Clearfield Republican. (Clearfield, Pa.) 1851-1937, October 20, 1875, Image 4

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    gardwari, ttou'nri.
1 SAC&ETT 4 SCURYVEX, I
. .1 BBaLSBI II -
HARDWARE,
and meaareotaran of
Tln.Copper ASheet Iron Ware,
.-.. .1 rot . .
Seoaad Stmt.
1 tlltiriELD, PA.
Harlag largely loonaied our etook of Herd
ware, we larllo the puttie t eiaenlne oar ilok
and pric .
1 Oarneatora end pmoni who eon temp late build
ing will do well to einmino our
TOOLS & BUILDIHO HAEDWABK,
which sew u4 ol iho hut maaufaetan, ud
will bo told low for oeik.
NAILS.
GLASS,
. PUTTT,
. GLUE,
LOCKS,
. . LATCHES, " ' I
HINGES,
SCREWS
All kinds of Bonoh Plane., flawe, Chisels, Rquarea,
Hammers, Heteheti, Plurabe and Levels,
Mortised A Thumb Quag Berele,
. i '. w Braon BilU, Wood ud Iron ' 1
Beneh Bonws, and tbo best
Boring Machine la tbo
market.
Double and Single Bitt lies,
POCKET CUTLERY, At.
Agents for Surnell't Iron Corn Shtller,
warranted.
Also, agent! for Riobardi'
GOTHIC FLUE TOPS,
whleh efleetually oan Smoky Float.
Farmen' Implemonte and QardoB Tool! of ovary
desoriptioa.
A largo variety of .... ,
COOK STOVES,
whloh w warrant to fire smUifaotloa. -
Portable Hanfea and FitrnacfM.
fcajw Rooting, Spouting end Job Work dont on
nMonebletersna. All orders will reoelv prompt
attention. Jane 11, lilt.
POWELL & MORGAN,
DIALIM II
HARDWAKE,
Alio, Mftnnfo.fltt.rari of
Tin and Sheet Iron Ware.
CLEARFIELD, PA.
F
ARMING IMPLEMENTS of all
1 klndl for lalo by
POWELL A MORGAN.
T) AILROAD WHEELBARROWS
XV
for oalo by
POWELL A MORtlAN.
QIL, PAINT, PUTTY, GLASS
Nails, ate., for tale by
POWELL A MORGAN,
II
ARNESS TRIMMINGS k SHOE
Finding,, for lalo by
POWELL A MOROAN.
Q.UNS, PISTOLS SWORD CANES
For lalo by
POWELL A MORGAN.
gTOVES, OK ALL SORTS AND
Slioi, for aalo by
POWELL A MOROAN.
JR0N1 IRON 1 IRON I IRON I
' 1 ' ' 1 ' ' For ,alo by
POWELL A MOROAN.
JJORSE SHOES & HORSE SHOE
, ( NAILS, f.r aalo by
POWELL A MOROAN.
pULLEY BLOCKS, ALL SIZES.
' And boil Maanfaotaro, for aalo by
, POWELL A MORGAN.
"UIIMBLE SKEINS AND PIPE
t BOXES, for aalo by
POWELL A MORGAN.
cvnva ooanoa.
WEST BRANCH -
INSURANCE AGENCY
PRINCIPAL OFFICE, Clearfield, Pa.
BRANCH OPFICBS In dttTereat partt af tha
County.
Tha folio win ( Old ud Reliable Flra, Accident.
S took and Life Inaaranoa Campaniaa rvpraaaotad
Eitub. Aaaata.
lSOv North Britlib A MaroantlUFlra
Ina. Co., of EnKUnd 3fl,tOO,000
ISftft Peottlih Commaroial Fir Ina.
Co., of England (gold) 10,100,001
1794 North Atnartaa Flra Inaartooa
Co., of Philadelphia 'a,7lMM
1K20 Fira AaKooiatloa Flra Iaaaraoca
Co., of Philadelphia 1,100,000
IMS Phntnii Fira Inn. Co., N. Y.... 2,200,000
laST Watortowa Fira Ina. Co., of If.
f., tafuraa farm hoildiogi of 70O.M0
1871 Amaaon Fira Intaranoa Co of
Cinoloaatl 1,000,000
185 York Stock Ininranoa Co., of
Piinna Inaareahoraaa. Aa T,00l
1874 Hartford Accident Iniuranoa Co
of C'oonootiaut. 200,000
1847 Paaa Mutual Lift Inaaraaea
Co., of PannaTlraaia........ 6,000,000
1868 II afro poll Lao Lira Inaaranoa Co
or New York 2,000.000
Total capital 17,000,000
Paaana In tha eoontrj dealrtng ioioranoe, oan
ha? It promptly ftUanded to by all inn at tha
otfaa or addraaalng aa by tatter. Iowr-neoa ef
feeted at tha loweat poialblo rata, to he obtained
la Bret-laa eompaniaa. iVe Compuniti rtprt
$nt4 wkirkwmk Ammnta.
The above two lira inaarana Co.'i, repreaeated
1 by T. II. Murrar. have paid oat in caah, batweea
tha datoaof Aug. 1072 and Aag. I "74, to the
friend or deeeeeed policy boldera in tail eoaaiy,
tha ion of S22.000.
Prorlda for the futara hv Ininriat yoar hoaaaa
and your Uvea la tbe Weat Ilraoih Inaaraaea
Agaoy. II u Hit AY uuituun,
Claarlald, May 28, 1876. A gent a.
Jai. S. Piaione, Praa't R. I. Baarna, Bae'y
CONTINENTAL
Life Insurance Company,
OF HARTFORD, CONN.
AIMU 3,IH,H0
Ratio of Amu to Liabllltloi Ill
ForniahM fniaranoo at th. r.rr lowoot .oil
Potier-hoM.ri panielpato In tbo prollll of tbo
uompany, thai oootlnnaiiy rMueing in. mbiim
parmanti.
For rat... Ao., call on or mldroM
R. M. M( KNAl.l.T, Agont,
OffiM la Shaw'. Row, Cloarl.ld, Pa. 7:16 74
JOHN TROUTMAN,
- DEALER IN ' f ,
FURNITURE,
SIATTTESSEfll,
. AND
Improved Spring Beds,
I MARKET STREET, NEAR F. O.
Tbo uadoriirnod Org. loaro to inform tbo oltl-
aom of Cloarfl.ld, nnd tbo poblio gn.rally, that
bo baa on hand a Ina aao.rtm.at of Foralloro,
aaah aa Walaot, Chutoat and Palntod Ohombo.
SuitM, Porlor fiuil.i, Roflinlng and Eatoaaloa
Chain, L.di.r a umto main, um rr
foralid Dining and Parlor Chain, Can. Soot. aa
Wlad.nr Chain. Clotboa Ban. Sua and ElUa.
tloa Ladd.M, Hat taoka, Sorobblng Brnibu, Ao
UOtlLDlNa AND FIOTUM FRAMES.
, Lo.klng OluOM, Clroawo, Ao, whh Won Id bo
anitabl. ror tlollooy prwtnii.
dool t JOHN TROUTMAN.
J. R. M'MURRAY
, wili. snprLT Tor with any articlr
OF MRKCHANOIHB AT THE VERY LOWEST
. PRICK. . DOME AND Skit. (AAIlyO
NEW" WASHINGTON.
Jru ewit, ftrorrrl.., Hit.
KRATZER & LYTLE.I
-Tilt-
NEW FIRM!
