rtli5rfllnnfou. OOT AND SHOP. MAKING. B jT,SKPII II- UKKHINII. ".'' ' .. i . .u D. kaa lost We! Shaw l Row, uieeraem. . -- f i.. M if lr.-b O.ir Bill" Klp. ! I.., la the aerkel.end la now proper., vamaa .""""bil.bl. Iln. il. .ill. Br mil bis work ia be e T"""' AIo. all hied, of Limber end Shoe Finding. '"tm'.!'!"" of Cla.rS.ld .ad vlelally ar. e,,r,.etfully lnl lo giv. Ua a .ell. Work doe. .1 abort ..ill... Mt 73t ibftl trM or Mfi-I of Ian 4 annate ta Ueoalar i ditanee of the Tvron A t'bi4rl)l 1 H. R , end arijomiog leade of Hubert UmUon and etnera, and hnowa m the Jacob B. Urarhart lot. Thr Mid traol containing 60 acre more or Uti, with two Toioe of valuable eoal thereon, ha about acre cleared, and la the key to large body of eukv ahoet being develop J. Will he fold lav and upoa w term. Fur particular, apply to DAVID L. KHKB8. CWrO.ld, Fa.. July It, lS7. TAME1j Soodlakder, LUTHBRSBITRfl, PA., Dealer in DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, UOSIEIU X GLOVES, -HATS CAPS and BOOTS A SHOES, Tobacoo, Uroccrloa and Flab, Neil, Hardware, mieensware anti Miaeiwart, Men i ana li..jt' Clothing, Druge, Painta, Oil, 8cbuol Book, a largo lut of Patent Mcdictnci, Can lie., Nute A DrM Frulle, Checee and Crack era, Rock and Rifle Powder, Flour, Grain nnd Potatoes, Clover and Timothy Seed, Sola Leather, Morocco, Lining, Binding! and 1 bread, hnoemaRera loola and Shoe Fiodinga. No greater variety of gooda In any tore ta tha ooaaty. A U for ia1 vary low for eeb or coontry produot at tbe Cheap Uorner, . May I, 1875, N EW FJLOUK. FEED, AND G110CE11Y STORE. A. G. KRAMER & CO., Room .No t. Pie'. Oner. House. Cleartelil, Pa. Keep ouoataotly ao b.nl 8C0AR, COFFER, "'AS. 80DA, COAL OIL SYRUP, 8 ALT, PICES, SOAP, Cooad aod Drlod Fruit., Tobawo, Clfirl, Cu dioi, CMcr Vlnr(.r, Dolt.r, Kgjt, A. AL80, EXTRA OME-MADI Wheat and Buckwheat Flour Corn Heal, Chop, Feed, 4o., All of whleb will b. Mid .h..p for eub or It .xcb.og. for eooDtry produes. A. U. KRAMF.R t CO. Clurl.ld, Ni. 11 I874.-If GLENN'S . SULPHUR SOAP. A Sterlino Rr.MKnv roa Diseases and iNjuaiu or the Skin i A Healthful Beautifier or the Complexion; A Reliable Means of Peeventino and Relieving Rheumatism and Gout, and ' an Unequaled Disinfectant, Deodo. aizfia and Coi ntk.-Irhitant. Olenn'$ Sulphur Soon, beaidn cnuli. eating local diseuea of the skin, banishes de fects of the complexion, and imports to it gratifying clearness and smoothness. Suljihur ltntlm arc celehrated for curing eruptions and other diseases of the skin as well as Rheumatism and Gout. Vlenn'9 , Sulphur Soap produces the same .fleets at a most trirlinc expense. This admirable specific also speedily heals tons, iruiset, xaldtt imrtu, sprains and tuti. It removes dandruff and prevents the hair from tailing out and turning gray. Clothing and linen used in the skit room is disinfected, and diseases communicable by contact with the person, prevented by it. The Medical Fraternity sanction its use. ' Prices35 end SO Cents per Cake; per Box 3 Cakes), 60c. and $1.20. K. B.Buy lb. laf. calree and thereby aoaoadaa. Sold by all LMigeuu. "HOfa HAIR AND WHISKER DTE," ksek er Brows. St Ceou. C. I. CWTTEITO!, rmp'r, 7 Sixth b., SACEETT & SGHRYVER HARDWARE, nnd aanafaotartra of TIN, COPPER & SHEET IRON WARE, Heeond Mreet, Cleardeld, Pa. He lag red t ted oar atorerrrnm aad doubled oar etnek, we are prrpareil to offer hargeina to per abaaera im eur ir lino, we oare aecmea m ao n Strictly Cash Business, mi eu therefor, sell at grotty nd.ead prlns. Oarp.nUra .ad p.rs.as who eoauapl.t. balld lag will do wall to .i.ata. oar Tools &i Buil&intSuiw'm, vklek rs a. aad .f tk. ket aa.afaetor.. W krep a l.rg. sti kof LOCKS, LATCH KS, HINtiKS, SCKEWS, NAILS, GLASS, PUTTY, . OLUK, AH klads of B.nek Plsaes, Saw., Chltall, RqqarM, Hianns, H.teha., Plombe .nd L.v.11, atortlwd A Thank fle.a., Beeals, BrMM A Him, Wood .ad Iraa Bneh Serews, .nd tb. bsl Boring Maebln. la tb. . a.rk.t- Double and Single Bitt Aiea, . , POCKET CUTLERY, Aa. . Aftntt far Burnetii Iron Cont Shelter, mrraatod. ' Alse, agaaa tor RLhArd.' GOTHIC FLUE TOPS, ' wblab effeetnally era SeMky Flaea. Farm Implements, Garden Tools, . t of mr dretrlptlen. A large variety of ' COOK STOVES,' wklak lamat le gin MllrtMlo. I mJkTrieau Rftt and IWawui. kona. Sp.Mlag tmi Job Week da. fSMaablo area.. All oriSef. lll raaaiv. proapl Cell, a PJeabiec aad caa IttUg aimded a SV.r1aS.a orkaas. Mar i, HIS. 5ru ftoods, Brorlftt, fctf. JJARD TIMES IIAVI NO Kr-mCT IN FRENCHVILLE I I u awnra that -here re aem. kereoek. ft Hill aarj to r.lra4.-.d I em also awa-e ibat Ihr . '.irnier end prove oonHuiHely that "herd time" I uad .11 mj p.lroa. f b.ll t lnlti.ll Into Ih. m tr.1 ol UOW TO AVOID HARD TIMES I bava good i enougb to -um.ly all tha tnhabl- taola in tba lowtr and of tha eouatjr whiab I tell at atrwding low rate from my matanoth atura ti ai'LSUNliimi, when I fan alwaya bt foaad raatly to wait npon tallara and aupply than wltb Dry Goods of all Kinds, Snob aa Clotbi, Batinatti, Caaalmaraa, llnalina. vaiainaa, binaa, urunnga, Laiieoaa, Tritaminga. Ribbona, Lao, Raadj-Bada Clothing. Roota and 8boa. Hata and Cape all of tba boat material and made to order uoat, boona, uiotn, Mitten., Laona, Kibboni, to. OHOCERIBR OF ALL KINDS. Ooffet. Tea, 8ugar. Bice, Motaaaaa, Fiah, Bait Purk, Llnaaed Oil. riab Oil, Carbon Oil. Hard vara, Qaeenawara. Tinwnra, Caitlnga, Plows ana now tattinga, nana, Bpmta, uorn Ualtir tora, Cider Praaaatand all ktnda of Aita. Perfumery, Palata, Varntab, Glaai, nnd general aeaortaaeot oi utattontry, 0 0 01) FLOUR, Of diferant brandi, alwaya on band, and will bt old at too laweat poaaibl flgurea, J. II. MoClaln'a Medtelnai, Jayne'a llediolaaa