Democrat and sentinel. (Ebensburg, Pa.) 1853-1866, June 29, 1864, Page 2, Image 2

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    gcmocrat nnb mtiiuL
M. Il.tSSO.V, CdKor & Publisher
WEDNESDAY. JIE 23, U.
S. M. Pettengill & Co.
Advertising Agents, 37 Park Row
New York, and 10 State treet, Boston,
are tho authorized Agents for the "Dem
ocrat & Sentinel," and the most influen
tial and largest circulating Newspapers in
the United States ana Canadas. They
are empowered to contract for us at our
LOWEST TERMS.
Democratic Ticket.
Assembly,
CYKUS L. PERSUING, of Juhnstow n.
Sheriff,
JAMES MYERS, ol Ebensburg.
Com missioner,
ED. R. DUNN EG AN, of Clearfiild Tp.
Poor Mouse Director,
GEORGE ORRIS, of Richland Tp.
Auditor,
JOHN A. KENNEDY, of Carrolltown.
COl'XTY COMJllTTKC.
P. S. NOON, Chairman,
George Pehuiv. J S. Mardis. Georue C i
iv. anm, 1 eier miner, i i.mi
C. Zahm, Peter II uber, Philip Miller. John
E. McKenzie, Joseph Belie, John Durlni,
David Farner, Henry Friedthoof. John
Stough, Elisha Plummer. Lewis Rodders,
George Gurley, John MeDermit, Simon
Dunmyrr, W. A. Krise. Thos. F. MeGnunh,
Jacob Fronheiser, J. F. Condon. John Ham
iltoc, F. O'Friel, Michael Bohlin, V:n. C.
Diver, John White, Henry Topper, Nicho
las Cannan, M. J. Plott. J. V. Condou,
Daniel Cnfair, Wm. McCloskey. Diniet II.
Donnelly, Anthony Long, Jchn Marsh,
John Ryan.
Morality of (HI Atfminlxtratioii.
The Divine Nazarine in giving instruc
tions on the Mount of Olives, to his hear
ers, told them among other beautitudes,
that " Blessed were the peacemakers for
they shall be called the children of God."
lias this doctrine become obsolete, or is it
as immutable as its author? None will
deny tho authenticity of the doctrine. The
Dynasty at 'Washington cannot be called
the children of God, they are not pace
makers they are blood-thirsty in the ex
treme, they have mutilated and butchered
over one million of the flower of the
American jieople without one single effort
to terminate the slaughter. And now it
is the same old song, more men, more
money, and more taxes. The profligate
destruction of human life has destroyed
tho whole system of American labor, and
left very few able-bodied men to till the
soil. The wasteful extravagance of the
present administration is appalling. From
the days of George Washington s inansu- !
ration to the day of the inauguration of
the present incumbent, there was spent
something over fourteen thousand million I
of dollars, and now the appropriations for
this dynastv is over forty thousand mil- !
lions, according to the last om.sus, b,fore !
there was anv .W n.r-iinn ..F :. !
j " r'"-''.'i " i
would take the whole of the northern pro- ! "
perty, real, personal and mixed to liqui
date this debt. We may Ikj toM the
country is prosperous, nior-ey isplentv, so
it is, but it is the hectic glow of a con
sumptive patient, the sure ha.bingcr of
death. Surely men will soon open their
eyes to the inevitable state of things that
now exists in this once free and happy
land. No man but a maniac could think
that this couutiy conld stand this war
much longer.
There are no peacemakers in this Ad
ministration. Truly, they shall not be
called the children of God. T heir trea
son, their insanity andjwickedncss is more
to be pitied than blamed, they are spell
bound and controlled hy the demon of
Abolitionism, and arc not free agents any
more. Providence has abandoned them
to their own wickedness mil r.AU. c
" whom the gods wih to destroy thev fi-v.i !
make mad." The Southern Suih-s have cons,I,l,tion of our country, if the De
ought for a recognition in Vam from all mocracy do 'et1 IwalcJ up, it will for a
nations of Europe, but-their nationality
, ,
is recognized hy Lincoln's leader in the
House of Representatives, who .k chues
'hat the l m m of .r fathers is Kid and .
never again can be revived with Lis con
sent. And they still tell us we are fight
ing for the Union.