IN THEIR
COLOSSAL
CONSOLIDATED
STORE,
Aro marking down their
IMMENSE STOCK OF GOODS,
to th Inweat
CASH PRICES.
Reduead sipeneea and Bailing tor ready pay
rntblee thee, to do II. Thy will endeavor to ba
HEADQUARTERS
for itipplylpg th eltlaeae of CJearleld euaoty
with
DRY GOODS, NOTIONS,
Dnio Goods, Wall Pep.,,
Boot, aod Shen, Qunneware,
Gronriea, Ae., Ao.
And all othor good, la thalr lino.
N. B.-TRRMR CASH. .
J. M. KRATZER,
J. O. LYTLB.
Cl.arAild, Don. Id, 1174.
ED. W. GRAHAM,
DEALER IN
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
SQUARE TIMBER & LIMBER,
CLEARFIELD, PA.,
Hal Jul! oponod, at tbo old otand, la Graham's
now, a oompioio aioea ei
JT E W GOOD,
of orery dnerlptloa.
DRY OOODS,
OROCERIKS.
HARDWARE,
BOOTS AND SHOES,
CLOTUINO, cf-c.,.l'C.,
IN GREAT VARIETY.
FLOUR,
MEAT,
SALT,
RYE,
OATS,
CORN,
ALWAYS ON HAND AND FOR
SALKATA SMALL ADVANCE
FLOUR
tha oar lewd, and told
adnata.
Rlrd b tha oar load, and told at a email
advaaea.
A Mpflj of ROfl oonatantly on band.
Bpoelal ladaoeaiaata offered to thoae getting oat
Square Timber and Log, aa we deal largely
la Lumbermen' Supplies, and art pre
pared at all times to purohaae Mm-
bar and lumber.
Rl). We GRAHAM,
Market Street,
CLEARFIELD, PA.
Oet, 23, 1872.
H
ARD TIMES
HAVE NO EFFECT
IN FRENCHYILLEI
I m aware that there are aone peraona a little
hard to pleaae, and I am alao aware that the
oomplalnt of "hard timea" la well nigh universal.
Bat 1 am so taatd aow mat I eau aaniiy tae
former and prove eoolaalrly taat "hard ttmaa
will not effect those who buy their erooda from ma,
and all my patron aball h Initiated Iota th ae-
oral f '
HOW TO AVOID HARD TIJLES
I have roeda enough to auniily all tha Inhabi
tants la the lower and of the county which I sell
at eieeedtng low rates from my msmmof h store la
MULHUNBURQ, where I ean alwaya be foand
ready to wait upon callers and 'apply then with
Dry Goods of all Kinds,
Snob aa Clotba, Satlnetta, Ceealmarea, Maelini,
Delainea, Linen, Drillings, t'alieoea,
Trlmmioga, Ribbon a, Laoe,
Ready 'made Clothing, Boots and 8hOH. list and
Capa all of the boat material and made to order
lloae, noeaa, uievei, niiiena, Liaoee, nioooni, ao.
OROCERIKS OF ALL KINDS.
Coffee, Tea, Sugar, Rice, Molaaaea, Flah, Salt
Pork, bineeed Uil, Fiab Ull, Carooa UU.
Hard ware, Queenswara, Tinware, Caatlnga, Plowa
and Plow Caatlnga, Nalla, Spikes, Cora Cultiva
tors, Cider Presses, aad all kinds of Aiaa.
Perfumery, Paints, Varnish, Qlaaa, and a general
assortment of Stationery,
GOOD FLOUR,
Of different bnnda, alwaya on hand, aad will ba
aold at tho lowoat poMlbm nguroa.
J, H. MoClain'a Mwlieln.., Jarne'i Madtetnoa,
HoaUtur aad lloofland a VllUn.
aAO, ponnda af Waol wantad for whleh tho
high.it prkowill bo pold. ClovonoMl on band
and for oala at tno lowoit maraat prleo.
Alio, Agont for Strattoarill. and Curwonivlllo
Tombing Maohtnaa.
foaa-Call and ooofor yoaralr.a. Yoa will Ind
oror,lbing aaually h.pt la a rotail liar.
L. M. COITDRIET.
Franobrlllo F. 0., Aognit 11, 1174.
JKW STORE AND NEW GOOPS
JOS. SHAW Ac SON
i :
Hit juat opened a
Niw Stohi, on Main 8t.,CLiirui.D, Fa
latalr occupied by Wm. F. IRWIN.
Their itock conilatiof
com vr ao cd ao to at
, ' Oaociaiaa of tbo beet quality,
Qdebnbwarc, Boots and Shoes,
od ererjr artlole neceaaarr for
. ooa'a oomfori. . ,
Call and eiamlne our itock before par
ehaalng elaawhere. Ma, 9, lR69-tf.
STEAM SAW MILL, ENGINE '
AND BOILERS FOR BALI.
- Tbo nndnalgaod offon for aolo oa rooaeaoblo
lotma, tbrirotoaaa aaw mill, loootoa at Walmoo
ton, Oleeroold Ca, Pa. Thaooglnand boilera
aro ao good ao aow, Th. .la. of tbo .ngln. It
I4i, aad li la good ranaln, order. They will
ale. ull tkolrobinglo aad lalb Bill, aad all tae
worklag anebtaory la tbe mill. Parlloo wlihing
to poroboeo ooa oall oa or addroee
GRAHAM. WALLACE A CO.
ClearloM, Pa, Jaao ti, lift. - ' ' .
THE REPUBLICAN.
CLKARNKLl), J'A. .
t'flNK8I)AY MOKNINO.OCT. III. IITI.
BC THOU TRUE.
Car out what othera ny,
He lb nit true I
U tliey goniip to betray,
He tbon true I
Ra eon at tent and do right,
For tbe truth me he a good fltfht f
Do what thou duet with all tby might
li thou Una I 1U thou trua !
Let thy lore be slneer
He thou true 1
Only God heat thou to fear j
lie thou true I
Hiaoe our joye tauat pua away
I.Ike tha dewdropa or tbe aprmy.
Wherafora ahoulu thou atay t
Be thou trua I lie thou true I
Friendship' very bard to And,
He thou true I
Trw low la not always blind '
Be ebon true )
Time at last makea all tbiogi at might.
let ua not reaent JupI wait
But not trait too much la fete,
Be thou true 1 lie thou true I
Like tha aatnmer'a fragrant Sowere,
He thou true I o
Lib tbo April' coming ahowere,
lie tbou true t
Like th mountain lotiking high.
And the river rolling by J
L the the blue and arching k,
lie thou true 1 Be tboa true !
CAPITAL IXnUSTtt YCUft-JM-XCY.
