?niount we charge for them,
biclj , use a carriage onc6 will never go
chi'j.. ie ld-fashioned way of dragging
fr st, iarr"nd in lhe;r arms- Cal1 antl 6ee
of Infant Carriages and Cabs.
"EElER AND VTT.Sfyvs Rv-WTxrn.
MACHINES,
Huntin i am 601(5 ARent for Blair and
erer usVunties' are the best machines
for t Ttey are perfect, and warranted
bj jj, j"?1"6 satisfied you are saving money
AW , R A- O. KERR.
'na, Jane 10, 1863-3m.
O By virtue of a writ of
Levari Facias issued out of the Court of Gm
root: Fleas of Cambria County, and to me
directed, there will he expot-'ed to Public
Sale, at the G.uit House, in Ehensburg,
on Saturday the 20th day of August next
atone o'clock, P. M., the following Real Es
tate, to wit : Of the lands and tenements
which were of Timothy R. Davis, to wit :
All tha messuage of piece of land situa
ted in Jackson township. Cambria county,
descried as follows : All those two tracts
of land adjoining each other and adjoining
lands of Thomas Jones and Lewis Dunmire
and others, in Jackson township, Cambria
county, and iState of Pennfylvania. with,
and subject to the reservations hereinafter
meutioned, viz : One tract containing eigl ty
three acres and thirty-four perches and al
lowance, surveyed on a warrant granted to
David Price, dated the 17th day of My,
1825. and which the said David Frice by
deed Pole dated the 1 9th day of March 1828
and recorded in Cambria county in Record
Rook, Vol. 3 Page , sold and conveyed
to John Murray, and the other of the said
pieces of land cortaining three hundred and
thirteen acres and fifty-four perches and al
lowance, surveyed on a warrant granted to
John Murray, dated the 15th day of January
1830, be the said John Murray and Mary
his wi'e did by de.d, dated the 2d day cf
June, 1847 and regularly executed, convey
ed the same to Samuel Davis, deed recorded
in Record Book, in Cambria county Book.
Vol. 11 Page 284. as by reference to the
same, will more fully appear at large and
he the said Samuel Davis and Elizabeth Ids
wife, did by deed dated the 12th day of
Febrmry 1858, convey the same to Thomas
Davis and Timothy R. Davis together with
the appurtenances, having thereon erected
a two story plank house, a stable and a
saw-mill, now in the occupancy of the said
Timothy R. Davis.
Taken in Execution and to be sold at the
suit of Samuel Davis.
JOHN BUCK, Sheiiff.
Sheriff's Office, Ebensburg. )
July 29, 18G3-3t J
Auditor's Notice.
In the matter of
the final account of John C. Ivory, Admin
istrator of Patrick Ivory, dee'd, stated by
the Administrators of the said John C.
Ivory, dee'd.
And now. to wit, July 7, 183, on appli
cation r.f William Kitteli, Esq.. Geo. W.
Oatman Esq., appointed Auditor to Report
distribution of the balance due upon the
6aid account.
In pursuance of the above appointment,
the above named Auditor, will sit, for the
purposes of his appointment, at his office in
Ebensburg. on Monday the 17th day of
August, A . D. 1863, at one o'clock. P. M.,
at which time and place, all persons inter
ested will present their claims, or be debar
red from coaling in for a share of the fund.
GEO. W. OATMAN,
July 15-3t Auditor.
Sham us O'Brie
n
BALLAD.
Jist aftber the war, in the year '98,
As soon as the boyn wor all scattered and
bate,
'Twas the custom, whenever a pisant was
got,
To hang him by thrial barrin' sich as was
shot.
There was trial by jurv goin' on bv day
light, - '
And the martial law hangin' the lavins by
night.
It's them was hard times for an honest gos
s -on ;
If he missed in the judges he'd meet a
di ag xin ;
Au' whether the soldiers or judges gev sen
tence. The divil a much time they they allowed for
repentance.