Jlojtaltar a and Uoofland a Blltara, 0Ot Minda of Wool wanted for wbleh tho higheat prieo will bo paid. Cloveraeed on hand ana tor anic at tna mwait market pnoe. Alao. Aatent for Strattonrille and Cnrwonarllla lareiniog Haontnaa. fee. Call and aaefor yoaraolraa. Ton will tnd OTer; thing nanally kepi In a retail atoro. L. M. COUDBIET. Pronchrtlla P. 0., Angnet 12, 1374. REMOVAL! JOHN McGAUGHEY Would raipeetfullr nottfr tho pabllo cenerall that ba baa nnored bia Grocery 6 tore from Shaw'a Row, to the building formerly oeeantoti by J. Mi lea Kratier, on Heeond at reel, neit door to Biglar a hardware atoro. where be intendt- ka-ping a rail line or OllOCERIEH. IIAMIVUIIIKD BKF.F.nd LAHD. SUGARS and SI Rl'PS, of .11 gradM. TEAS, Orara .ad Blu-k. COFFER, Routed .ad Orora. FLOUR AND PROVISIONS, All kind, la tha market. PICK LF.. in Jar. and barrel.. SnrKH, In erery fora and rarl.ty. FAMILY FLOUR, ALL KIKDH Of CRACKER. SOAPS, MATCHES, 1IRIK0 APPLES, DRIED PEACHES, DRIED CHERRIES, Coal Oil u& Lamp Chimney. And a food aaaortmaat of thoa. thine, aiaall. ll.pt la a froaorj atora, wbieb k. will ..ekang. loa aaraaiiog a. in. aaraai pnoe a. Will Mil far aab a. ekmpl m aa othw .a. Pleaaa call and ... bit .took aad Jndg. for ronrioir. . JOHN McQAl'OIIKT. Clnrlli Id, Jan. , 187. G HOCK l! IKS JAS. II. LYTLE, (Suemuor to LYTLE A MITCHELL) , WIIOLKSALB AND RETAIL , DKALER IN CllltICK LINB (IK TEAR. '' 00L0NI13, JAPANS. IMPERIAL, YOl'MO HYHON, ENULI.SU BREAKFA8 Pamt la Markei. iii)Tri:H a I. n lioca Will be bept and wld at im eosl. Cask paid for Coaolry Prodae. HERMAN CHERRIES, TURKEY PRUNES, PRESERVED PEARS, PHILADELPHIA BAMS. flHII. M.ek.r.t, L.k. U.rrlag, Cod, A.. PICKLUI. B.rr.1 PickM. and lagllak Pioklet. CLOtlR AND FEED. Floar, Cora Meal, Oat Ileal, Ae. etch I 71 JAS. II. LYTLI. AMERICAS CYCLOPEDIA, (APPLETON'S) NEW REVISED EDITION, Complete In 16 Volumes. Intirelv ra wfUta. Erarrtbloc brencht down to the preeent tinw. lllaat rated tbreng boat wltb Over 3,000 Illustrations AND M A PA of erery eonotre on tbe f tobo. Sold only by aubarrlptlon. It la mot eWtiratory to take all tbe tela met at Aore oelamo may bo delivered one n aaftntb, or enco In tern month a. Tea eente a day, tha prlee ef a eif ar, will pay for a aet rtf CVCLOPKUIA OH A bl-MOKTHLf AllHHrRIPTlUNInleMtkaotbrMyenra. Then tberewlll be aoatetklng anbitantlal aarod aad ft ebrrehot.ee of knowledge. Indeed ft nnlrereal library la tteelf eeeefedllh mm little effort er neriloe. ritlCB AND CTVLK OF DINDlNOi For Rura ciotk, pw Pov Llbrarv Leatb.r. ft vol Por kalf T.rkev Mimwe, per vol .... Pa b.K S...H. Iitra Ollb pee vol.. P P.ll MerMM Aattoae, pot Vol... 1 1 ns ...... t M .... I M ..... I be IS e .... is s. i ( : ee aw, ataeeia, pav.l,. r tanker iaforaatiea address.. ' J. V. WIUIAllSort, ' i PooJuaW. at Kid, atms, j Jas.N.ltrs.1. . nnskago, Pa. THE REPUBLICAN. atjaygkgp. CLEARFIELD, PA. WKHNKXDAY MOKNINfl, JAN. 17, 1177. TUK M1LI0SA1RK Kisa. RAILROAD A REVIEW or 1118 FINANCIAL OAICKR IN TKSISTIIKl INOIIIRNTII OF MIS DOIMO 111 BT. If. ,.Vt iuxKh I tut W for day by day, hut bia extraordinary vitality acemed iiiexhatiHtible, and day uflor day the report waa atill tho aame Mr. .Vandorbilt'a condition remain unchanged. About 4 o'elotk yentcrduy morning he waa found to be rapidly ninking, and ba exprcmiud a deaire to wo the Iter. Ir. Dcoma, bia apirittiul adriner, Tho latter urrived in a few tninutei and Commodore Yandorhilt wid, "1 think 1 am nearly gone, Doo tor." Dr. Deems prayed by tho bed .ido of tho dying man, and then aome membore of tho family who wero pres ent sang a few hynitt in low tnnea. The music rX'emedtossothe tho sufferer. All his 'family were sent for during the night, and when ho died they wero by his bedside. Uia cldettt aon, William' II. Vunderbilt, arrived soon after mid night and remained to the end, which occurred nino minutes before 11 o'clock. All his daughters wero present, and his wile, who had been present by bis bed sido during tho entire- period of bis sickness, was at her post, as ustiul. Cornelius Vanderbilt was born at Staplcton, Staten Island, on May 27th, 1794, and his death has thus occurred after tbe completion of his eighty second year. The bouse in which he was born is still alanding and is part of bis estate. At tho ago of 19 ho mar ried Sophia Johnson, his second cousin, who was just a year younger, and who has been dead eight years. She was a business woman and was well adapted to assist tho career ot a money-maker. Vandorbilt'a indomitalilo energy, when only 16 years of ago, as tho cap tain oi R sail boat, first brought him to the attention of tho farmers of Stilton Island. A small steamer bad been carrying garden stnlT to New York, and ns tho weather grew stormy and cold the freight tariff was increased to such an extent that the farmers and small gardeners could make no profits ; on their produce. Young Vanderbilt offered j to run an opposition, and he curried vegetables and oysters to New York, and actually beat tho steamer, as hu run nt all hours and in ull kinds of weather. In 1810 ho es tablished a ferry and carried pussen gers at eighteen cents each, and Vun derbilt's landing, at Staten Island, bu. camo almost as well known to Now Yorkers as Whitehall, from which' point tho boats started. In 1815 ho extended his operations, and, with his brother-in-law, Captain de Forest, built a coasting vessel, a beautiful model and notod for speed ; ho was successful in all his ventures, and two years latter ho commenced stcamboaling. , Ho was offered by a friend of his Gibbons command of a steamer plying between New York and New Brunswick on the Philadel phia line. Mrs. Vunderbilt bud charge of tho hotel ut that pluco, where