Cuiiitnl in alwava powerful; wino-
tiinoa omnipulont. It is ollen blindly
amount j nolilom dincrevt in adjunting
public ncccHsitk'H. It is wmo in its
narrow way among tut) jovonimenlB
of tlio Old World, whero tlio govern-
mont is the sovoi'ciKii power; but its
teaehiiiffH, its iiiBtimw. iu commonly
sclfinh view of its intorests, and its
necessary exclusion from the ways and
tastes anil stru't'S and sympathies of
productive industry, unlit it lor an en
liirhtcncd judirment on pulilic questions
touching tlio nniiH-iliiito interosts of
labor ina popular irovcrnmont. We
are just aiproaching the solution of
one of tho gravest political problems
ever presented to our free government.
lue tuoiijlitlvss may say that the
question of our finances will lo settled
by the elections of Ohio and Pennsyl
vania. Hut it is not so. lndoed, tho
results in those Slates, no matter what
their verdicts may be, will bo but tbe
opening skirmish, of the groat battle
that is to lo fought. And it will be a
mighty conflict. Jt involves not merely
the question of our currency and of
our whole llnancial policy, and ol our
national faith and credit, but it in
volves our vast and varied industry,
with all its complicated necessities and
impassioned theories. If tbe contest
was to bo had in a despotic govern
ment, or even in the liberal monarchy
of England, whoro political power is
concentrated, and where industry and
comniorciul interests and population
aro so compactly intcrwovon with each
other, tbo solution would bo a mere
question of statesmanship; but it is not
so hero. There are many reasons why
it is not so, and one of tho saddest is
that our statesmanship has of late
years been dwarfed to tho tricks of
tho uemagogno, until what remains
is impotent in the councils of the
nation. W hon tho leader of the Son
ate will sit down in Ohio, in the midst
of fearful peril to both industry and
the government, and counsel, not how
to restore prosperity by honost meas
ures and honest statesmanship, but
how a local election can be carried at
any and every cost of principle, and is
followed by a great party with the
whole power of the government, it for
bids hoe or trust in the party of
authority. And when the party that
is without power counsels, not how to
restore a sound currency and to make
industry Roundly prosperous, but drills
from tho anchor of intrinsic valuee to
mako adversity sweep a popular elec
tion, both capital and Industry aro
bidden to tuko pause and look the
common peril in the face.
It is a dream of speculative capital,
the parrot-like gabble of Wall street in
New York, and of Third slreet in
Philadelphia, and of the small classes
who are money-lenders throughout the
country, that tho struggle for what is
called inflation in Ohio and Pennsyl
vania is but a popular spasm that will
flash and perish, They have been so
told by trembling politicians who nro
upon trial before a suffering people for
their misrule, and who would avert tho
retribution that justice has in storo for
them. And capital, sensitive, timid
and unskilled in touching the popular
chord that bad government has made
jangled and out of tune, pours out its
treasure and bids tho politician and
advonturer to pulluto the bullot and
return with tho certificate of a hard
money victory. Then, i-eason the
monoy-chnngoi-s, thoro will bo peace,
consorvulivo laws, early resumption,
and money will reap a rich harvest of
tho increased value ol a dollar, anil
debtors will pay tributo to it by giving
gold dollars in satisfaction of depreci
ated currency debts. It is simply
suicide, and those who thus teach cap
ital, sing tho song of I lie syren that
leads to destruction. If Ohio and
Pennsylvania should bo won for in
flation, it wonld liberalise and onlighten
the intolerance ol resuinptionists, noth
ing more. The nation will never tor a
moment entertain tho policy of illimit
able and irredeemable currency. No
party dare teach it, for it means re
pudiation, dishonor and death. If
Ohio and Pennsylvania shall bo won
for hard money, resumption will bo
more difficult and uncertain the day
such a victory shall bo proclaimed
than at any time in five yenrs past.
The accepted construction of tho ver
dict of these States in Invor of uncon
ditional resumption in 1879, would be
the signal for a tide of bankruptcy
such as this country lias novcr wit
nessed, and the distress in all channels
of business and trade would make cap
ital but a feather in the nostrils of a
needlessly atricken and prostrated
people. Tho premium on gold would
steadily advance, the value of all class
es of property would decline, and tho
debtors, who aro two-thirds of the
wliolo people, could not bo reasoned
out of tho litet that they must give
three dollars of lulior or values to pay
two dollars of debt. Theorise as we
may, any attempt at enforced resump
tion when our productive industries
are paralysed, simply means a tempest
of insolvency and madly intensified
misfortunes to tlio nation.
Will not men reason? Capital should,
for it is not maddened with hunger,
nor do its households sit in want. It
should reason, furthermore, becauso it
ia most interested in tho exercise of a
sound discretion on this vitnl issue. It
is in no respect equal to tho contest it
is likely to provnko, lor it is, with all
its lcgitiinalo auxillcrics, in a pitiful
minority to-day. Tho country is made
up ot debtors, with hero anil thoro a
capitalist who is free from cmbarass
raents to profit hy the necessities of his
fellows. Why it is so, it matters not.
It will not consolo a dying man to tell
him that his follies Imvo brought him
to an untimely grapple with death, nor
will it make men stntosmen to preach
that they have over-traded and specu
lated and must now reap as they have
sown. Provo to them that they hovo
been fools, and they will not repay can
dor with affection. And tboso people,
these debtors, these embnrassed, su tier
ing classes, aro tho government. They
mako and unmake Presidents, Senators,
Governors. Congressmen and Legis
lator. Thoy made lirant President
in 1872, bocauso thoy followed capital
that then gave them labor and thrift.
To-day the capital that nnee employed
the reduction of prices and the limited
demand lor products, or it li crippled
nnd languishing, and idleness and dis
tress have fallen to its operatives.
They, too, should reason; but will
they? There is tho lo'-io of necessity
that is inexorable, ami want and de
spair will bow to it. They seo that
prosperity has taken Wings and left
them : Unit their mills are silent, their
forges voiceless, their miuoa temintltws, j
their lorests tinlirolren by tlio echoes ol
tlio woodman, and they plead in vain
for the privilege to ourn their broad.
They may not be schooled in the po
litical economy of the age as taught by
its masters, but they see and under
stand that this stagnation and dialress
should not prevail so mercilessly iu
this favored land. They see the barns,
tho garners and tbe cribs teeming with
ileuty about them, and Vet there is
lunger in their homes. They see the
fields mellow with tho fruits of autumn
and green with the promise of future
abundance, and yet tho diversified in
dustry that should furnish customers
and mould th() sir.ow of lubor Inlo
gold to requite the operative and en
rich the nation, is lifeless and hopeless,
They see money in superabundance in
tlio vaults of our banks, begging for
solvent borrowers, hut tbo iutegrity,
competency and Industry which mice
were credit to command capital, ure
now distrusted because the lender,
looking tothoconsuminatiunnf hisown
favorite theory of enforced resumption,
calculates wisely that both tbo prop
erty and tbo product, of industry must
depreciate into bankruptcy. They see
that capitalists will not engage in bus
iness enterprises, nor will thoy deal
with business men as debtors exoept
uKiu security outside of tho business
for which capital is wanted, and, see
ing these facts, which are as patent as
noonday and within tbe comprehension
of the most ordinary grade of Intel
ligence, are we not admonished that
our present financial policy is inherent
ly and fatally detective? To this
grave question wo beg capital to yiold
respect. It is both just and wise to do
so, for tho obstinate maintenance of a
violent resumption policy must, as
surely us tho night shall succeed the
day, result in the triumph of a violent
inflation policy. And, if the battle
must bo thus fought over prostrated
industry and wide-spread bankruptcy
and the unreasoning want that enforced
idleness will breed, there is unseakuble
danger of the revolution sweeping to
tho very verge of tho abyss of repudi
ation, if, indeed, it can bo arrested
there. In this battle Ohio and Penn
sylvania this full aro but outposts, anil
will but determine the field for tho
conflict and the attitude of tho belliger
ents. If by hard money victories ex
treme positions shall bo irrevocably
assigned to tho contending partiea, our
froo institutions will bo exposed to a
severer crucible than that of civil war,
with all its dcmorulir.ution and sacrifices.
And capital is to-day charged with the
responsibility of shaping this issue.
We regard tho man who insists upon
unconditional resunipion in 1879 as the
foe of industry, of prosperity and of
national laitli as bund in band with
tho madman who would flood the
irredeemable currency and demand
that it bo culled money.