" Blessed are the pure in heart for they
shall sec God." Are the men of this
generation clean of heart who are hover
ing around the public treasury watching
for the drippings that fall from this great
plundering machine. Those shoddy rob
lers of the public treasury who are turn
the blood of their fellow-citizens and
the tears of the widows and orphaus into
money to enrich themselves, regardless of
the affliction of their unfortunate country,
are certainly not clean of heart, they are
wallowing in the mire of their own cor
ruption, and will not relax their grip on the
public treasury until they are forced from
it by pome means or other.
Are those Republican members of Con
cress who billet their doxies on the Trea-
j sury Department as clerks and get the
j Govcrnmcnt t(, my thcm salaries. "Are
j they pure of heart, no, Hell must be filled
I with such purity of heart.
' "Thou shalt not steal." This Admin-
istration is a den of thieves. They steal
everything that is jwrtable, from a piano
to a wooden leg.
Indeed some of
our Republican friends stole a gum-clastic
leg in Fredericksburg, that was said to
belong to a lady there, and this wanton
depredator for his dexterity in thievery
was shortly afterwards rewarded with a
i lucrative government office. There are a
J great abundance of pianos gracing the
parlors of the North stolen from the South
j Even the library's of the war preacher of
! the North have received large accessions
from the stolen literature
t Thou shall not bear false witness
against thy neighbor," that is thou shall
not lie. This administration is the most
being of all ages and nations. There is
one other government that probably might
compare with this, but it is nut of earth,
and its ruler is called tho father of lies.
Lincoln, Seward, Stanton and the whole
fraternity of those at the head of affairs,
lie as gracefully as if thoy had been
brought up at the feci of his Satanic ma
jesty. Hefore this unholy administration
got into JMJWI.T an American gentleman
j was expected to tell the truth and to tell
I him he lied m his presence was generally
j answered by a blow, but now the whole
, country is become so degenerate that false-
j hood from high places is become the order
! of the day. To look for the truth in the
i
Republican newspapers now, would be is
j nonsensical as to look for the state of the
j woather in last years almanac. So that
the high-toned truthful bearing of the
country is gone, perhaps never to return.
This moral decay of the country is to be
regretted as much as its physical. Truth,
honor and public virtue has been wasted
away, as well as our blood and our treas
ure by this unholy government of ours.
" Thou shalt not kill, thou shalt not
steal, thou shalt not commit adultery,
thou shalt not covet thv neighbors foods,
nor his ox, ncr his ass nor his man-servant
nor his maid-servant " &c. We lind
every command in the decalogue trampled
under foot by these blood-thirsty minions
wtr 9 eH as they have trampled
on the constitution ot our country. We
suppose that this cannot be successfully
"Ul "u "K m JU3l".v
L 'y tU ,,loa f m,IilarJf
' P'Ca ,S a9 My anJ unteM as
a"J dirtbo,ical- lt
t,,at tl,e Irvine author and dis-
pos-;r ot nature has hand d over this
government for a season to his Satanic
Majesty or that he has permitted him for
a season for his own wise purposes to have
an undue influence over this unfortunate
dynasty. Iet us however trust that
righteousness may yet reach their blind
ness, and that the Lord will soon aain
take the country rmder his divine protec
tion, by infusing into their minds a
knowledge of their iniquities and folly.
The Democracy of the country will have
to do their part. The country is dying by
inches and if they have it not mortally
wounded before the next election, we
must make a grand effort to restore it,
though it never can be what it was, it is
like a stout athletic man who has had a
violent fever, he may be restored in somo
cases thouah nlmnst nl
3 cj c CtlllJ
j ing some marks of tho disease linrrerinn-
in ,US c0011"1'0"- So it must be in the
long time have some tender points where 1 1
i -l.
. . . " 80 v,,ah Ptabbed y the
'tlunist3- ' f
Never quit certainty for hope.
War .ew.
The news from the army of the Poto
mac is not very encouraging. 1 ctersDurg
is not yet taken, and we don't think it
will be taken. It is said by the New
York Tribune that General Grant appre-
ciating the great labors ot hts white anu
black troops fighting by day, and en
trenching by night, has added to their
comfort a whisky ration. Now we don't
wish to be understood as having any per
sonal objection to a whisky ration if we
were in the army, but we think it looks
like infusing a false spirit into men to
make them fight, when in sober seri
ousness they would not attempt it.
We see .men in bar-rooms, when they
are intoxicated are very often more be
ligerant than they would bo if they were
confined to hard tack and water rations.
