27 ULESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT, IKE THE DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALIKE, UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THE RICH AND THE POOR. 1 KTEW SERIES, 1. ;c Jtmotrut anb j?cnlind, TS pr.l.lisheil in tliC borough of Ebensburg, L':ui.lni:i comity! Pa., every Wednesday ionium, by Clark Wilson, at the folio w - rate.-. invariably in advance: Kx copy, three months, 60 )i:! copy, iviontlis, 51 00 ,e cojv, olio yenr; " - 2 00 I Tho.-ewLo fail to ray their subscriptions jntil uftcr the expiration ot six months will " charged at the rate of $-'.50 per year, 'fin! those nlw fail to pay until after the ex "liiration of twelve mouths will be charged at tfee rate of $2.00 per Year. " Tlie lh-mu-ral awlSatlind when paid for in advame costs four cents per number: 'fheu not paid in advance six ceuts jer ainiher vill be charged. Twelve numbers constitute a quarter; twinty llve, hix months; and fifty numbers, roe V'-ar. I UATKS OF AKVLUTlSIXC. '4 Fia -eii lines of Durgoise type constitute a j;:.r. 0.f 'I'l-oe, oni? insertion, Eii 'ii .iiI'M'ijUent insertion, Otif iiuare. one year, Xwo t'j ia'res, one insert!.'!, liu'n suhsc(jui i:t insertion. Oi.i't""urtli column, three month; One fourth eojunin, six months. $1 00 . . ; oo rQ g ()U j 12 00 20 00 12 00 20 00 Onf f i:r:li column, one year. . Half column, three months, Jjaif column, six mouths, ' lalf column, one ear, ( W colun.n, three months, C V'' column, sis months, )ce column, one year, .'iuditor's Notice, 1 xevutor's Notice". . .dministratoi'r: Notice. Marriage ami Death Notices. f . .-. 20 00 ' 85 00 70 00 2 0U 2 CO 2 50 Free. rirrofe.-olotial cards with paper, per an $o 00 nam. ; Obituary Notices, over six lines, teu cents jtjr line. -jSiiecial and business Notices eight cents tr line A.r firt insertion, and four cents for icli subsequent insertion. 'Resolutions of Societies, or coiiimunica f joi'S of a personal caturc nuist be paid for f 1 advertisements. No cuts ius rted in advertisements. -CAii- J OOM WUKti 1UL..S AD OIlltiMlid. ft.-- For 2o. GO. 100. E.ad.100 I atetnthKh't. $1 50 SI 75 $2 00 l ighth Sh-et. 1 50 2 CO 2 50 "4 To 1 00 1 50 2 00 0 Barter Sheet, 2 50 3 00 3 50 1 00 5 00 0 50 Alf Sheet, v CAKDS. CO for $1 50 I 200 for 3 TO for 2 00 500 for I U h additional hundred. $S 00 5 00 50 Il.ANKS. . ( l quiu , $2 50 Each ad. q'r.$l 50 iAU trans "h i it work must be paid for on Every. CLARK WILSON. Eheihr.r-, June 11, 18C5. I JOHN D. THOMAS, Loot and Shoe Maker, ni'oP oMHiv ctt Vi'i'vmit'DM i 1 r 1 I f r T-L ;i-hB,LK(; f te,t rn fl-, T f f t f na.itely opposite he store of L J. i :,n :';t .f' ?: d aH WVk ,n, ,,W The woi tloiie at this establishment will C w M..nv i.nii.iiiii; uii ci any tnop m lWi.iue!p!)i.i, Pittsburgh or elsewhere in the coautry. Erench Calf. Common Calf. Mo rooco and all kinds of Leather constantly on hasd. All Work warranted to render satis faction. Novemher 2, 1SG5 ly. i JAMES P. MURRAY, 'Jt&i'H Street, (ijoaite IIiinthii Jlinhcare .$'.) euknsbrik;, pa., ""EEPS constantly on hand a good qual ty of i j FLOUR, CORN MEAL, j droceries of All Kinds, I Bool's AXD SriOKS. I iMuslins. Detains, Calicoes, Hals, S,-c, j A3 of which he is prepared to sell for cash t or exchange for approved country jirmluce, on i.,ir lerms. ov. 50, IS'Jo.ly. . JCO KNEli (i I IOCE1JY STORl WOim J. T1I0MA8, vmcr of Maui ami Franklin Streets, JOHNSTOWN, PA., thTS constantly on hand a geneial as rtnient of FAMILY GROCERIES, 4 a try Protluce, ttc. together with Spices, ii!es. Preserved Fruits, Dried Fruits, I 4.1CC0, Cigars, &c, all of which w ill be 8c. an cheap as the choapest. Call and txamir.o our stock. -Nov. 16, 1805. ly. 3. M. Pettengill c Co. '.vertlsins: Acentti. Pku- v. i w lotit and 10 Mate street, Boston, I a r- a. jx r A bKsmsEi,," and the most influen- . "-""iiitru n-iiib ior ine "IJem d largest circulating Newspapers in tinted States and Canadas. Th tL empowered to contract for us at out ftST TERMS. he Life and Campaigns of General Me an, i r sale bv JAMES MUKUAY. 37. mrrixG TO AND FIIOM ENG LAND, IRELAND AND SCOTLAND i;y hik (JAbWAY LINE OF STEAMSHIPS, MONTREAL do. do. AXI WASHINGTON LINE OF SAILING VESSELS. Diafts at sight for 1 and upwards, on National B.iuk and branches. Payable in all the City's and Towns in England, Ire laud, Scotland and Wales free of Discount. R.A. 0. KERR. May 25, 1SGL AUoona. UNION HOUSE. EBEraSBURG, PA. JOHN A. BLAIR. Proprietor. 