Wo cannot resume until we have
gold ; we cannot pay until we earn ; wo
cannot earn until our productive in
dustry is employed, and our gold coff
ers will bo ompty until tho balance of
trade with tho gold nations of the
world is in our favor by selling more
than wo buy. Volumes of platitudes,
however plausible, cannot answer these
plain assumptions. And tbo remedy
issiinple. It is not to bo the work of an
act of Congress whose fruits shall ripen
in a day. There must bo an inflexible
adherence to tho specie standard as
tho anchor of tinancial, business nnd
industrial sulcty ; there must bo no on
forced resumption in the face of im
possibilities imposed by paralyzed and
unproductive labor; there must be a
steudy effort toward resumption by
quickening thecrcntivo enorgiesof the
people and tho gradual equalization of
currency and values with gold ; there
must bo a judicious rovinion ol our
banking system to adapt it to the new
and imperative necessities of the coun
try, and to disarm it of ovcry semblnnco
of monopoly; thero must no a Bell' ad
justable currency that will divorce the
business ot the nation Iroin the caprices
or speculations of Presidents, Cabinets
and money gamblers; there must be
wholesome and just laws for the whole
people ruthor than for favored classes;
tho compensation of capital must yield
to the reduced compensation of labor,
and thcro must bo integrity, economy
and statesmanship aulistitutcd for the
debauched authority that now rules in
almost every department and grade of
public trust. l'mladclphia I mm.
WHAT M THE ISSUE f
The iVrstsays: What is the issue
in Pennsylvania? Himply that of
maintaining good government. The
itcpublican party throws open its
record. We need only go hack to lRtiU,
when tbo public debt at tho end of the
war was :,r22,tir2.l(i. In 1875 it
was 2l,5(;H,i;:iH,38.
Of courso the issue is good and
honest government, but this is just
where tho shoe pinches tho liepilbli
enn candidates and party. This cry
ing out "good government," at' the
eleventh hour, is liko a pursued thief
bellowing "stop thiol" when ho is run
into a fence corner and nabbed. The
people bavo been thirsting for honest
government for years, but the party in
power tsk no notice of their cry, but
went on plundering them. But now,
when Indignation lias come to a head,
and the peoplo are determined to have
good government at every hazard,
their plunderers como in crying among
tho louiiest for reform. Itwllnnt do.
The peoplo hnvo their mark upon the
rogues who have boon robbing them
for tho last decade and cannot be de
ceived as to their identity. They
would as soon trust the devil torelorm
tho infernal regions, ns the party in
power to correct the abuses that pro
vail at Ilurrisburg.
When has the Itcpublican party
"thrown open its record V That is
just what tho pooplo and tax-puyors
would like to seo done to look uMn
tho inner pages of their books. It
didn't look much liko throwing open
the record when Mackoy refused to let
tho Legislative committee oxamine his
books. Will the Yes, mako a note of
this? And will it persuade tho Treas
urer to throw opon his money record
for public inspection ? Then) are aomo
figures thoro that will hardly bear in
vestigation. Tho boast that the pnb
lio debt has been reduced ten millions
in tho last ten years looks liko the
I'rm congratulating itself and tho
Stato that tho rogues in and out ot' of
fice have not stolen all tho pooplo's
monoy ; Those in owor are entitled to
no crotlit for reducing tho debt, and
tho only wonder among honest men
is that tho rognes loft a dollar to bo
applied to thai purpose. In tho last
ten years forty millions of dollars have
boon collected from tho pooplo of this
Slato, in ono way or another, for taxes,
and it prenenls a "beggarly account ol
empty benches" to show that only ten
millions bsvo boon applied to tho re
duction of tbo public debt.
Wo repent that this is a contest for
f;ood ana honest government, between
lonest men and rogues, and this time
tho honest men are going to win. Will
the Prr make a noto of this and
smoko it in its political pipe? Dtytet
twn Democrat.
, Wouldst thou not ho thought a fool
in another's conceit, he not wis in
thlno own ; bo that trusts to bis own
wisdom, proclaims his own folly.
When the Unman is still, the Diwno
i speaks to it, bocrnse it Is Its own.
m A XTl.AXn TllEMQXlT Y oM
1U8 OFh'lCE.
Irt ilk leftor milking a" tail W ai
third term, (irsnt aays lliut it "was be
neath tho dignity of his office" to tell
the pooplo whother or not ho intended
to Use the vast patronage at bis com
mand to perpetuate hla power. How
has ho borne himself hitherto, tbultho
dignity of his office should suddenly
appear so groat in bis oyes ? On what
particuliar occasion did he take pains
to show tbe country that he respected
tho proprieties which ought to hedge
in his exalted station ?
Was it when he visited New York
fur tho first tiino afW his inauguration,
and sauntered into a theatre arm in
arm with Jim Fisk?
Was it on tlio eve of Dlack Friday,
when he took himself off to a little
town in Pennsylvania remote from tel
egraphic and railroad communication,
alter leaving directions with lioutwoll
not to sell any gold till ho got back ?
I M'aa it WBeufbe peril kisl ipdorent
brother-in-law across tho wafof to rep
resent our Government at the court
ot Denmark ?
Was it when he permitted Jay Gould
to pay foi' him the $1,0(10 which he
had subscribed to the fund raised to
lilt tho family of the faithful Rawlins
out ol abject poverty ?
Was it when he rewarded with the
best offices in hi, gitt the men who
had bestirred themselves to raise gifts
of houses and horses aad money for
him' just before be entered upon the
Presidency?
Was it when ho closed tbe doors ol
tho While Ho .so and made his way
to the seaside that he might devote to
idle and dissolute ploasuros the best
months of the year ?
Was it when he haggled with Con
gressmen for exorbitant appropriations
tor tho "oxien8cs of the Kxecutive
Mansion," and managed to get enough
under that head to keep him in tkiver
without eating into his salary ?
Was it when he sent Casey down to
New Orleans to manage the custom
house, control tbe party, and reduce
tho citato of Louisisnu to a province ?
Was it when be found the chair of
thoChiet i ustice vacant, and attempted
to fill it by tho appointment of a dis
reputable and ignorant adventurer in
politics? ..
Was it when ho disregarded the ro
buke of the .Senate and restored that
adventurer to the place that ho had
disgraced at the head of tho so-called
Department of J ustieo ?
1 Was it when ho permitted himself
to bo advertised ns the chief attraction
at the opening of a now seaside hotel,
and apcared promptly iu company
with noes Slioppard, making an un
seemly exhibition of himself in return
for a free lunch ?
Was it when ho wont out of bis way
in an annual message to praise the
work of the lloss and his King, when
ho knew that work was neither more
nor less than highway rubbery ?
Was it when ho became a party to
the secret issue of 5,000,000 of green
backs on the eve of an important elec
tion, that a clique of gamblers in Wall
street might make euough thereby to
enable them to contribute largely to
the corruption fund which was em
ployed to wrest Pennsylvania from tbe
cont rol of tbe majority in October,1872 ?,
Was it when ho lobbied In tho cor
ridors of tho Capitol when his first
term was drawing to a olose, and be
soeched tho faithful to double his pay,
and assured them of his co-operation
in case they saw tit to help themselves
to a few millions in the shape of a sal
ary grab?
Was it when ho found a constitu
tional adviser in the person of Colum
bus Delano, and approved the policy
whereby the Indian Icing wore enabled
to steal $10,000,000 in five years?
Was it when be entered into a com
pact with thieves of Arkansas to over
throw the constitution of that .Stato,
or w-hen Congress balked bis designs
and he pensioned the chief conspirators
on tlio (iorernment as officeholders?