tho passengers passed tho night. It had never previously paid expenses, und was civen to Vanderbilt rent free. Under Mrs. Vaudcrbilt's management it soon became profitable. It may now bo said that Captain Vanderbilt in 1829 was in the flood tide of fortune. He was worth about $30,000, and became a formidable op ponent to tho Slovens, of llohokon. In 1851, so rapidly had his fortune ac cumulated, bo established a tin lo California, via Nicaragua. In 18C2 he presented a new steamer ol 5,000 tons, costing 1800,000 tho Vanderbilt to the I'nited Slates, for which Congress passed a resolution of thanks. At the time ho wus earning him $2,000 a day. The most memorable and exciting scenes, however, of Commodore Van-del-lull's life wero in connection with tho stock market, into tho busy arena of which he bad lo enter in order to control tho great railroads and their Connections, succeeding In which hu since earned for him many of his mil lions and tbe name of America's railroad kino, Tho history of llio Iltirlcm "corner" must bo familiar lo all who have hail dealings in tho slock market, and in this, as in every other affair of the business life, Vanderbilt allowed his sagacity as well as pluck. In the "corner" of Harlem shares ho bad, howover, lor his assistant John Tobin, a reckless slock speculator, who is still living in New York. Ho was just the man fur tho occasion. His means were not supposed to bo large and ho had tho audacity and norve required. Tobin was sent into tho board to buy all the Hnilem shares offered. Tho price roso rapidly, and tho "benrs" camo upon tho sccno to hurl their blocks of "short stock" at thu head of the coo1,bltic-cycd man who was acting for tho doughty Commodore After tho adjournment of tho boards the Harlem excitement was kept up in the street in front of tho Stock Exchange until tho blackness of night settled down ; the fight wus then renewed In tho up town hotels and night bourse Tobin was buying wildly ot Harlem, and, carUittsly enough, paying lor it too. Morse, Jacob Little and tomo of the larger speculators, who are now dead, expected that Tobin would fail, and they put out short contracts for thou sands of shares, which they expected to tuke in at an immense profit when Tobcn Bhould rati. The stock was cy to borrow, but day by day it mounted up from thirty to fifty dollars per share, until the fabulous price of j $300 per sharo was bid for it. Tho bears wero distracted ; not a sharo was to be had. All tho stock was locked up in a fireproof, and Vanderbilt bad tho key. Milliona of dollars wero made by the Commodore and his friends, sxore of speculators were ruined and ihisgaveriso to the famous couplet so often nsed in dorision by brokers ut those who sell "short:" "II.ob.MllewbMle.1bls'., M .t pay ap sub or go te priioa. But Vandorbilt'a slock operation in Harlem, Central and Erie were al waya for tb parpoM of ooneolidaling and strengthening bis vast railway in terests. ' U needed lb Marl era rood ; of Decesaiiy he pjnat buy its slock. If, in tlx purohaMe, money could bo made by manipulation, well anil good ; it clivupriicd his railroad, , , fill JAMOIH HlU'll' UlYIUf.NI. . , (III Ducomtior 10, 18118, oik oT I lie (rieati'Ht roup it'ftntt llmt ever took pluco in tlio tliuiiK'iiil world oicuni'd in New York, wlion, ul u Hectvt mid niilit Neiwion o( (.Vxnuiudoru 'undtr bilt and iilndirwHom. llio caiitiil of tin' Nuw Yoi!; (Vntral liuilioud Uoiniany oik in,T'w,! o"fr I wr.i y-tliroo mil. litiralt-H rulr-l ic Htm-k. 'I'iiu lut-kv I liolticio (! aiiuius wtiifli Wei' tpimcil on Saturday at 1.13, tin Monday morn ing awakened to the agreeable fait I hut an HO per cent, dividend had been declared, ami the slock was selling ul 2.10. In all thesu transaction thu Commodore proved his suiicity, und tho Central has paid dividends to thin day on the so-called ''watered" stock. The following is THE UK SAT RAILWAY SYSTEM on which his genius wus employed : Tho lino between New York, Albany and Troy, 150 miles lung, is one oftbu most I'uvoi ito lines in the country on account ot its running u II the way along the nuirgin of the river, present ing to tho traveler a' panorama oi scenes of unequaled beauty und inter est. This is generally known as the Hudson lliver liotid. Tbu New York and 1 1 ink in line, also running lo A I buny, several miles from tho river. Tho Hosloli line. UulTuloaiid NiiiL'aru Fulls line to Albany. This litu con nects Huston und New York with .Sclieiiectuiiy, Plicu, .Syracuse, Itochc. ter, Buffalo und thu celebrated Pulls. It ia 3'JO miles long, and a quadruple truck. Tho Shore Lino Division con nects New York with Huston by way of New London and 1'iovidciicv. Tbu Uoston and Albuuy liuilroad connects those two pointBby way of W orcesler, Springfield und I'iltsHeld. The small er lines of the system are the Syracuse and liocucslcr line, via Auburn; the liochcNter and Niitgura Fulls line; thu Cuiiuiiduigiiu, lialaviuund Tonawundu line, uid a uuinburol sumller branches which need not be specified ull form, ing a magnificent system which is ot inestimable advantage to thu State and city ot New York. IIIS II A HITS AND AMI'HFMENTS. Mr. Vunderbilt's habits of lite were nintn1i lit, Iota liv,.il for n irreut mini- ber of yeurs in a spacious, but unpre lentioiis mansion, No. 10 Wasliiuloii Sipiuro, in which be breuthed his last. llo indulged, with a few iiiliinute friends liku Dr. Corey und Hen Wood, in a gume of curds once in awhile, and u Saturday evening curd parly nlDul nionico's old place, corner of Four teenth street und Filth uveniie, or at tho Muiihiittun Club ausubout the ex tent of his social recieution until three yeurs ago, since which time they