1 HE I'KUrKIfcilUH will spare no pains to render this Hotel, worthy of a continua tion ot the liberal snare oi puune patron age it has heretofore received. His tablo will always be furnished with the best the market alibrds; Lis bar with the best of 11,1 11 stable i large, and will be attended, by an attentive ami obliging hOatler. Ebenburg Apr.17 1SC1. HARNESS ! AND SADDLERY The undersigned keeps constantly on hand and is still manufacturing all articles in Lis line such as, SADDLES, FINE SINGLE & DOUBLE HARNESa DRAFT HARNESS, LLIND BRIDLES. RIDING BRIDLES, CHECK LINES, HALTERS, WHIPS, BRWlUiANDS Sec, &c, which he will dispose of at low prices for cash. Ilia work is all warranted, and being ex perienced, he puts the best 'of leather in his woik. Thankful for past favors, be hopes, by attention to business to r.v.'rit a continu ance of the patronage heretofore so liberal ly extended to him. Shop above the store of Robert Davis. Persons wishing otnl aud substantial Har ness can be accommodated by. HUGH M'COY. Ebcnsburg Dec, 11, lSGl-tf. EBMSiimm house; t the undersiged having purchased and taken possession of tlio Ebenburj; House (form el y ocupicd by Henry Foster.) will be happy to receive and accommod ate his eld customers, and all others who ' iM'isc'.i u patronize mm. me. Proprietor feels assured from the spacious ,I0USK'STABLK (,thcr f-ioilitiis that Le can offcr at c:l,t as j accommo c any other in the of the choisest liquors with which his bar . . - ry.t.,.., f .j will be lurnishcd; lus table will be furn ished with all tit luxuries of the season, and he intends by his hospitality aud care, to merit the patronage of all those who stop withLim. ISAAC CRAWFORD. Ebensburg April, 17, 18Gl.-tf. DEXTISTRY. rBlHE undersigned Orailunteof the Calti Jl more College of Dental Surgery, respect fully offers his professional services to the citizens of Ebensburg. lie has spared no means thoroughly to acquaint himself with every improvement '.n his art. To many years of personal experience he has thought to add the imparted experience of the high est authorities in Dental Science. He sim ply asks that an opportuity may be given tor Ids work to speak its own praise. . SAMUEL. lu:r.FOUD, IX D. S. Office in Colonade Row. Referkkcks. Prcf. C. A. Harris ; T. E. Bond, jr. ; W. R. Handy ; A. A. Blandy, P. II. Austen, of the Baltimore College. Will he at Ebensburg on the fourth Monday of each month, to stay one week. E BEXSBURG FOUNDRY. The subscri ber announces to the public, that he has repurchased the Ebensburg foundry and is prepared to lurnish his former customers and all others with every description of cast ings usually manufactured at a country es tablishment. He will alwavs keen on hand j the best quality of COOKING STOVES, I'AKLUK MOVES, OFFICE STOVES, &c. Also PLOWS, of the most approved pat tern. BLOW POINTS, THRESHING MACHINES find all other articles connect ed with the business of a Foundry. lie invites the patronage of the public and will sell at the most reasonable prices. for cash or country produce. EDWARD GLASS. March 20, 18C5-ly. The Mystery, by Mrs. Wood. The Heir ess oi iVllefont. By E. Bennett. William Allair, Cy Mrs. II. Wood. G-l lege Life, By F. H. Fanor. North Pacific Exploring Expedition, Dy A. II. Iiarbcrs ham. For sale bv JAMES MURRAY. EBENSBURG, PA., SOBERING THOUGHTS. The Baltimore Gazette says: From being one of the cheapest countries in the .world to live in, taking the late wage's into con sideration, the United States has become one of the dearest. Five years ago all 1 articles of nrime ncrmssitv wort within tha Klid of almost evcry faniily ia t!ie laiiJ . whilst taxes of every kind were so light that the burden of them was hardly felt. What a change has taken place since then ! Now every imaginable thing is taxed to its utmost capacity. We are taxed on the food we consume, the fuel that cooks it, the liquids we drink, the clothes we wear, the house we live in, the income that we receive. Wo are taxed on raw material, and taxed over and over again on its manufacture and sale. The busi ness we do, the receipts we give, the cove nant wc enter into, the car we ride in, the watch we carry, the chair we sit in, the window wc look through, the nail that we drive, the match that we light, even the very stones of the street and the bricks of the walk are indirectly taxed. Ever thing, in short, is taxed, except the 'air we breathe. What have wc to show as a compensa tion for being saddled with all these ex traordinary burthens 1 The emancipa tion of the negro and the vindication of a principle that jet remains open to dispute. These are the achievements that has cost us four thousand millions of dollars, the loss of two hundred and fifty thousand lives, the greater or less devastation and impoverishment of thirteen States, and the creation of a priveileged class of bond holders, whose exemption from State taxa tion increases the charges imposed upon the rest of the community. But the cost to 