Was it when he found places for
Congressmen repudiated by the people
who had sustained his wicked demand
for tho autocratic powers contemplated
hy tho force bill ?
The "dignity of his ofllco" would not
permit him to answer a civil question,
to which Washington and Jefferson
found no difficulty in framing a pointed
and effective reply. But tbo dignity
of his office docs not stand in the way
ot acts which will send bis namo down
to posterity in disgrace. Utica Ot)Server.
COL. TlOS. JEFFEltSOX RAN
, , DOLPH.
Among the most noted nnd distin
guished fnmilios of Virginia aro the
Randolphs. For a long series of years
before tho settlement of Virginia they
bad been a family of consideration in
tbo midland counties of Warwick and
Northampton, in Kngland, and thoy
claim among their ancestors tho pow
erful Scoth Karls el Murrav. connected
by blood and alliance with many of
tho most distinguished lamilies III the
English nnd Scotch peorugo and with
royalty itself. The head of tho Ameri
can family was William Randolph, of
Warwickshire, Kngland, the son of a
cavalier of high position. This Wil
liam Randolph emigrated to the United
States about the year lfiGO, and took
up his homo at Turkey Island, on tho
James river, twenty miles below Rich
mond. From this parent trunk sprang
the numerous branches by which the
Stato of Virginia has been enriched in
an intellectual line. Randolphs have
figured as leaders of tho groat ante and
post-rovolutionary movements of the
Old Dominion, and the blood, has min
gled with that of many of tho other
celebrated families of that Slate. One
of this fumily, Thomas Jefferson Ran
dolph, died at his homo, near Char
lottesville, Virginia, on the 7th Instant,
aged eighty -three years. Thodcceased
was tbe eldest son ol Governor Thomas
Mann Randolph and Martha Jefferson,
tho daughter ot Thomas Jefferson, nnd
was born in 1702. Ho was educated
under tbe eyo and euro ol his illustrious
grandfather, and was ono of bis con
stant associates when tbe latter reached
tbo Presidency. ' Cot. Randolph made
his debut in polical lifo in 1832 as a
delegnto from Albemarle county, Vir
ginia, iu tho General Assembly of that
State. 1 He was a man of strong natural,
powers and lino educational training,
and early obtained a leading position
in the councils ot his naliro State.
When the resolutions for the abolition
ol slavery wore Introduced they met
with tho full and onrnest support ol
Col. Randolph, and not withstanding
this fait ho was re-elected to tho next
session, although AlbemaHo was ono
of the largest slavoholding counties in
tho Statu,' Upon the orgnniratkm ol
tho Whig parly in Virginia Col. Ran
dolph was hoalen in 1835 for tho Leg-!
isluture. Rutin 1836 bo and Judge
Rives wore elected over Governor T.;
W. Gilmer and V. W. Southall, and
ro chosen the following year. After
this period Col. Randolph romainod
upon his farm until ho was elected a
delegate to the convention which
amended tho constitution af Virginia
previous to the war of 1861. After
the end of tbo war Col. Randolph again
camo upon tho surface of public lifo,
was a dclcguto to tbe Baltimore Demo
cratic Convention which nominated
M r. G rcoley and tompornryjprosident of
that body. This ended Col. Randolph's
fiihlic life. Thomas Jefferson mado
ol. Eaiidolpa hi ducdtnfaiid to
him was confided the public nnd private
papers of his grandfather. Four vol
umes of Mr. Jefferson's works were
afterwards published by him. Col.
Randolph was a man of commanding
presence, ceniaj sand aottrtei la his
iimnBurs, loutMmJ itv ale- toapitility
and a fine type of the Virginia gentleman.
HADICAL CORRUPTION.-
NenaUir Thiirinan In a speech de
livered at Mauslield, O., a lew days
ago, aaid : Is there a man here who
has not beard of the Union Pacific
Railroad Company aud the Credit
Mobilier? la tbore one of you who
diMt not know, by swum Umtiutony
taken boforo Congressional commit
tees, luat by tho frauds of thoae oom
iianloa, principally ruled and governed
by curtain members of Congrose, tbe
Qluof tbo United States are abao
y eortat to lose not lees than
$50,000,000? Mas any one of you for
gotluu that over $425,006 were used
by those eompauiee to procure the
passage of an amendment to the rail
road charter by tho corruption ol mem
ber of Congress an amendment that
surrendered tho most important rights
of the Government, ana In the end
euUiled upon tho people the loss to
which 1 have referred ? la it neoeaaary
fur me to produce the proof taken at
the Just suasion of Congress that over
$700,000 were employed by the Pacific
Mail Steamship Company to procure
from Congress au immense public sub
sidy If Must t read to yon the testi
mofiy given before a Senate committee
a few years since, to show that bribery
of New York Custom House officers
bad become an established usage ? Or
is it necessary to more tbau mention
tbe prosecutions by tbe Government
ol' merchants, groat and small, charged
with defrauding the revenue out of
millions by smuggling or otherwise
not one of which frauds or offenses
could have been committed had not
Government officers assisted in its com
mission ? Have you not heard of tbe
practices of tbo whisky rings, demand
ing the Government out of untold
amounts of taxes, through the oonnlv
anoe and with the aid of purchased
revenue officials? Must 1 do more
thau remind you that the official re
ports ol responsible officers of your
army and tho statements of disinter
ested private citizens have clearly
shown that, through th fraudulent
practices of Indian agents and contrac
tors, large number of Indians whom
the Government is bound by treaty
stipulations to support have lately been
on the verge of starvation, and the
country thereby menucod with an In
diau war? la it not an indisputable
fact that the appropriations for tbe In
dians and tho Indian Hureau are an
nually about $3,000,000 more than
they wore in 1860, and that through
tbe frauds and peculations of "Indian
rings." in collusion with Government
officials, millions ot this money are
every year embezzled ? Have you not
heard how fraud, bribery and corrup
tion existed in tbe Post-Office Depart
ment, nnder the very nose, so to speak
of the Post master-General himself
frauds and offense so gross as to
necessitate not only the dismissal of
tho detected officials, but also tbeir
criminal prosecution in a court of jus
tice ? II nve you not road ol tbe fre
quent thefts in the Treasury, from tbe
abstraction of a trifling sum of frac
tional currency ' to a larceny of over
$40,000 in a lump? Need I do more
than refer to the long list ot defaulters
in almost every branch of the public
service, and whoso defalcations in the
last fourteen years amounted, at the
lowest computation, to millions ot dol
lars? Must I again remind yon that
not even tho Department of Justice
ba been tree from taint, aud that,
under the late Attorney-General, offi
cers whose duty it was to prosecute
tbe guilty were greater criminals than
the men they prosecuted r
Man's idea is to amend and turn
over a new leaf, and so work his way
up to re-conciliation and friendship
with God : the Gospel way is first to
be friends with God through Christ,
and then to work.
Mutual infirmitios, necessarily known
to one another, and together confessed
to the Father in Heaven, may unite ns
more closely than common success and
joy.
c
Al'TION.
AM peraoaa are hereby eaatloaed agalatt per
ebasiag er la ety way meddling with the follow
pieperty, aow ia the peaseaeion of Wat. Kinder
u, ef Urmdy towaaaip, vis t One fall set
of wacoa-aMker's toola, a lot of oak aad aab lam
bar, thro wreaehoa, one aal strive, aae eook etove
aad pipe aae grind-ateae, aae set babe, lot af
dreeeed apoaaa, lot er Baft wood, Iwe trade aad
bedding, aae aet ehalrs, eaoeloek, two wash tabs,
on meat stand, one table, two hiobiag-glaaees,
lot of ererka, lot tie were, aae eow, lot ef hay, aad
lot af potatoes. This property wee pareaaeed by
aa at Coaefeble'a aale, aad Is left with bim aa
loaa labieot to my order.