were discontinued. IIu wus n grcut lovcrof horses und could bo seen on lluilein luno any uflernoon behind a puir of flyers, tuking no man's dust or snow bulls. In appearance ho was lull and commanding, wore gray side whiskers, and was not an unworthy subject for l)c(i root's heroic hronto staluo on the Hudson Hiver Depot. ins riiAnmr.s. He paid for tbu building of thu Sli'tingcm, in New York, ol which ItuV. Dr. Deems is the pastor, and supported tbe Moravian Church at New Dorp, Staten lsluuil, near which bo had erected a mausoleum for his own rest ing place. Hu also endowed a school fur girls on the grounds of tliut church, lo bo built un thu pluli of thu Seminary ut Bethlehem, in this Slute, which he ulso liberally endowed. Hut his greatest benefaction wu to tho new educational enterprise ul Nashville, Tenn.. under tho control ol thu Methodist Kpiscopul Church South, of which his second wife hud been a member. This institution, named the Vanderbilt University in his honor, wus organised in .limitary, 1873, and in March ensuing Mr. Vunderbilt guve f.ri00,0tl0 towards its endowment, fol lowing this up with un udditionul tlOO.OOO in April, 1874, t't bu used us I a building liiml, in onler tout L mveis j ity buildings tuny bu completed in ac cordance with thu plans und specilica lions previously approve, I by bint A portion of the buildings were reudy by October, 1875, and iho institution was then formally opened for students. In Junu of this year hu added 1300, 0U0 to his endowment of thu institu tion, thus swelling his donation to u found $1,1100,0110. Ills FAMILY. Mr. Vaiidurhill'a first wilu died in August, ISliS, and uhuiit a yeur later, at thu ago of seventy five ho married Miss Frances Cruwlurd, of Mobile, Alabamu, who wus somo lorly flvu yeurs younger than himself, nnd with whom hu lived very happily up lo the time ot his (lentil. Of thu thirteen children by his first wife, eight daugh ters and two suns are still living. Wil liam Henry Vanderbilt, tho eldest son and the filth child, wus born on May 8, 1821, and lor years past bus been entrusted with the details ol managing his father's onormou interests, holding llio responsible position of Vico Prcsi ' (l"nl ,,f 1,10 W York Antral and 11 udson RlTC,r 1!ilr"J- Cornelius, jr.,uus uecn somcwnuioi a spetiullirilt, inheriting few of his lather's ruro busi ness qualities. The second son died when a boy, and tho fourth, George, graduated at West l'oint, served cred itably during the rebellion, and died in 1H67. His deceased daughter, Frances, tho eleventh ol llio children, was alwaya an invalid, and died un married at tho ago of forty. Several of his surviving daughters married men who in timo took their place in the ranks of the millionaires. PliiliM phia Timet, January 5tb. Death or ah Old Miser. At Fort Byron, Iowa, Ihcro has lived for thirty flvi year un old and very eccentric character named Charles Gray. He used to drive stago between here and Dixon, III., on tho route to Chicago, before any railroata wero built. , He baa lutely lived alono, and had low as sociations. On Saturday howsslonnd dead in his chair, tho causa of his death being boart disease. Ho had al ways been supposed to be quits poor, but upon looking through bis effects after his death greenbacks and Gov ernment bonds to the amount of 113, 000 were found in bis trunk, lit is not known to have a friend or relative in tbe world, and his fortune it now looking lor aa owner. 1 THE BLA CK 111 LIS LX mSTEIf, crrriR city vnikr tii i wiatii ir-lodm WITH UlLLIONalN 'KM THUL'BIl FOR OATTLI CntHK TH ARRIVAL orTIIC FIRST QUARTZ HIM CU8TIR Citt, (Black llilln,) 1). T., Dor, 17. All road lead to Cuater, aa 1 disenrurud on my trip to tbiaclty, tho lealincd molropolia of tho ililla; for trying no li-aa than three well reeoin I of luw, in awepting the electoral votea mended short niia 10 Deadwooil, 1 In- of South (,'nnlina, Floriilu and Ixuiai v -ful'ly brontlit m Unffulo iF. ana. w !li? (her itnHiJ 'old c m til rv 1. CiiIim- is to i!:iv exactly what it was ten months ago, i u. regards fin inutii n. )ne thousand : hastily constructed shanties, and some half finished huts, strung along thu uveuues and street'.' I'uiut und nrua- nieiilul work are as cotispicuotisly uli sent now as tlien. ; French crwek is us destitytu of water, and this scarcity ia us puinlully tnunil 'Bt in tho grixxily luces ot thu few inhabitants. The city is hero just the sumo, but tho deserted huts a rutin of three to one with those occupied show that Ilitmt of tbe citi zens have lelt. Tie old settlers suy they huvo gong, east for tho winter, or else are oil' in the stuniHdu to Ilutlle Creek, but that liny will all bu buck in thu spring. I liuvu been shown two specimens ol 1 quui'tl taken from the Wcbloot hxle, a ieud cnnimeiielng two miles from tbe city nnd rtinuim; duo north, ns tar ns prospected, eilil miles. Thu first specimen wus taken from the claim next to the discovery, eight feet from the stirl'ucc, and the quurlz assays Jllli,-1 000 lo tho ton. The lhcr specimen was taken from the eighth claim, and wus said to le almost solid gold, and lo ussny ubout 830,0(10. 