An' it's many's the fine boy was then an his
keepin',
Wid small - share of restin', or atin', or
sleepin',
An' because they loved Erm, an' scorned
to sell it,
A prey for the bloodhound, a mark for the
bullet
Unsheltered by right and unrested by day.
With the heath for their barrack, reveuge
for their pay.
An' the bravest an' hardiest boy iv them all
Was Shamus O'Brien, from the town iv
Glingall.
His limbs were well set, an' his body was
light,
An' the ke3n-fanged hound had not teeth
half so white,
But his face was as pale as the face of the
dead,
And his cheek never warmed with the blush
of the red ;
An, for all that he wasn't an uly young
by 3.
Tor the tlivil himself couldu't blaze with
Lis eye,
So droll an' o wicked, so dark and so bright,
Like a fire rl.ish that crosses the depth of
the night ;
An' he was the best mower that ever has
bee u,
An' the illegantcst hnrler flirt ever was seen
In finciu' be gev Patrick Mooney a cut.
An, iu junipiu'l.e bate Tom Malov ney a
tut:
For lightness iv fut there was not his peer,
For, by gorra, he'd almost outrun the red
deer ;
An' his danciu' was sich that the men used
to stare.
An the women turn crazy, he done it so
quare ;
An', by gorra. the whole world gev into
him there,
An' it's often he run, an' it's often he fought,
Au' it's many the one can remember right
we'd
The quare things he done, an' it's often I
heard tell
How he freckened the magisthratos in Ca.
Lirbally,
An' escaped through the sodgers in Aberloe
Valley ;
An' leathered the yeoman, himself agin
four,
An, stretched the two strongest on old Gal
timore. But the fox roust sleep sometimes, the wild
deer must rest.
An, treachery prey on the blood iv the best,
Aftber many a brave action of power and
pride,
An, many a hard night on the mountain's
bleak side,
An' a thousand great dangers and toils
- overpast.
In the darkness of night he was taken at
last.
Now, Shamus, look back on the beautiful
moon.
For the door of the prison must close on
you soon,
An' take a last look at her c'iui lovely
light.
That falls on this mountain and valley this
night
One look at the village, one look at the
flood. -
An' one at the sheltering far distant wood.
Farewell to the forest, larewell to the hill,
Au' farewell to the friends that will think
of you still.
Farewell to the pathern, the hurlin', an'
wake.
And farewell to the girl that would die for
your sake.
An' twelve sodgers brought him to Mary
borough goal,
An' the turnkey resaved him, refusin' all
bail.
The fleet limbs wor chained, an' the sthrong
hands wor bound.
An' he laid down his lergth on the could
prison ground,
An' the dreams of his childhood kem over
him there.
As gentle an' soft as the sweet summer air ;
An' happy remembrances crowding on ever.
As fast as the foam flakes dhrift down on
the river,
Bringing fresh to his heart many days long
gone by,
Till the tears gathered heavy and thick in
his eye.
But the tears didn't fall for the pride at his
heart
Would not sufler one drop down his pale
cheek to start;
An' he sprang to his feet in the dark prison
cave.
An he swore with the fierceness that misery
gave.
By the hopes of the good an' the cause of
the brave
That when he was mouldering in the cold
grave
His enemies never should have it to boast
Hi scorn of their vengeance one moment
was lost ;
His bosom might bleed, but his check should
be dhry
For. undaunted be lived, and undaunted
he'd die.
Well, as a few weeks was over and gone,
The terrible day iv thrial kem on ;
There was sich a crowd there was scarce
room to stand.
An' sogers on guard, an' dhragoons sword
in haud.
An' the court house so fnll that the people
were bothered,
An' attorneys an' criers on the pint iv bein'
smothered ;
An' counsellors almost gev over for dead,
An' the jury sittin' up in their box over
bead ;
An' the judge settled out so detarmined an'
big.
With his gown on his back, an an illigant
new wig ;
An' silence was called, an' the minute it
was said
The court was as still as the face of the
dead,
And they heard but the openin' of one
prison lock.