FRKDUKICK KNARft.
Trout. ilia, tV, Oet, tb, U7J H.
c
AUTION.-
All Mffcma an. berak eawtloaed aiatnet
varebaiiagor la any way meddllag with th rel
ieving peraoaal property aow la the peaeeeeloa
or ftobeA Beat, af Bell towaahia. vlat I alack
mare, 1 plow, 1 harrow, I log ehala, N baehele of
Wheal,! aawee or eera, aa aatnoia at oat, i
bat-bale of lMwhat, I bed aad bwddieg, 1 table,
4 ehair. 1 stork, 1 leokiBg glees, I lamp, 1 sat
ditbse. I tnb, I barrel salt, S bogs. I grain areata,
1 sevtb, I etove, 4 teed etraw, a the eaiae was
srafTihaaad by me at Coaatable'e eale ea tha 4th
woywf Oe4oaea awd-ts tots with bias on raea ewly,
sobjeet to my ardor, J. B. KLLI&.
Rumbarger, Oat. ll,7 lt
All pereona aro h.ntiy waraod araiart par
obaiing or io any way meddling with the follow
ing property, now In tho p.lie.ioa of Melon.
Barelay A Panlal, of New Washington, oil : I
ot ainglo harneae, 14 eollari, a fut ef bornee.
loalhrr, aad a large lot of aad.llei, hardware aad
trimming!. Tbia property waa porehaied by mo
at Sheriff ' aal., and la loft in tbo noMoeoiia of
the partial earned, autyoat to my order ol nay
time. JAMES OALLAIIIIER.
New Wwblugtoa, Oct. 11, '7.-31
ADMINISTRATORS' NOTICE
Nblie. il hereby gl.ea that Lallan of Ad
miaiilration on the onu or LORENZO O.
PRICE, late or Plao lownebip, Cloarleld oonnty,
Pa., deeeed, baring boon duly graalod to tho
uodrnigned, all penom indebud to eaid eotnte
will plea, mahe immediate payment, and tbew
baring olaiml or araanda will enroot them
properly aothoutieatod for i.m.m.ot wlthoot
delay, SARAH J, PRICE,
' HENRY BILE,
Carweairlllo, Oet. U, TMt Adm'ra.
DMINISTRATOK'S NOTICR.
Nolle. Io hereby glroa that Lotion of Ad
ml.lrtralioe an thaaatateof JOS I AH HOCKEN.
11KKKY, kloof F.rgaioB top., Cloorield ronaty,
Pa., deeeeied, baring boon duly granted to tbo
andenlgnod, art poneas tadobtod to eatd oatalo
will plaoeo mono Immediate payment, aod there
aariog etalml or domaado agaiaot the mm wIU
preorot them properly aathootieetod tor oottle
meat wlthoot delay.
EMANUEL HILDEBRANO,
Kurd, Pa., Oet. tin, 'IJ-dt.l Admlololrerer.
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE.
Notleo la hn.hy gloea that Letten of Ad
mlnlrlialiu. oa the oilate of JOHN CRE9S
WKLL, Ba, lato of Oolieb towaahlp. Cloarleld
ooonty Pa., drooaied, baring boaa duly granted
to the andenlgnod, oil penoaa tadobtod to Bold
tale will e.oM mahe immediate aaymeat, aad
th. e harlagal.ima or domaado will oreoootlaem
prop.rly autb.alloal.d for Mttlem.nt witb.ut
d.Uy. JAMKSFLYNN.
Smith'! Mllle. Rent 1,, It U Adm'r.
lXKCUTOR'S NOTICE.
I J Notlrj. h henby giro, that lettm t.eta
mrutery baring been granted to teembMrlber oa
lb. eitale of JOHN RIHHKL, doseoeod, leto of
Diwly towaibtp, Cirargold ooonty, l'.eeeylrente,
alt pereona tnd.htod to Mid oelnt. on rotnotled
to mala Immedioto payment, nad tboM Baring
alaimo .galoot tbe aimo will prevent them duly
intheallealod for aotllemeat.
i. ADAM R1SNEL.
Lalbmharg. Boat. M, ltd Eleoabar.
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICR
Nnila. u b.nby glf on that Lotlore of A I
mlaiilralioa oa the estate or UEO. W. 8IIOFF,
lato of Ueeoarle lownahl,. Cloarlotd ooaaly, Pa.,
deoeoaod. boring beea duly graalod 10 tbo eador
Ifaed, all pononi lodeblod to aaid eel I wifl
Cleoeo mahe Immediate payment, aud taooo
oeing . oleime r demand! win pneeat tbem
Jroparly aalboatleated for orttlement wilbeat
loy. ALBERT 0HOFF,
Madera, Fa., 8ept. M, llla-ti Adm'r.
ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICK.
Nolle, la hereby gloea that Letem ef Ad.
miolotnllia oa tbi omoio of BAeJUBL POWIL,
In. of cleeeSeM aoreegw, CWseld eeaeiy, ,-,
deoeoaod, borlag beea doly graalod Io lao aaaor-
Hgaoa, all aaroaaa leamble ia ooid
aleaeo mahe Immedlele pvaMai, a4 baeoe
oaoag ouumo or aeoaoaai am areeoat laoea
proper), aaabaatteouol I aaulemoat w tenet
iemy. A.atATB,
0ioaraaM,ea.U,Un4, . AeWi.!
tti'$ tfalawa,
Wm. Rood
BOOM NO. S,
OPERA HOUSE,
It now receiving new fall goods
of which he invites the
attention of catb
buvere.
Is agent for this county Tor Hate
Detnorest's papr patterns,
tbo beat in tba market.
A full a seo rt merit or
fall and winter
styles juu
received.
When the season arrives will have
a full line of millinery goods,
with an experienced trim
mer that will suit the
tastes of all.
OPERA HOUSE,
BOOK It O. M,
Wm. Rood,
CWeei,$wai.t,M. - , awe.HTe
Crarittfi, U.
j71r017I3. jTBXSD,
An
GROCERY
STORE.
A. G. KRAMER & CO.,
Harlot Street, eme tw weed ef Blaaeoe)
Moves. ClearmeM, Pa.
Seep ouaataatly oe bjaaA
SUDAN,
COFFEI,
TEAS,
SODA,
COAL OIL,
STRIP,
SALT,
SPUES,
SOAF, ,. .
Coined aad Dried Fralu, Tobaooe, Clgin, Oea-
dlaa. Older Vlaogay, Batter, Iggs, Ao.
ALSO, EXTRA OhtE.MADB
Wheat and Buckwheat Floor,
Cora Meal, Chop, Fsed, ac,
All of whleh wIU be oeld oboaa for oaak er la
oaoboogo for eoeatry prodeeo.
CU.ri.ld, N.r. II, lITS.-tf
JBMOVALI
JOHN McGAUGHEY
Weald traset felly notify the awhile geaereJly
that be has removed his tlroeory Rio re frooj
(thaw's Row, Io Iho halMiag formerly ewewpied
by J. Mile KnUer, am Bsoowd iaet. Mil dear
to Bigler1 hardware store, wears be iatoada
ke-Weag full Itae at
UIIOCEBIE8.