1 wus taken over to tho I'o Smilt lode, to tho cast to Lawn, where tho quarts unsays 11,777 und seme cents (lo bo precise), aiid thence to tho Centennial lode, to thu south of tho city, nnd bIiowii big I their respective States, that they lumps of ore. I inquired ubout tho I wouldn't so much as publish the vote placer digging, and was told that " wo of a single county in any of the disptt don't care tu bother ourselves with i tod Stales, until Ibo lielloggs anJ such stniill, fi' kle, and transient enter-, tho Sleurna" und tho Chamberlains prises. We huvo our lodes ; them's j and tho army had a full opporlu millions in 'cm, und with them we are mty to revise them and decide bow the more than content." puople should have voted. The vote Hut Battle Creek is now the rallying of Florida, South Carolina and Lou cry, nnd if tlo region from Deajwood j isiuna, as actually received by licpuh to this city is not soon depopulated, it lienn election boards in every precinct, will be because Battle Creek is not land certified by Ilepublican county long nor broad nor deep enough to hold the people rushing thither. There is much reason in their madness, too, for Cupt, Timhlin showed meu nugget lo-dtty llitit he picked from the ground, "just ns you would gather hickory nuts, you know." It weighed filtecn doliurs and (tiguiti to be minute) lour cents, while a pan of earth from thu same claim washed out ten dollar. Tho discovery is sa:d lo bo cquully rich, if not more vnlouhlu than the famous Head wood gulch, from which tho Wheeler Brothers look so much dust. A sprightly littlo town has al ready budded into existence, and will soon blossom into a city. Tbu first quarts mill to enter tho Hills passed through here to-day bound for Deadwood. 1 1 cost $15,000, $5,000 for transportation, and tumbled from tho watron into tho Cheyenno river while being taken across, entailing grcut Ittbor to recover it. Its owners are thu Finney Brothers, of Nebraska City. Thelitis a fortune in that mill il there is money i.. anything, for thu grout need of the several mining dis tricts is machinery to led nee tbu ore. Deadwood begins fo look "down ill tho mouth." Her placer cluims are nearly ull worked out, und alio bus not sufficient quarts mining to enable ber to hold her own. Thu luckiest fellows ill that district, next lo thu Wheelers, huvo been three colored men, who hud no more knowledge iff prospecting and mining than they bud ul astronomy. Hut they trailed itilo u little spur, thrust their shovels into the bank, and drew out several "colors" ul the first fill. Their "pay" increased a they I procecdeil, until they Uclnoiisi rated , their possession of the richest claim in HeudwiKsJ. Crowds flocked lo Nigger (lull h, as it w use ailed, to see tho" shiny'' washed mil, and when thu trio shut down tor the season, a few weeks ago, two went home each with $75,000 in his pockets. Thu third remains to wuteh their still valuable claim. I'riccs are rcmurktibly luw now in Custer, considering that freight from thu Union Pacific ul Sidney lo ibis point is seven or eight cents per pound. For instance, beer is only $1.00 per (ullon ut the Custer brewery, und board (lair to middling) $7 pT week. Flour sells nt $10 lo $12 per cwt., and corn nivtil tho same. Poor whisky "two bits" a drink j good whisky not in demand il isn't raspy enough. Tho moral atmosphere of " metropolia '' should bo commended, fiumblur, and other who prey upon their fellow beings, have quietly departed, A good school bus been established, and there is talk of forming a church society. The city Government is provisional, nnd is composed in part as lollows : Superior Judge, Thomas Hooper City Recorder, P. J . Koefer j City Treasurer, C. L. Spoonur j Justices of the Peaco, P. J. Reefer and A. H. Hughes; a Hoard ol Urn Trustees, with E. J. Ward as President and ex-ofllcio Mayor. There is no poatoftiee north of the Indian agencies. Lo'.inrs for tho Hills are turned ovor to thu alagu company ut Sidney, and t charge ol ten cenla each is made fur bringing them up. Stages arrive once a week, but more lines und duily trips are promised for tho spring travel, which is expected to bu immense. The llrrali, a new weekly paper published by A. R. Kennedy and J. S. Bartholomew, late of Omaha, made its first appenranco lust week. It bus a fine dress, much vim, and telegraphic new. Indians are dodging around on tbe sly, but beyond culling the wire last night, havo committed no hostilo act of Into ; still everybody ia on guurd and expecting depredations nt any time, lookingfora high old war whoop when spring etiubles tho reds and their ponies to subsist away Iron) tho agencies. On my way through Red Cloud Agency 1 learned that thoso noble pa triots, Messrs. Dearaud Yates, Indian traders, had again come to tho relief: of the nation, by filling a " iecial con tract " for bay at $00 por ton. Tholr patriotism isshown by the foot thai the hay coat them, delirered, $7.50 per ton. Wu are reminded of winter only by an occasional piercing wind.. As a general thing lb days are bright and warm, and the tola! absence of enow enablua tho ruinera to continuo opera tion.. In tli Dortbcrn diatricU tbere ia r little anow, but not nongb to im podo mining or at all lo intrrre with propicting. L. F. W, PITY THE ORGANS. It was plain ruilini; lor ilia orguna wliilu an appuronl uilliorence to lorma lt:';'vlhii:lLi"'M.t.ii.' ....,1. t,,l H nai i iiai.iii.1 i iv us believed bvl lian.t ! those Stales. It lur and Cameron that they could en trench ihutUMilvea Uihiml the legal re turns and thus decluro Hayes elected hence thu orguna, big and little, lulli price und ball' price, were tuned to shriek fur tbu law, and to denounce all as revolutionists who dared to question thu broad seal of the sovereign States of Loiiisiuna, Florida and South Carolina. Willi one uccortl they became clamor ous lor tho letter of the luw, and for the sanctity of tho seal of the .Execu tive of a Common wealth. It mattered not that tho popular vole in at least two of the three Slates was in direct opposition to tho returns made and certified to the country , there wus but one answer from the New York 7Viio down lotlio Yen und llulletin it is so denominated in the law, und wliut is