On the whole Grant deserves a great deal
of credit for discovering that men will
fight better drunk than sober, but we
think that this great discovery must be
attributable to the towering genius of the
President. He made a visit to Grant's
army last week and of course something
sublime would be the consequence. He
did not even go alone but took Ins son
along, and it is fair to suppose that the
son will be a perfect reflex of the old
gentleman in genius and talent, you can't
expect him to " swap horse3 in crossing a
stream.
Our impression is that Grant is loosing
his men and making no headway in the
capture of Petersburg or Richmond. lie
has now divided his forces and sent one
part of them to destroy the railroads south
of Richmond and has the other part of
his army facing the enemy. This may
be a perilous maneuvre, but let us hope
for the best,
Sherman's army is not in any more
promising condition than Grant's. lie is
kept at bay by Johnston and is in a very
unenviable position. On the whole the
situation of our armies north and south
looks rather gloomy.
Accident. George Attec, an elderly
man, who was a watchman on the Penn
sylvania Railroad, was killed on last
Friday evening on the curve between Gal
litzin and Crcsson. lie was niectin" a
locomotive coming on the track where he
was walking, ho stepted off to the other
track and a train of cars coming the other
way killed him immediately, he was badly
mutilated. Within the last few years
many men have been killed nearly in the
same manner and in the same place.
tT We call the attention of our rea
ders to the card of Dr. Gardner in an
other column of our paper. The Dr. is
said to be well qualified in his profession,
and we know him to be a gentleman in
his intercourse. We have no doubt of
his success in this locality, and of his
giving general satisfaction.
Uf. spa tcli.
We received the following dispatch
from the Conemaugh Division of our
home army, and hasten to lay it before
our readers, as its importance demands.
It appears that their victory at the bridge
was complete, and will go far towards the
closing of the war in that locality.
I Ika ihia rtkrs ok the Mountain Dk-
PAUTMENT.
Wilmoke, June 28, 18C4.
To Major-General GUlan, Minister :
Dear Sik : I have the honor to inform
you that we have had a battle with the
enemy, in our Department, near Racer's
Kun, tne result ot which has been entire
ly satisfactory. The enemy came into
town in force, on Saturday" evening last,
and after skirmishing for a short time,
took a position on the llridge at the south
end of town, and endeavored to briri" on
a general engagement by calling us cop
perheads and daring us to mortal combat,
a challenge which we accepted, and made
a charge on them and succeded in driving
them to Itager's Run, where they rallied"!
We charged again, and this time routed
them entirely, with the loss on their part
of several chip hats, suspenders, etc I
regret to have to inform you that we lost
two of our best men, one is wounded in the
shoulder, with a knife, and the other in
the arm, they are however doing well,
and will be fit for service in a few days.
Considering that we were outnumbered in
the engagement I think it must be con
considered the most glorious affair, of the
war, as we routed them completely. I
think we will have no farther trouble with
them during this campaign.
At some future time I will give vou a
list of those of our command, whom I
would recommend for promotion for Tai
lm,i anu uici ibonous COnuUCl.
I have the honor to be, General
Your's Respectfully,
nt and meritorious conduct.
D. Regulator.
Gen. Commanding.
A Mammoth Enterprise. By our ad
vertising columns it will be seen that the
two well known establishments, Thayer &
Noyes' Circus and Van Amburg &Co.'s
Menagerie have effected an arrangement by
which they will both travel together the
present season, and exhibit in one mammoth
tent for a single price of admission, forming
a combination of attractions which cannot
fail to draw out immense throngs of visitors
wherever they may go. The Menagerie is
said to include an unusualy fine collection
of living beasts and birds from all parts of
the world, many of which have been im
ported within the last year, while all are in
the beat condition. Among other rare zoo-,
logical features this collection can boast of
the largest lion in the country, a white Folar
bear fresh from the Arctic ocean, a superb
ostrich a South American hippopotamus, and
monster elephant Hannibal," the largest
quadruped on exhibition either in Europe or
America. The Circus performances which
are given at each exhibition, without extra
charge, will consist of every variety of dash
ing horsemanship and extraordinary athletic
feats, introducing one of the largest and
most taleuted troupes ever brought together
in this country. A stud of horses, ponies
and mules unrivalled for extent, beauty and
thorough training, completes the list of at
tractions included in this truly colossal com
biuation, which is to exhibit here on the
11th day of July. Those who enjoy
hearty laugh will have their cases attended
to by Dr. J. L. Thayer, the inimitable hu
morist, who will enliven the scenes of the
circle by his quaint drolleries, and also in
troduce his wonderful comic mules. Mons.
Davis, a pupil of the great Van Amburgh,
will manipulate the lions and tigers.