An' Shamus O'Brien kem into the dock.
For oue minute he turned his eye round on
the throng.
An' he looked at the bars, so firm an so
strong.
An' he saw that he had not a hope nor a
friend,
A chance to escape, nor a word to defend ;
An' he folded bis arms as he stood there
alone.
As calm and as cold as a statue of stone;
And they read a big writiu', a yard long at
laste.
An' Jim diiln't understand it, nor mind it
a taste,
An' the Judge took a big pinch iv snuff, au'
he says,
" Are you guilty or not, Jim O'Brien, av
you plase ?"
An' all held their breath iu the silence of
'd bread.
An' Shamus O'Brien made answer and j
saui,
' My Lord, if you ask me if in my life time
I thought any treason, or did any crime
That should call to my cheek, as I stand
alone here,
The hot blush of shame, cr the coldness of
fear,
Though I stood by the grave to receive my
death blow,
Before God and the world I would answer
you no ;
But if you would ask me, as I think it like,
If in the rebellion I carried a pike.
An' fought f r ould Irelaud from the first to
the close.
An' shed the heart's blood of our bitterst
foes,
I answer you, yes, an' I tell you again.
Though I stand here to perish, it's my glory
that then
In the cause I was willing my veins should
run dhry.
An' that now for her sake I am ready to
die."
Theu the silence was great, and the jury
smiled bright
An' the judge wasn't sorry the jb was made
light;
By my soul, it's himself was the crabbed
ould chap.
In a twinklin' he pulled ou Ins ugly black
cap.
Then Shamus' mother in a crowd standin'
Called out to thejndge with a pitiful cry,
" Oh, judge, dailin,' dou't, oh, dou't say
the word.
The cratur is young, have mercy, my lord : I
He was foolish, he didn't know what he was
doin'
You don't know him, my lord, oh, don't
give him to ruin
He's the kindliest crathur, the tendhercst-
bearttd
Dou't part us forever, we that's so long
parted,
Judge, tuavourncen, forgive him, forgive
him, my lord,
An' G xi will f.-rgive you, oh, don't say the
wor.l!" '
That was the first minute that O'Brien was
shaken,
When he aw that he was not quite forgot
or forsaken. "
An down his pale cheeks, at the word of
uis mother. i
The big tears wor runnin' fast, one afther
th'other.
An' two or three times he endeavored to
spake,
But the sthrong manly voice used to falther
and break ;
But at last by the strength of his high
mounting pride,
lie conquered and niusthered his grief's
swelling tide
" An," says he " mother darlin', don't break
your poor heart.
For, sooner or later, tho dearest must part ;
And God knows it's Letther than wanderin"
in fear
On the bleak, trackless mountain, amonr
To lie in the grave, where the head, heart
and breast j
From thought, labor, and sarrow, forever
shall rest j
Then mother, my darlin', dont cry any more i
Doct make me seem broken, in this, mv
last hour.
For I wish when my head's lyin' undher
the raven.
No true man can say that I died like a
craven!" "
Then towards the judge Shamus bent down
nis head,
An' that minute the solemn death sentence
was said,
The morniu' wad bright, an' the mists rose
on high,
An' the lark whistled merrily in the clear
sky
But why are the men standin' idle so late ?
Au' why do the crowds gather fast in the
street ?
What come they to talk of? whit come they
to see ?
Au' why does the long rope hang from the
cros tree ?
Oh! Shamus .O'Brien pray fervent and fast,
Mav the saints take your soul, for this day
is your last ;
Pray fast and pray sthrong, for the moment
is nigh,
When strong, proud an' great as you are,
you must die.
An' fasther, an' fasther. the crowd gathered
t litre,
Boys, horses and gingerbread, just like a
a fair ;
An whisky was selling, an' cussimuck too,
An' ould men and young women enjoying
the view.
An' ould Tim Mulvany, he medthe remark.