leul must bu right und accept- led. In answer to all suggestions that I fraud vitiated whatsoever Us deadly I poison touched, thu organs would cry only tho tnoru vehemently that thu j U-gul return und thu certificate of tho jUuvcrnor could not be uppculcd from lo a ribald and licentious press nor to a disloyal Congress. They had such contempt tor anything but the lawful returns as the lawlul return boards should compute and tho lawful (iover- nor certify them under tho aeala of I boards in every rounty, bns yet to bo given to tbe readers of any of the or gan which have so violently clamored tor obedience to thu luw. F.vun the New York Tinr, once a great news paper, bus so utterly ignored the truth touching the dec' ions in tba disputed Slates, that it has censed to bo quoted by any but tho worst class of mendi cant organs, and baa ceased to be credi ted as a luilhful chronicler ol current events. Tbo Tribune did better, al though it did badly enough in falling up against all Its beltor attributes of the poet, while tho Prettt and tbo Hulk tin echoed the order. of the leaders and played tho average organ wilh tire less fidelity. They all demanded obe dienco to tho luwful returns. Such returns were invested with a sanctity by tbo Rulloggs and their kind that none dero look upon them even with suspicion, and Hayes was declared to he tho President-elect, because tho le gal returns und the sacred aeals of Loiiisiumi. Florida und .South Carolina so proclaimed him. It was suirl tor the organs lo hunt tbo tiger. They weru exhiluruled in the chusa for they saw thu end, us they believed, when their prey must be an easy captive. Hut at last thu tiger hunts tho organs, and they tumble pell-mell over them selves and each other. 1 1' no longer MKrt ; it' thu play of death, and they shiver over their own follies as Ihey shriek that they won't stand being scratched when they intend to hunt instead of being limited. They hud gono winding, and they witn'l stand being sheared. What they for a mouth said was law yea, averred il day af ter day, und swore lo il with each re turning sun they now insist isn't law, unless it is made exclusively their law, to bu applied only to their own eiduot tho case. They didn't dream, while lliey weru weaving the network of fraud about themselves 'and teaching the country to bow to it, in the name of the law, that thuru were other Stales than those where (he palmetto thrive and where the pelican dwelt and where llio water of the sunny gulf wash the sharp peninsula. They looked only upon thu valient curpet baggurs, and on ihetn stuked their hopes lor Hayes and the crumbs which might full from his official table, and never turned to tho lur-ofT alopea of tho Pacific wilder nesa, whero rolls the Oregon. They bad forgotten that there ure other re turn boards than thoso. fashioned by tho ballot thief ol tho South, and that accidents could happen, with a littlo effort, to plttngo a whole army ol car petbag adventurers and their pitiable organ defenders in tho slough of des pair, (iovernor CJrovor and his Secre tary of State happen to bo a return board also, made so by tho laws of their Stste.' "Tbo Secretary of Stuto shall prepare two lists of the names of electors elected and affix tbo seal of the SlutO to tho samo; uch lists shall be signed by vho Governor and Secre tary." So says tho Oregon statute. And Gnvornor G rover and bis Secre tary havo done ao. ' They have certi fied and seuled tho result, and by all tho laws of thu organs, taught daily and hourly, whilo tho last moon was filling and emptying ber horns, no clamor about fraud and no profane voice of Congress shall deny that which Is solemnly written and attcatod. True, the Governor of Oregon, like the Gov ernors of Louisiana and Florida, certi fied and sealed tho wrong way, and clothed tho wrong mon with the re sponsible trust of choosing a President. The people voted as they thought boat and (ha Governors thought they un derstood tho mntlor still boiler, and made the legal returns oppose the pop ular will. Now tbe law, so Currently pleaded by tho parrot cry of the or gans for weeks past, defeats Uayoa and elects Tilden, and forthwith they declare that the law isn't the law, for getting In their Mind party passion that when they kick out tbe Governor's seal of Oregon they kick nut with it the aeala of Chamberlain, Hleurns and Kellogg. If (boy stand to the legal return as they havo schooled the party, Oregon elects. Tildes ; if they reject the Oregon legal return, out go Louis iana and Florida, and liayea It no where, and they can't exactly Inaiat that white it while im Looiasait and that white ia black In Oregon. Won't the organs take pity on themselves, since party madness cut tbuir throats either way they play it, and try a lit tle honesty and candor by way of nov elty to their low lingering readers? Let them make the experiment just oncef I'hilmlilphia Time? THE MOST MOMENTOUS ISSUE OF A I.I. 