Correspond nee .
Johnstown, June 27, 18G4.
Dear Coixnel : Presuming that the
news from this locality would be of inte
rest to your numerous readers, and well
knowing your comprehensive view in re
lation to your position as a journalist. I
take advantage of a leisure hour to add
my mite towards making your journal a
a county iMpaper.
The week just past has been sultry and
hot in the extreme, and the warm breath
of the night and evening air gave but lit
tle relief to the tired and parched laborer
of the day, in and about our mills and
workshops. The universal cry is for rain,
and many orisons, no doubt, go heaven
ward laden with the petitions of suffer
ing mortals for relief of that kind from
the bounteous hands of Providence.
Friday and Saturday last were what
is jK.pularly known as "jKty day's " at the
mill, and the inevitable consequence, (as
has been demonstrated by the past) was a
universal spree, and the usual number of
hghls incident thereto. On Friday nigh
we passed a beer saloon in which there
was a dance and several fights coin" on at
the same time apparently as a matter of
course, as neither party the ji,jhters or
dancers appeared to interrupt the other.
On Saturday evening there were a num
ber of knock downs, but no serious injury
to any one resulted at least nothing
more than a black eye or bloody nose.
During those two days the saloons done
of course an extraordinary business. Some
idea of this may be inferred from the fact
that it is estimated that not less than a
hundred thousand dollars are disbursed
monthly by this mammoth manufacturing
corporation known as theCambria Iron
Works.
Our city was the scene of at least one
successful robberv. and an attemoted one
during the week. The facts as I learned
mem are these : an "American citizen of
sijrwan aeccnt" was observed to be
making an effort to get his hand into the
wrong coat poeket,the coat being on the
back of one of our merchants. He was
taken up and while receiving a hearing
he was asked if he was drunk. He re
plied, " Xo sah, I can't say I was intoxi
cated, but I was dujhtly inebriated." The
Mayor fined him 1,00, and in default of
vo, w ne nau but one) sent him to jail
for twenty-four hours.
The successful robbery alluded to was
perpetrated according to my informant
last night, and was to the amount of forty
dollars, alledged to have been stolen from
a merchant in town, by a suspicious look
ing individual who has circulated about
town for a couple of weeks past, and who
has since decamped.
There have been a hundred other inci
dents worthy of record transpiring here
here dunng the week, but not wishing to
mipose on your space aud columns, I will
defer sneaking of several improvements
till another time.
In the meantime, dear Colonel, con
tinue to treat us to similar pithy and com
mon sense editorials, like those that have
made your paper intei; fr th nt
few weeks, and we will be under addi
tional obligations. Such articles suit the
times and the hour? I am 6iare they af
fect the masses far more than the misera
ble attempts of many who try to grow elo
quent in words and leave their columns
destitute of matter.
Yours, &c.t "Cal."
3" The three hnndred dollar rommn-
tation clause, will be repealed in Congress
5 Prear9 m ,aPt nishts
P l' ?'
Postponement of the Chicago '
Convention.
We were about to write an article on
the postionernent of the Chicago Conven
vention, but we clip the following from
the Philadelphia Aye, that truthful and
reliable Democratic paper of . the State,
and ask our readers to give the following
remarks a careful perus;d.
THE MEETING OF THE CHICAGO CON
VENTION POSTPONED TILL AU
GUST 29.
At a meeting of the Executive Committee
of the National Democratic Committee, held
in New York on the 22dday of June, 18G4,
it v as voted that, in deference to the desire
of a larje number of the leading members
of the Conservative Union Democratic party
throughout the country, the meeting of the
Democratic National Convention be post
poned to Monday, August 29, 18C4, at
twelve o'clock, noon, at Chicago.
August Belmost,
FatPERiCK O. Peakce, Secretary.
"The National Democratic Committee
have acted wisely in posponing the meet
ing of the Convention. This action was
uoi omy a just oeterence to the almost
1 , - . . I
the Middle and Western States, but was
that which suggests itself as nroner and
upiiiiuii ui me iemocracy oi
decorous to every man w ho feels that
there is a higher duty in party than ap
propriation of spoils. The Democratic
party could not afford to tarnish its fame
by an exhibition of such gross indecency
as has just been perpetrated by the late
conventions of the Abolitionists, in huck
stering and wire-pulling for places whilst
thousands of their fellow-citizons are
lying maimed and dying on the fruitless
battle-fields ot V lrgmia, and the question
of our defeat or success is still an open
one. No Democrat hna timp nnu- tn
think of canvasses or of electioneering ' To ain a footing with her :
His heart is with his suffering brother on ' Ulitr',,,at k'nSth: tu Central Park
the James River; his eyes are turned with He llrove and t0k h" tLlUr'
an auxiety which permits no release of j Ton verdant he too bashful she
watchfuljness on the end of that mighty Till fortune did entice ;
struggle in which the fate of a continent : She slipped he caught her on his We.