There wasn't sick a sight since the time of
Noah's ark ;
An' be gorry, twas thrue for him, for divil
such a scurge.
Sich divarshin an' crowds was known
since the deluge.
For thousands were gathered there, if there
was one,
Waitin' till such times a3 the hangin' id
corne on ;
At last they thtew open the big prison gate,
An' out came the sheriffs and sodgers iu
state,
An' a cart in the middle, aud Shamus was
in it ;
Not paler, but prouder than ever that
minute,
An' as soon as the people saw Shamus O'
Brien, Wid prayio and blessin, all the girls cryin ;
A wild wailin souzd kem on by degrees,
I4ike the sound of the lonesome wind blow
in thro trees.
On, on to the gallows, the sheriffs are gone,
An' the cart and the sodgers go stead-ly on
An' at every side swellin around the cart,
A wild sorrowful sou'ud that id open your
heart.
Now under the gallows, the cart takes its
ftatid.
An' the hangman gets up with the rope in
his hand ;
An, the priest having blessed him, goes down
on the ground.
An' Shamus O'Brieu throwsonc last look
round.
Then the hangman dhrew near, au' the
people grew still.
Young faces turned sickly, and warm hearts
turn chill ;
An' the rope bein ready, his neck was made
bare,
For the grape iv the life -struggling cord to
prepare ;
An' the good priest has left him. havin' said
his last prayer.
But the good priest done more, for his hands
he uubound,
And with one daring spring, Jim has leaped
on the ground ;
Bang, bang ! goes the carbines, and clash
goes the sabres.
He's not down ! he's alive still now stand to
him neighbors.
Through the smoke and the horses he's into
the crowd.
By heaven's he's free ! than thunder more
loud
By one shout from the people the heavens
were shaken
One shout that the dead of the world might
awaken.
Y'our swords they may glitter, your carbines
go bang.
But if you witnt hangin, its yourself you
must hang :
To night he'll le sleepin in Aberloe Glin,
An' the divil's in the dice if you catch him
agin.
The sodgers ran this way, the sheriffs ran
that.
An' father Ma'one lost his new Sundav hat
An' the sheriffs wor both of them punished'
severely,"
An' fined like the divil, because Jim done
them fairly.
A week after dis time widout firing a can-
Dfitl
A sharp Yankee schooner sailed out of the
Shannon,
And the Captain left word he was goin' to
Cork,
But the devil a bit he was bound to New
York ;
Aud that very night she ran so near land ;
That some thought she would strike upon
Galtimore strand.
But before the day-light, lik a. wiuged sea
mew.
As swift and as fleet to the westward she
flew,
" Bad luck," said tho police " bad luck,"
said the sodgers,
" We tot dat we bud him," but "Jim"
proved a dodger.
The very uext Spring a bright morning in
M ay
Just eix months after the great banging
da y "
A letter was brought to the town of Kildare,
And oaths outside was written out fair
VOL. 10 NO. 37.
"To ould Mrs. O'Bi ien in Ireland or else
where,"
And the inside began " My dear good ould
mother
I'm safe and am happy and not wishing ty
bother
You in the radin' (with the help of tt
priest)
T send you enclosed in this letter at laist
Enuf to pay him and to fetch you away
To this "Laud of the free and brave"
Amerika
Ilcre.you'll be happy, and never nade crvin'
So long as your mother of Shamus O'Drien ;
Give my love to swate Biddy and tell her bo
ware, Of that spalpeen vrho calls himself "Lord
Lord of KiHare
And just say to the judge, I don't now care
a rap
For him, or his wig, or his dirty Mack cap.
And ns for dragoons--(them paid men of
slaughter.)
Say I love them, as the divil loves holy
water.
And, now. my good mother, one word of ad
vice. Fill your bag with pertoties, and whisky, and
rice,
And when you start from ould Ireland, take
passage at Cork,
And come strate over to the town ef ew
York,
And there ax the Mayor the best way to iro
To the State of Sinsinaty, in the towo of
Ohio ;
For tis dare you will find me, widout much
tryin'.