'I I ME. The readers of this journal know Trt.,.; " l,iVWt,,Tfrfsy thoiigbtlcs Northern masses did not uke up in timo to the unspcukcblu crimes and unimaginable tomfooleries ul Southern "reconstruction." It lias, week tifier week, line upon lino, with an iteration absolutely puinlul to our selves, and possibly, at times, to our readers, said the same thing, with lit tle variation the country is rapidly drifting to national bankruptcy and universal anarchy; and though, juBt at this moment, tho political "situa tion " is uppermost in the mind of tho country, tho materiul "situation" is churgud with infinitely greuter horrors, and if Chandler, Grant li Co. precipi tate nn urmcd conflict, und a civil war ensues, even that cannot equal tbe widespread borroi'B wrapped up in tho industrial and material "situation." Nor is there, or should there bo any mystery in this mutter. Mongrclisin is a social disease, as deadly to tbe na tion as small pox or plague to tho in dividual man, and thu incorporation and attempt to ubsorb four millions of negroes in onr political system must as absolutely destroy that system as small pox kill tho tndividuul. This simple but awful truth is demonstrated all about us. No President in Mexico or tbo Mongrel Republics of South Ameri ca ever gut his scat until after a fight, and a bloody anarchy and universal Impoverishment is chronic every whore. It is the misfortune as much as the fault of the miscreants, Chamberlain, Stearns, Kellogg, Warmoutb, 4c, for, us there is not one honest wbito man from the Rio Grande lo Bror.il, so too, tbo purest und best man in all the North that goes to the front and strives to enforce Mongrelism, will become a do- graded and worthless beast, capable of every possible crime, and deterred solely by hi abject cowardice. A Re publican hero in tho North, bedeviled soleiy by an abstraction, is an honest and worthy citizen, but tho instant bu goes to the front and strives to apply his abstraction and equalise with ne groes, ho becomes a devil, a beast, capable, as wo havo said, of every con ceivablo crime, and held in check solely by his abject cowardice. Hut leaving all this out of view, the materiul and industrial question is in finitely more terrible than is the politi cal, and may bo grasped by this simplo, transcendent and awful trulh Ecery " frreilman " in the South t?nh to generate a tramp in the. Sorth ; or, in other words, the abnormal condition of tbo labor system of ibo South recoils and per verts that of tbe North, and at this moment a million of men out of em ployment are on tho march to tramp ism, and the rapid growth of a monster whoso Medusa bead, now barely seen above tho horizon, muy soon terrify and shock civilizatiun itself with its awful proportions fully revealed. What, then, is the remedy, or how ran Iho impending horrors be avoided ? Why, simply and solely by the white or liumoguneous Republic of Washing ton and Jackson, leaving the negro element to tho Stales to deal with as best they can, Huinun society can ex isl and civilization advance under Kings or Ruwian Czars, but it dies tba instanl Mongivlism exists, aa shown by our census returns, and could the North stand it, it would needs be simply a a mutter ol lime when South Curoliua, Florida und Louisiana would bo depop. uluted, both white and negro as abso lutely extinct as if no human fst had ever trod tlietr aotl. This porlcntious aval terrtblo truth must be brought home lo tbo musses, and the Demo cratic press must do this patriotic, and, under tho circumstances, holy work, and the journal calling itself Demo cratic '.hat fuill lo do it, or assents to Mongrelism in the abstract, ia a more dangerous enemy to the Democratic cause than an open and avowed Mon- grel or black Republican orean. There " . , , ,, i jusv one eimpiu, paipauie, common sense test to be applied if a loan honestly believes that the negro is of tho same species as himself, and there fore il is beneficial lo mate and mix the the blood of tho races, then let him ad vocate the attempted " reconstruction," and strive to absorb the negro clement in tho nation; but if ho knotct that God and nature utterly forbid thisalmalga mution in iho individual, then ho mutt know tbnt a Mongrel citizenship is death lo the nation ; as well as to De mocracy. The time has come when this momentous issue is real, direct, and must be met by tho press and tho Democratic leadership, and therefore all truo Democrats must rally aa one man for li e restoration ol the Republic of Washington, and spit upon every newspaper and politician that fails to stand by it. In conclusion, think, render, oh think, what a majestic as well as fatal issue tbe white Republic of Washington or tho Mongrel anarchy of Grant 1 nnd therefore every word you speak, every act of your lifo, every journal you rend or support, tend to the restoration of order, peace, prosperity, and the bound less good of future generations, or to the ruin, desolation and death of your institutions, in a sinful and monstrous effort to absorb four millions of differ ent species in tho nation I A'ew York Diiy Bonk. Thousands ol hearers are like spec tators at a banquet who come into the gallery and look down upon the guests wboaro feasting below, but never tasto a morsel themselves. For them there nru no daintios Cor actual tasting; they look at the oxon and tbo latling, they see thoenjoymenlol thefeastem, some times they feel their own mouths water ing for the good things, and they al most onvy those who are banqueting ; butlhepdo not seek a place at tho load ed tablet for themselves, they remain lookers-on. John Delano bos gone to Colorado to try how Mock-raisingrompa ret with In dian contract as a mean of livelihood. Tbt value ol real MUUinUass. ckuuertta Ml off laat year tAS OOe COO I C 11 BAP GROCKHIE.S! " " . M'MBF.R CITT, PA. Th. and.r.lrn.d ennouBoe. to bis .Id frUnda ..d patron, that b. haa op.n.d a good lino at UHOCKRIKS A PHOVIHIONS at Ih. .Id .land .1 Kirk A .e,Hr, for oblrb b. mII.Ui . literal palrraag.. II. W. SPKNCKK. Laahar Htv. P... M.n-k t t SEWING MACHINES. Lienv atnaise FF.WWO MACHINE FOR RALE BY mi.FM IC. BKKIW, CI.KAHFIKt.il. PA. (Itrsldraai I. West rienrflrlj ) All kinds of SEWINM MAnilXK I.'LKINIID aa.l RKPAIItKO Also, dealer la all kltcls of rl-wlnf Machine Needle,, nil, Huffier.. Teek-marber., Oseler.. Thread OoMere, lleramer. sod Binder., Oil Co., Shuttles. Chaeh-.prln., Peed