is being decided. The present moment tnat sir broke the ice !"
we all feel to be no time for making po- ' We have a bit of advice to Hve t,
htical nominations. Can a ward process- J any " bashful sparks " who shouhfehanc
ion recall us from the deathly tramn ofltoseethia ?n f ,t,; -
tlie armei contending hosts ? Are we to
be turned from the shriil reville or the
bugle blast of the thundering charge by
a placarded omnibus full of droning
trombonists? Amid the mifrhtv events
&
now transpiring, perhaps decisive of our
fate, and that of our posterity, such
sounds would jar upon Democratic senses,
as the blatant voice of John Hook crying
"Beef! Reef !" did on the soul of Pat-
rick Henry, in the full fervor ot his pa -
tr..t .,1 n, .: . .. .
.....v. j. ie- nuie is ioo large, ioo ;
full of big events, for such small aims, j
such subordinate interests. A display of i
personal selfishness beside an individual;
coum is revolting to our sense ot decency ; :
how much greater is our disgust and ab- '
besides, another evidence of the deep
foundations on which the structure of the
Democratic party is laid. It has no one
man to exalt, no individual to doryfy at
the
i r
na
tions interests.
t. .. c "
.-i .1 .
" limner ui coin-
r.. .j mumc.H lo ii vmai uamu
j huiw.u on us oanners, ior us coliorts
rally under an undying principle. Its
leader is snrp. tn h Aioi.A.i r, e. i
I 1 1 r. . . ' .
ioeia woum ngnt under no other : that
they have chosen him, stamps his adhe-
sion to its creed, as the mint mark on the
coin Stamps its purity, it can w ell afford
therefore, to wait and watch the varvin
scenes of the great drama now being
played before us mighty movements
which each day create new relations, dis
place old opinions, form fresh phases and
different combinations of circumstances.
To have refused to acknowledge these
elements, which go to the making up of a
just decision on the questions w hich will
come . before the Chicago Convention,
would have been to have willfully thrown
away the conditions of success. The ac
tion of the Democracy is never at fault
when it is not premature.
Death or Tom Hyer.
Tom Hyer, the well-known numlist
and athlete of former years, died at his
i .
resiaence in this city yesterday (Sunday)
morning. For several years past he had
been complaining, but most of tho time
had not been confined to his house.
Hyer's first fight in the prize rinr was
with Country McCluskey, up the North
river. He was whipped ; afterward
fought him again and came off victorious.
At this time Yankee Sullivan was in his
fame, and nobody supposed he could be
whipped. Sullivan wanted to fVht Hver.
but the latter did not care to. Finallv
however, they happened to meet at Sher
wood's bar-room, near Park Place, on
Broadway, and some taunts were thrown
out, which resulted in a quarrel between
the two men, and in Hyer eivinsr Sullivan
ft thrashing. This led to a formal chal
lenge, and finally the great event took
place on Delaware Ray, where Hyer
whipped Sullivan easily in sixteen rounds.
This fight created an intense excitement
in pugilistic circles, and many thousands
of dollars wero lost and won upon the
eevnt.
Of course it made Hyera hero, but altho'
he was in splendid health, from that time
fnrf b liA L'Ont ourav A-i ! -
In Kin day he was regarded as one of the
handsomest men that walked Broadway,
IlOlTCnce in such Mliilntimw rniiU way far Lorcllo. I hf Spilnc
grave of our country and our liberties. i uhn..l.E
T1A ., p .i rt . . 1 uc Having purcu.wetl me eu-.
1 he postponement of the Convention is. tirp Kt.K'k of lh,rSa na, L t,;n
a perfect model of an athlete. He had a
manner and bearing, too, entirely unlike
that of a Hash sportman, and a large cir
cle of friends regarded him highly for
generous and chivalric personal qualities
of character that those who only knew of
llim Oa ima.-krv n r. IT. .... 1 . 1 t
credit for.
iitui no trvmji a pujunoi umm fce niro no
Lately he had become verv
much broken down by disease, and liia
business enterprises, such as they were
having miscarried, he had become quite
indigent, and was compelled to accept of
a benefit from his sporting friends a few
evenings ago.