HAMS, DRIED BEEF aad LARD.
BUOAB8 aad Rl RPP8, of oil grodoe.
TEAS, Sreoa and Block.
COFFEE, Beeotod ead Aran.
FLOUR AND PROVISIONS,
CJJTjrED FHVITM,
All bind, la the market.
FICELES, ia Jan ead befr.ll.
SPICES, la orery farm ead rarloty.
FAMILY FLOUR,
AIX KINIMOSCRACKKaS.
SOAPS,
MATCHES,
DRIED APPLES,
DRTED FEACHEit,
DRIED CHERRIES,
Oosi OH aad Lamp CTUmxLtyf.
And e cued oeoortmeal of tboeo thing, aaaally
hep! ia a greeery More, wblrb ho will eiraeage
tor meraeung at lao mornm pnooa
Will Ml for oaek eo ebeaply aa aay ether eae.
FUee. eolt led eae all Moot aad Jedgo for
real Nit.
JOHN etcOAUUHEY,
CUeri.ld, May ST, It7t.
G
ROCERIES.
JAS. H. LYTLE,
(Rooeow to LTTLS MITCHELL)
WHOLESALE AND U ETA II,
DEALER IN ,
CMOICB USE OP TEAS.
OOLON0S,
JAFANS.
' IMPERIAL,
TOl'NO HYSON.
NOLI8H 1R1AKFAST
Paraot la Market.
VTTBB ARD BOG
Will be kept ead Hid at Bret ooot. Caah paid
oar voeairy rroaaee.
SESMAM CHERRIES,
, TURKEY PRUNES,
PRESERVED PEARS,
,. PHILADELPHIA HAMS
rum.
Meekeret, Lake Berrtag, Cod, Aa.
PICKLf.
Barrel Flekloa aad BagHik FlokUa.
PLOD R AMD PEED.
Fleer, Cera Meal, Oat Maal, Ao.
meblTt
JAS. II. LYTL1.
CHEAP GROCERIES!
LUMBRR CITY. FA
Tho eadenlgaed aaaeaaoea to hll eM friaad.
aad patroal that ho kao oaoaod a nod line ot
vnwiH a rRui iniuns at tae eie nun
of Elrk A Bpoeoor, for wkleh ho eelielli o llheral
aatroaaga, oj. w. erartCKn
Umbo. CHy, Pa- Marok M-af.
B
OOT AND SHOE MARINO.
J08IFIB.DEERINa.ea Market otneL la
Shaw-e Row, Cloertal. Pa., kao yaol reeelred
a See let ef Freaek Oalf Skiae aad Ripe, the
keel la lao market, aad Io aow propone lo maa
ametara erorythlag la hll llae. lie wIU war .
real hie ork to be ae roeroooated.
The elttoeee af Clearaeld aad rlelarit. an
iB.reewoiiy BBTieoa ea gtoo BIOJ 011.
wont aoeo aa aaon aotioe. TiiS'TI,
E08AArL0IIBAr;-irV,
Seorgla er Florida, aboald oabMrlbo or eh.
aniaa aawa, pabllobod at Soraooah, Ca.
am.lt. ,1,1 . ,1 aor oaaam. AdoaMlaan
.rlri.g .oetomere ie thooo Sulot, should on Iu
Mromaa. A w me i4 aoaor . laeeoolteoel.
Spnimo ooploo oeat ea ronlpt ef t eenle. Ad
ArootJ. a. UTILI,Savaeak, Ua. I ll Im
HOUSE AND LOT FOR SALE.
The Boan aad Lot .a tbe eoraer ef Mar
boa ead Fifth Mreeta, Cleerteld, Pa., la for eel.
Tho tot oiaeaeai aoarly ea one ef groaad. Tho
o e urge aeaon irame, ooatatatag alao
Far lorona aad ethw iaformolsoo ouul.
U Ike oabMrlher, at the Post OBn.
eeria F. A. SAULIN.
M EAT "MARKET.
F. M. CARDOH A BB0.,
Rear ef Pi. i Opera Boaao,
CLEARFIELD, PA.
Oar arraagemeeli are rf tbe moot nmpleie
rboraetar for Paraiehlag Iho puhlle wllb Fruk
"o ef all klad, aad ef the eery hoot eoality.
WeoaweMbhallhbadoer A nlaalaaral imple
oata. whwk we keea oa eiathlitea far the aaa-
oat of Ike anblw. Col aroaad wbea la tewa,
aad lake e took ea Iklaga, er addnn ui
C aa. OAROON m BRO.
Clearaeld. Pa, J.I, li, iila-tf.
jRESH MEAT MARKET.
M. 0. BR0V7H A BRO.,
Markal SI, Slow I old. .i .
WeaM aaaeeeoa le the otriwai ef the Iowa aad
otelBily thai they 0111 keep the moat Market at
Ike eM sal, when She, U1 beep
rreh M, Val ktsttoa and) Umb,
el lbs 8ntat oaalilies.
Maemot are tare Toe ode, a, Thanaayi aad
aomo nro. mna aa a ean.
Jaw Ms-tea M. . BROWN A BRO.
I eaaaiiFjes o bvsbv aasoaiv
r noeaoaai, oaeealo at IBM oSoa.
g atria.
ALLEGHENY HOTEL,
(Merbel Bt , hot. Third end Perth,)
CLeCAMolitLO, tA.
Tbo oabooriner borlog beeomo proprietor of
ibl butel, weald roopootfelly eah a liberal .ban
f poblie pairoaago. Prwee redneod to .ait the
ttMoe.
Ja.M-tAiif. . - tt. L. LEIP0LD T
C usqu kuanna-houbh7
O UURWSNHVILLK, PA.
NEWTON READ, Paoraiatwn.
Baring beeomo proprietor of Ibll BoUl, t
weaM reajjeeUaily oelielt lao potroaago ef Iho
pwtiM. Uoaea leaoaatly aad ooavoalaaUy elt
eelod j a wl, nlttea aad referalibod i good earn
pie ruome attached. AU railroad traiaa atop at
able kaetoe. )eale-fe
SilAW HOUSE,
(Oar. ef Market A Froat etreeU,)
OLMARFIELD, PA.'
Tbo nedoniguod borlag hahra ohorgo of thll
Hotel, woeld roapoetfully .olleit poblie p.lronag..
Je.l'Ta 1. K. FULLEKTON.
ASHINGTON IIOIIH E
NEW WASHINOTON, FA.
Tbla aow and well forai.tUHi boaro baa beoo
take by tho aadoraigood. Mo feole ermfldont of
being able to neder eetlifeetioa to tbooewbo m.y
faror eta. with a aaU.
Nay,, 171. 0. W. DAVIS, Prop',.
M
OMTOUSl alOUSB,
Oppealse the Court Hoeee,
LOCI; J1AVEM,, PCJJII'A.
J.U7I
HAU8BAL A KROM, Prop a.
LOYD HOUSE,
Main Street, -PHILIPSliURO,
PENN'A.
Table el way. lonptled with tbo beet tbe market
af urdi. The trereliag peblte li larlted to oolL
avi,7s. auaanr .uiu.
THE MANSION HOUSE.
O rawer Baaondawd Market Btreeta.
CLBABKILD, PA.
TBI I aid aad sommodloa Hotel has. dariag
th post year, been enlarged ta doable Its
Curve or eepaeit for the eatortatamewl of straa
gar aal tweets. Tha whole baildlag ha beea
rru rati bed, aad ia proprietor win apstre a
paiaa to reader hi gaesta eeaslorUel while
eiayiag with bim.
aav-rba 'Mtaalea Hoeee" 0 m el bee rvae u
aad rea th Depot oa th arrival and departar
f aaeh trala. JOHN DOUOllKhTT,
aprd.rt if Proprietor
Hanks.
r. s. atteoL.