'us docs not end here. We have vet toi take into consideration the utter disorgani zation of the labor system of the South ; the contempt which has been cast in high places upon the organic law of the land, the total want of itspect that has been shown for the civil tribunals, the shame Ices disregard that has been paid to the clearest rights of individuals and States, and the persecutions for opinion's eake, the malign influences exerted upon com munities by legions of spies and informers, the sycophantic adulation of every wrong ful act, every lawless exercise of power by professional politicians and fanatical par tisans, and the bold and unblushing ad vocacy of the centralization of authority and the crushing out of all opposition, by assuming that the Administration and the Government were one. Make the IIomestkad Attractive. It need not cost much money to adorn the place one lives in. Begin by digging out the briars and thistles of the door-yard. I'lant a few trees : then add several flow ering shrubs, perhaps that will answer for one year. Next year make a gravel walk, or two, and set a few. flowering plants by their sides. Your wife and daughters will sow some flower seeds, if you will only prepare a border for them. Look at these improvements some bright morning next June, and we guarantee you will be glad you made them. And labors, so re warding, will lead on to others. The fencing and buildings will be kept in re pair. Trees will be set out along the roadside. Tho houses -will have window blinds, the rooms papered and painted ; good furniture will be provided, and books and papers will notba missing. All these things will be regulated according to one's ability. And, as a general rule whatever our means, it is better to make improve ments by degrees, from year to year, than to do them up at once, 'by the job.' lie assured this is the way to find tho most happiness in home adorning. And re member, the influence of such improve ments does not end with the individual family. They tell silently but with great effect, upon society. Kvcry ntighltor and every passer by feels them, and many are led by such examples to go and do like wise. A II.U'CY Ketout. A man was brought into court on a charge of having stolen some ducks from a farmer. "I low do you know they are your ducks ?" asked the defendant's counsel. "I should have known them anywhere" replied the farmer, who proceeded to de scribe their peculiarities. "Why," said Hie prisoner's counsel, those ducks can't be such a rare breed I have some very much like them yard. in my "That's not unlikely, sir," said the farmer, they are not the only duck3 I've had t-tolen lately. "Call the next witness." 1 r is said that several other Southern journals besides the Kichmond ICraminer are to be suppressed for "disloyalty." THURSDAY, MARCH I, 1866. The Freedntea's Bureau Bill, Veto Message from President Jolmscu. Washington-, February 19, 18GG. To the Senate of the U. States : 1 have- examined "with care the bill vhich)i initiated in tlio Serrate, and has boot-passed by the two Houses of Congress, to ameiidan act enti tled "An act to establish a liurean for the relief of freedmen and refu gees, and for other purposes." J laving, w ith much regret, come to the conclusion that it would not be consistent with the public welfare to give my approval to the measures, L return the bill to the Senate with my objection to its becoming a law. I might call to mind, in advance of these objections, that there is no im mediate necessity for the proposed measure. lne act to establish a JJurcau for ihe relief of freedmen anu refugees, which was Approved in the month of March last, has not yet expired. It was thought strin gent and extensive enough for the purpose in view. Before it ceases to have effect, further specimens may assist to guide us to a wise con clusion in the policy to be adopted in time of peace. I have, with Congress, the stringent desire to se cure to the freedmen the lull enjoy ment of their freedom and their property and their independence and equality in making contracts for their labor. But the bill before me contains provisions which in my opinion is not warranted by the Constitution and are not well suited to accomplish the end in view. The bill proposes to establish, by author ity of Congress, military jurisdiction over all parts of the United States in wlfich the freedmen most abound, and it expressly extends ihe existing temporary jurisdiction of the Frced men's Bureau with greatly enlarged powers over those States in which the ordinary course of judicial pro ceedings has been interrupted by the rebellion. The source from which this military jurisdiction is to enii nale is none other