On Saturday last he was out until be
ween 12 or 1 o'clock, yesterday moni
tng, when he returned in a wagon, accom
panied by a friend. He sat on his fruit
stoop about fifteen minutes, when he com
plained of being ill, and asked for ice
water, which was furnished him. Soon
after this he was aided in getting to bed,
and continued to grow worse, breathing
shorter and with more difficulty, until
o'clock, A M., when he expired. I)r"
Thomas Robinson made a post mortem
examination of the body. He found
; the lungs and intestines healthy th(
neari very large and tatty, and neri
cardium filled and distended with serum
The liver was also very much deseased
and the whole structure of it entirely de
generated into schirrus mass. The spleen
was enormously large, measuring ten ami
a-half incees in length, eight inches in
width, and weighing several pound,-.
The doctor was of the opinion that the
immediate cause of death was cardiac
dropsy. Deceased was forty-five years of
age, and a native of New York. N. Y
World.
"They Way he did It."
" Tom sought in Tain, unhannv sn.ir,-
1 " 5 UIMIM" IU V-'fIi.l.
Park, drive to E. J. .Mills & Co.'?. u i
not bike her on your knee, but buy l.er a
new dress from their stock of summer d -laines
and calicoes, that will lie a sun?
way. They have iust nr ivp.l n.
stock, and can suit every one. Call and
see them.
; 1
J)U T' C S' Gardn"'
' Plivsirriv a vr r ct' n,.
: Tt... ira uU r, fi c A - .
: . hu kr? tls I'rofeSMoiial .service t tl.o
citizens oi
EBENSCURG,
and surrounding vicinity
OFFICE IN COLON. 1K ROW.
Juue 2'J, 1864-tf
j of the late firm of Ryan & Durbin. bg,
j leave to inform his liien Is and the public u.
general that he is now prepared to fumi.-h
: ,nem w,tn every accommodation in his Iiiie
wiiu an mi; trams oil llie ll. u. ri , U"-
: . - i i
'"g pai-seiigers no ae ay wnaiever.
Cal's
aiwavs promptly attended to
JOE F.
DURBIN.
Loretto, Juue 29, 1864-ly.
T Ot
rtr i9tan,mi.rv .... tl.-
I estate of John II. Evaus. carpenter, late . f
! Cambria township, Cambria county, deoM,
having been granted by the Register of sai-I
couuijf iu tiiu iiiiocrtikiifu. police is
given to all those indebted to said estate t
come and settle the same aud those hariiii
claims against said estate to present them
duly authenticated for settlement.
JAMES MYERS.
June 29, 1864-Gt Executor.
Margaret Evans
by her next friend
Robert Davis,
r.
David Evans.
IN the Ccurt :-i
Common Pleas oi
Cambria County.
No. 16 June Term,
Term 1S64.
Alias Suf'jwa ti
Divorce.
To DAVID EVANS, the above named Li
brler :
YOU are hereby notified, that in pursu
ance of an order of Court in the above
stated case, you arc required to be and ap
pear iu your proper person before the Judges
of the said Court, on tho First Monday of
September next, at Ebensburg, to answer
the petition of libel of the said Margaret
Evans, and to show cause, if any you have,
why the said Margaret Evans, your wife,
should not be divorced from the bonds of
matrimony, agreeably to the Acts of Gene
ral Assembly in 6uch case made and provi
ded. JOHN BUCK,
Ebensburg, June 29, 1864 4t Sheriff.
Sheriffs Sale.
BY virtue of a writ of
Vend. Eipon. issued out of the Court of
Common Pleas of Cambria County, and to
me directed, there will be exposed to Public
Sale at the house of Patrick Shiels, in Lo
retto, ou Saturday the Sixteenth day of July
next, at one o'clock, P. M., the followinj
Real Estate, to wit :
All the right, title and interest of J. Blair
Moore, of, in and to a piece or parcel of land
situated in Allegheny township, Cambria
county, adjoining land of Thomas Farrish.
Peter Kerrigan and others containing about
forty-five acres (45) more or less, about
twenty five acres of which are cleared hav
ing thereon erected a one story !og house
and a small log barn, now in the occupancy
of Margaret Daily.
Taken in execution and to be sold at the
suit of John J. Glass.
JOHN BUCK, Sheriff
Sheriff's Office, Ebensburg.
Jnn 29. !8644t