U. W. ARSOLB.
t. a. ARot.a
F. K. ARNOLD A CO.,
nun kern and Broker,
ReymeldevUle. Setrerao Co., Pa,
Moa.y rooetrod oa depoelt. DiM-oonta at mo
derate nut. Eartora and Ponian Birbangeal
wari on hood aad oollretions promptlr made.
Reyaolderltlo, Deo IS, ISM.. ly
County National Bank,
Or CLEARFIELD, PA.
ROOM h Maaoaia Ratlding. oa. door eorlh of
C. O. Weleoa'. Drag Store.
P.ego Tiahrti to ood tram Lieerpeol, Qeeoai
towa, 0 la.gow, Loudwa, Peri, and Coponbag...
Alee, Drafti for aalo on the Royal Bank af Irrl.ott
aod Imperial Banh of Loadoa.
JAMES T. LEONARD, Prer't.
W. M. BHAWCaihlor. e,:.M
DREXEL & CO.,
We. S4 enlh Third Street, Philadelphia
BjUTKKRH,
And Dealers in Government Securities.
Applioatloa by mail will rooeiro prompt atlea
tloa, aad all laformatloa ebeorfully furni.hed
Ordon eolieted. Aprllll-tf.
JfiitiStru.
J. M. STEWART, D. D. S.,
Ofl.ce over Irwin' Drag Utor
CURWEKSriLLE, PA
AH dental eporatioaa. either ia the meebaoie.!
er oporotiro braaeb, promptly oltendml lo oad
oatlafaotioa gaoraateod. Kpoeial otlvntloo paid
to tbo treatment of dinoeoe of tbe natnrel leeib,
game aaA mooth. Inegalarlty of tho Imh aor.
oeoerully oorrortod. Twll eilroelrd wilboal peio
by the an of Ether, and artilioial tertb Insrd
of the bort material and warnnted to nnd.r rat.
Iifa.tloa. aprllS'7l:l,
D
ENTISTRY.-
Ha viae determiaad ta leeate In Corwrnsvilla
for tbo rarpoao of paraslog my proleaaina, I
hereby offer my servir t the pabtle. I hate
jaet laiehed a term af dental lastrectfona aaler
tb beet teaeliere ef th Peaneylvenia College ef
Desatel rturgsrry ta Philadelphia, and am a
prepeml to esevata all work pertaining le sjfat-
IPVi V iu, arvwi marai arr , wvai mw lairrt iau w
anebtm. All work aaraatead to give entire aat
Irieetissa a ta quality aad darallwa. Teotk at
traeted without paia. Rooai la new Bank beilti
tag. For farther Information apply In perana er
address . 1 II
rHOIfPttON,
Carwewarille, Pa.
A . M . HILLS
Weald rsrpaetfally notifr bii petlrnta
that he haa red need the prise of ARTI
FICIAL TBaTTH to I.N ter aet. or
$S-w for a eVoable aet. For any Iweporeuaa
oomlag at th same time, ta bare eek m apper
art, will get tba two set for tV.0, r 9IT.M
aaeh.
Term lavariably CAai.
Claarflald, Jaly 1, 1874.
GEORGE E. ROBACKER,
wBot-asata aiiLaa is
WINES AND LltJUOIta,
, ' , CLEARFIELD, PA.
My plan of buslooas io on Morhet etrect, di
rectly oppoelto th. Court Houn, when I drtira
to hnpe foil Mock of PliaE LIUI'ORS. ud
will warraat thorn to be Mah to my enMuaten.
Gir. eae a mil. Joly II, '7t-'.f.
WHOLESALE UQU0R STORE.
At tha end of th new bridge,
WEST C1.1ARFIELD, FA.
Tt.0 proprietor of this eeUbltehmeat will bay
hla liquor direst from diatillsrs. Partiea bering
from thia bourn will be aore to get a par anieie
at a amall aaargia above sort. Hotel kepera eae
bo faralahed with liqaora oa .roaaoMbto terna.
Pare wiae and bread tea dirt frtm Pee lay l
Vlnrrr, at Balb, Mew York.
UBORUR m. coLnt'k.t.
Clearflfld, Joao H, la7ft.tr.
DTTPl? DVV WUTCFV
1 VAIU 1I1U Tl 111UJV1.
Wa again oall your at tea tloa tw the above eU
brated brand of gooda, auad we do so with theree
rietiooj that there if a great want existing among
ft vaat namler of peraoae who are rompellrd t
aae, medieiaallr er otherwise, a pare whisky.
T eapply this want we offer Hallrja Par
yd), aa artiele whieb has beoo before the punli
for ft Member of yearn, ita repaiatioa ataadiag
high as a thoroughly reliable atlmaUat aanag
medical men. As aa evidence, qutte a number of
aor eailneat pbylaae preacrlb It to the axele
sloa af all others.
aWiag awd aa tha beet knowa aeWatine pris
eiplee, from tba eboloaat greta, aad by preetieel
distillerr), It rotatna a delightful fletor, aad,
greatly improved by age. Make il largely wagkt
after by Iret alaaa bia and drngtrisu.
(thwald yto deaire ae giv thi wbivby a trial,
aad are la doaat aa to whether year hetol or dreg
gift horp It, (not having nae of oar aigna diaplay -ed.)
write to as and we aball b moat happy t
dlreot yoa ta the peraeoa who haadle our goods
ift yowr neighawrboosl.
We ere alao sle proprietor and manufaetnreri
of the well-known D R. P tK K B H TONIC 1IKK0
BITTRRH, a blob haa been eueeeesfelly aaad for
over thirty y snar u ft Bleod Paviner, eett-Ua-papti
aad Toaie.
IUTKY A CIIRI8T,
taek2473 III N Third St., Pbiladelpkia.
O. I. c.
VtT'HERE la boy my DRY U00DS, 0R0
notioae, uonrrotlonerin, AO., ebeap lor ea.
The eubaorlbor ben ware to Inform bli ale e
A VARIETY STORE
IN OLEN HnPE, PA
Aad will eell a-ooda al nrlna to anil the tlojil.
liberal roduetina will b. mad. to nitomer, ea;
log el wholeeale.
elMwhen. A llheral ihan of pablle palroaag
milled.
I all m hmi mmm Burro..!"
C. I. KEAflY.
Illoa Hope, Pa., J.aa It, IS? I.
ljCTI(jlIiRIN"a
Tbo aadmlga.d woeld nepntfully lofeno i
ollleenl of Clnrteld ond rlrlnlty lhat he u I
nn anon notleo, and aa roeaoaaoi. roree.
Bills, Posten, Programmes, aad othor odrlrt'
p-i.ud and diitrlbulnl la lb. moat r"
plaeM. A ah.n ef puhlle potraneg. li "
r N. L. ROBIN
Menhir, t-tf, - Clwleld,
T30B kALE.-The aaderelinod aferr
or Clnrlold. Lot MalSi foot, wllb a gon
Men aleak Sown leerooa orntod, with
X w.iTwisnn lew! Mnn i.
mm.1 aB alM ui fca. hJ noma op
Hoon lolakod nmplote freei nlmrwat
Oeeo) deaale penk aad goad waur. Prhs
naahle ea4 pormeet. oaay.
SaaagTg WM. M. MoODLLOD