than the Presi dent of the United States, acting through the War Department and the Commissioner of the Frcedmen's Bureau. The agents to'earry out this military jurisdiction are to be selected either from the army or from civil life. The country is to be divided into districts and sub districts, and the number of salaried agents to be employed may be equal to the number of counties or parish es in all the United States where freedmen and refugees are to be found. The subjects over which this military jurisdiction is to extend in every part of the United States, includes protection to all employees, agents and oflicers of the Bureau in the exercise of the dubes imposed upon them by the bill in eleven States. It is further to extend over all cases effecting freedmen ami ref ugees where discriminated against by the local law, customs or preju dice, in those eleven States, the bill subjects every white who may be charged with depriving a freed man of any civil rights or immunities be longing to white persons to impress ment or fines, or both, without, How ever defining their civil rights and immunities which are thus to be se cured to the freedmen by military law. This military jurisdiction also extends to all questions that may arise respecting contracts. The agent who is thus to exercise. the of fice of a military judge, may be a stranger, entirely ignorant -of the laws of the place and exposed to the errors of judgment, to which all men are liable. The exercise, of power, over which there is no legal super vision, by so vasta number of agents as is conteinphitd by the bill, must by the very nature of man, be at tended by acts of caprice, injustice ; and passion. f.'-'rhe trials having their origin under tins bill, are to taico place withotJt the intervention of a jury, and without any fixed rules of law or evidence. The rules 011 which offences 'are to be heard and determined b- ihe numerous agents under such rules and regulations as the President, through the War Department shall prescribe, no pre vious presentiment is required, nor indictment charging the commission of a crime against the laws, but the trial must proceed on charges and speeirieatioris. The punishment. wilL be not what the law declares, but such only as a court martial may think proper, and from these arbi trary tribunals there is no appeal no writ of error to any of the courts in which the Constitution of the U. States vests exclusively the judicial power of the country, while the ter ritory and the class of actions and olfcnces that are made subject to this ! measure arc so extensive. The lull itself, should it become a law, will Neave 110 limitation in point 01 time, j but will form a part of the pcrma- nent legislation ot the country. 1 ; cannot reconcile a system of military jurisdiction ot this land with the j words of the Constitution, which deel nrc tli;t no person sltn.ll lc lie hi ro answer lor a capital or other in famous crime unless on a present ment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia when in active service in time of war -or public danger, and that in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury of Ihe State or district wherein the crime shall have been committed. The safeguards which the wisdom and experience of our forefathers established as securities for the pro tection of the innocent, the punish ment of the guilty and the equal ad- ministration of justice, are to be set aside, and for the sake of a more vigorous interposition in behalf of ju&tice, we are to take tho risk; of many ac ts of injustice that would of necessity form an almost countless number of agents, established in every parish in the county, in nearly a third of the States of the Union, over whose decision there is to be no supervision or control by the Federal courts. The power that would be thus placed in the hands of the President, in time of peace, certainly ought never to be entrusted to ;ny one man. If it be a.-ked whether the creation ot such a tribunal within a State is warran ted as a measure of war, the ques tion immediately presents itself, whether we are still engaged in war. Let us not unnecessarily disturb the commerce and credit and industry of the country' by declaring to the American people, and the world, that the United States are still in a condition of civil war. At present there is no part of our eonntrv in which the authority of the United States is disputed, offenses that mav be committed by individuals, should not make a forfeiture of the rights of the same communities. The country has entered, or is returning to, a' state of peace and. industry, and the rebellion is in fact at an end. The measure, therefore, seems to be as inconsistent