At the Farp and the Eagle,' kept by Sha
mus O'Brien." -
Rebel Loss
IX MAJOK-GENKHAL OKAXT'sj DEPARTMENT
PINCli THE LANDING OF THE AK.MT AT
GKANI r.CLF, MISS. , MAY 1, 1SG3.
Loss in men up to May IS 40,000
Prisoners taken at Vicksburg,
3uy 4 31,000
To.tal 71,080
Citizen prisoners 5 qqq
1,500 of whom were wo
men and children.
Prisoner?, sick and wounded. .
Prisoners fit for duty
Tents captured '.
Mules captured
Horses captured
Freight ears captured
Locomotives captured
Large siege guns captured
Field pieces eaptuzed
Pounds of ammunition
Stands of small aims
Shot guns, &c, &c
A alue of public properly captured, from
$10,000,000 to 15,000,000.
Approved by order of
Signed James Wilsox,
Lt. Col. and Provost Marshal
. .13,220
. - .18,000
-. 4,000
. . 1,500
.. 1,000
.. 200
5
. .. 1SS
. . . 151
. . 300
. .35,000
.30,000
Pout IIi r.-ox,. July 11, 1863,
I nsoners taken by Major-Gene-
ral Hanks.! 5000
Small pins, &c 700O
Artillery, field-pieces, &c, &c, all'
taken surrendered unconditionally.
1" CorNTVhT6' nUrtf c
O. tUL.ML June Term, 18C3.
CAM BRIA CO UNTY, SS.
TUF. COM.MOXWEAI.TH OF rEXXSYLVAVI
To Thomas Fitz Gibbons and Charles Fitz
Gibbons, in Dodge county, Minnesota, heirs
and legal representatives of Michael Fitz
Gibbous, laie of Allegheny township, said
County, dee'd, you and each of you are here
by cited to be, and appear before the Judges
of our said Court, at Ebcnburg on the fiist
l um' 01 ocpicmiKT next, (being the 7th
uay 01 said month), then and there to accej
v. .u- .u lahe lKe real estate of the said
Michael I itz Gibbons, dee'd, situated in said
County of Cambria, and which has Wen ap
praised and valued by an inquest awarded
by the said Court and returned bv the Sher
lft of said Co inty, on the first (iav of June,
A. D. 1SG3, to wit: Premises. No. 1 situa
ted m Allegheny township aforesaid, con
taining one hundred and nine acres (100)
ninety nine (93) ptrches nett measure, valu
ed at 741 per acre; premises No. 2, ad
joining premises NV. 1. containing (86)
acres and 18 perches, valued and appraised
at SS.41 per acre, or show cause why tho
same should not be sold. Herein fail not.
Seal. Wirness the Honorable GEORGE
TAYLOR, President Judge of our
said Court, at Ebensburg, this firgt
day of June, A. D. 1863.
ci -m E. F. LYTLE, Clerk O. C.
Sheriff's Office, Ebensburg,
. July 29, 1803-3 j
JOHN BUCK. Sheriff.
Auditor's Notice.
The undersigned
having been appointed an Auditor, by the
Orphans' Court of Cambria county, to exs
!1 n.int Ia-i.Ia on. vani-rl linAn tin
tions filed to the account of J. M. Campbell
- -1 . T - . . . r
one 01 me yunjmii.raiors 01 James r
Clark, deceased, who was guardian of Win
fipLl Stott Williams. I.pipI.t. r;c -1
; . - - j j uutiuca ail
parties interested that ho will attend to tb
duties of bis said appointment, at his office,
in the Borough of Ebensburg, on Wedncs
day the 19th day of August next, at one
o'clock. P. M. WM. KITTELL.
J"'y 22, 1863-3t Auditor.
D. MAOEHAN. Fsr A t-r. :
f .-I. 4uaBX
Ebensburg Fa. 14viii
S.
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