with the actual condition of the country as it is at variance with the Constitution of the United States. If passing from general coiisideraton, we examine the bill in detail, it is open to weighty objections. In times of war it was eminently proper that we should provide for those who were passing suddenly from a con dition of bondage to a state of free dom, hut this bill proposes to make the frcedmen's bureau, established by the act of 1SG5, as one of many Tcat and extraordinary military measures to suppress a formidable liebellion a permanent branch of the public administration, with its pow ers greatly enlarged. I have no reason to suppose, and I do not un derstand it to be alleged that the act of March, 18G5, has proved deficient for the purpose for which it was passed, although at that time and for a considerable period thereafter the (Jovernment of the United States remained unacknowledgod in VOL. 13-NO.l. I most of the States whose inhabi tants had been involved in the re bellion. The institution of slavery, for the military destruction of which, the Frcedmen's Bureau was rcallcd into existence as an auxiliary force, has been already effect ually and fi nally .abrogated throughout -the whole country ly" an amendment to the Constitution of the United States, ami practically its eradica tion has received the assent and concurrence of most of those States in which at any time it. had existed. I am not, therefore, able to discern in the country anything to justify an apprehension that the powers and agencies of the Frcedmen's Bu reau, which was effective for tho protection of freedmen and refugees, during the actual coiitinttioii of hostilities and of African servitude, will now in time of peace and after the abolition of slavery, prove in--aduquate to the same proper end. If I am correct in these views, there can be no necessity for the enlarge ment of the powers of the Frced men's Bureau, for which provision is made in the bill. The third section of the bill au thorized a general unlimited amount of support to the destitute and suf fering refugees and freedmtii and their wives and children. Succeeding sections make provi sions for the rent' or purchase of landed estates ir freedmen and for the erection for their benefit of sui table buildings, for asylums and schools, the expense. to be defrayed from the Treasury of fhe whole peo ple. The Congress of the United States has never heretofore thought itself competent to establish any laws beyond the limits the District of Columbia, cxce;t for the benefit of our disabled soldiers and sailors. It has never founded schools for any class id' our own people, not even for the orphans of those who have fallen in defense of the Union, but has left their education to tho much more voiiipeleni and ellieient control of the states of communities, of private associations and of indi viduals. It lias never deemed itself authorized to expend the public- mo ney for the rej;t or purchase t i homes for the thousands, not to.say millions of the white race who are honestly toiling from day to day for their bubsi.-tence. A system for the support of indigent persons in tho United State was never coiitempla.- ted by the authority of the Constitu tion, nor can any good reason be ad vanced, why, as a permanent estab lishment, it L-hould be founded for one class or color of 011 r people more than another. Tending the war, many lvfugees and freedmen re ceiv ed support from the (.Jovcrmuent, but it was never intcimcd that they should henceforth be fed, chdhed, educated and sheltered by the Uni ted States. The idea on which the slaves were assisted to freedom was that on becoming free, lhey would be a solf-su-t aining population. Any legislation that shall imply that thcv are not expected to attain a self-sustaining condition, must, have a (endenery injurious alike to their character ami presperity. The ap pointment of an agent for every county and parish v. iil create an im mense patronage, and the expense of the numerous oflicers ami the clerks to be appelated by the President, will be great in the beginning, with a tendency to increase. The appro priations asked by the freeehmn's bureau, as now established for the year eighteen hundred and sixty-six, . amount te 811,7-b"),0O0. It may be safely estimated the cost L be in eurreel under the pending bill will require double that amount, more than 'double the entire sum expended ; in any one year under the adminis tration of the second Adams. If the presence of an agent in every parish and county is to be considered as a war nie'asuro: opposition, or even resistance might be provoked, so that, to give- e licet to their jurisdic tion, troop; would have to be sfu-