Ifrtaee, A... New Feed p.. In Ih. oi l alyk Wlieoler A Wllsoa Maobloea. Mew Cog ehe.1. pu ia lbs dialer Maehiaa. OLD M AI'IIINKI or (I RAI.V take . Ja pin pavrn.nl for New Maflbie... Will eal'. at th. reatdeno. of persons living ia or about ClearBel.l. If aoeihing in bis line I. desired, if perHinallv Informed, or Ihruueh he Poatofilo. be Iclier or po.r.l oar.l. tlnod. .eat by a.ll if desired. In ordering be leli.r. he .ure .nd glv.naa.of Macfain.. (.'a.h most seonmpany allorderabya.il. MILKS U. BKb'KS. Cltarlald, Pa., Aug. IMS Ja. i. P. aa.rea... ,.sr. w. eerr. WEAVER A IIETTS CLEARFIELD, PA., An offering, at tb. eld rt.aa of 0. L. Road A Co. th.tr l took of go.de, consisting of DRY GOODS, GROCERIES, BOOTS A SHOES, HATS A CAPS, HARDWARE, QUEENSWARE, FLOUR, FEED, SALT, 4o., tto,, At th. aost roasouahl. rat.s for CASH or la irk.ng. for Square Timber, Boards, Shingles, OR COUNTRY PRODUCE. JOW'AdvaBoat aad. to tbow .ngaged ia get ting oat aquar. ttaber oa th. aost advantageous terms. pdtlJanTS Guarded the llirheal .liedal ttl I'triiiia. E. & H.T. ANTHONY A CO() ABI Brondwaj, New York. (Opp. Metropolitan Deter, MARoracTintna, im roaring hd dialer i C II ROM OS & FRAMES, STEREOSCOPES d- VIEWS Albame. Graphoecope, Pbot.e;revbe, and kindred gooda Celebritiee, Actretie, At., rilOTOGRArijuT MATERIALS. Wo are headquarter for everything In tbe way of Storeoptixona t&i 2a?io Liatoriis, Being Mann Tact or era of tb MICRO SCIENTIFIC LAKTBRS, 8TKRKO.PNMTK'ON, LNIVKRSITV 8TEHOP7ICOX. ADVKKTISKK-H BTKKOI'TICON, ARTOPTICOS, 8CU00L LANTKRV KAMfLT LANTERN, PEOPLE 3 LANTERN. Baob atyle being the beat of Ita .! io the aarkt. Caialoguoa of Ltnternt and 8liJe, wiib direc tion fur aing, aent on aplioaiia. Any rnterprltlng man can make money with a Mania Lantern. er-Vieilora to tbt Ontnoiat EKpoaltion will do wierly to defer pure baaing aood in our liue until tbey pome to eur turn in New York, where tbry will And greater rartety and more m idorrtte prieee, and e-a ultwt then at their leisure. Hut wo have a eoneenalttn to orll eome titles of nnr good In tbe building ef tb Drpertmrnt of PuMie Contort, and thoee not oomn.g tu New York ore invited to eall on ear reprraeuutioa tbt-re. affar-A full itork of Viewa of tbe Expitlr and their con tenia. -T-Cut out tbia ad retirement lor ftference.'9x June T, CALIFORNIA. run rmcaeo iimt wktiit au.wtr Embraeea under one manarrtnent tbe Ureal Trunk Railway Llneeef tbe VY ES T and NORTH- WhST, and, with Ita nameroni branch and 1 eeateelloefcforas the .h-.ise.t and quick..! rmile i belwatoCwtc.ao.nd .11 point. In ll.i.lxoi. Wis. ronai. Noam Kan Mirnieaa, Mis-mntA. Iowa, NBBUABAt CAt.ireaniA and tha W net a a TanniTonma. lie Omaha and California Line le tbe ebrtrteet and beat rant for all poin re in NonTH..it Ii.Lirtoia, Iowa, Dakota. Nbraika, Wrouiao Coi.oNAno, I'tah, Nkvaiia C alitor nt a Oitr,aH, Cum a, Jatam and Ai'mtkama. It fliicno, Madison & SI. Taul Line I Ibvabnrteat Una fur Nurtrkhr Wisro-am and M iimrrota, and for Mamko-, Bt. Patl, Mi-. RRArotia, Di Lrrn and all point In tbe Urvat Northweat. Ita AYhona anil SI. Polcr Line la the only route for Wii-..ni, Rocnr.-Tin, Ow. To, M a r k a ta, St. Pntnn. Nirw Kt.n, and nil pointe in Southern and Cmml Minnetota. tta Green and Marquette Line (a the only line for JAiaaviu.a. Wat-row Fon Df Lac, OnnRomt, ArrMtme, Gent Hat. RstCARARA, KaOAHRBR, IMUuqiTRTTU, tiot'HTlll, Hici and the LAXaSx:iicaioaUuNTR, tu Free port and Dubuque Line ta tbe only route for Bini. Rmifonn, Fnm port, and all point via. Krreport. Ita Clilrngo and Milwaukee Line la the aid Lake -bore Route, and la the only one naaeingthmugn KvataTn, i.aki Funn-r, Mian leARD r ARK, HAl-RKOAR, HaViII, KKNOeHA to MILWAt'Kr Pullman I'alntc Cars .e. raa on all tbroeeh leatna of wbls ad. Tbis is th. UNI.i LINK running tba.ee.rs h.. twaeeChieaeo aad Hi. Paul, t'hiraj.i and Milwaa bee, or Cbieao and Wtnn, AtOa.h. our Sleeper enwneet wltb Ih. oeee l.ad Hl.rl,.rs OB th. I'aloa Pew II. Ueilrood for all potola w ..t or ibe M neourl Sleet . Oa tbe arrival ef Ih. trains from Ih. Real or South, tb. trains of th. ChieafnA North Wester, Hallway I.K.VK CIIICA'IO aa (..Howl: ort'.wnrll Hlana.Oa.ha.ndt .llroral.. Two Throuah Train, eallv, wllb Pullaa. H.laeo, Drawing Hoom aad Hlavping Car. tbeoagb lo Couaeil niufla. for hi. Paul and MlnnrapoM.. Two Tbeoagb Trains dally, with Falla.a Palao. Care altaehed e. both teniae. for (ireen Hey ant l av. Kuperlor, Two Traias dally, wllb Pullman Peine. Cars altaehed, aad vanning through In Men,utto, Per Milwaukee, four Tbmu.h Tr.ln.deUv, Pullaa. Can oa Bight tralaa, Pallor Chair Cars en day traina. or Nparta and luona and points In HiaeoMia. Oo. Through Train d.lly, with Pallau Sleeper, le Wlaona. e'er llaou.ue. via freeporl. Two Throagh Tralaa daily, with I'ullnaa Cars oa Bight train.. far lluhaeue aad I41 1 roooe, via Cliaioa, Two Throagh Train, dally, wilh rullaaa Cars ea aighl Irala la MeOreg..r. Inwa. ferMoua i lly aad lanbtM. Twe Train, d.lly Pallwaa Core lo MlMuari Valioy Jw,.ioa, r I. eke (iene.a. Car Trains dallv. for Horbftird, tirrllnj;, Kenoaha. Jane, ellle, aad elbrr poi.n, Sua aa have Iroa two te tea Iraia. daily. Maw Verb Otoe, He. 411 (roadway 1 Boetoa OSJro, Ke. t Rial. SroH Ota. ha Oltloe, IJI r.mbaa tlreel, .. rraaHeoe Otle.. Ill Hons (oasavy tiroes 1 Uhieago Ttrh.t Ooe. t St Clark Klroel, aader tbaraaa Uowaei Mraer Caaal and Madlsee Slreel.i Klaale Slreel llepol, Mraer W Klaal. eat Caaal Slraots Well, Slreel I)e,,.i, eeraae WoM. aad Ria.i. (HraoU. r rate, ee asteeaaaabsa ael atlalaaMe froa yeni - lem ngeait, apply te) w. n. TwaniTT. eej. Pun. Ag Cbraaff. Ian. N, litt-lp Mart. a II van m. U.a. Sai w-a'.s-rV.tr-j Chleeg S'otrtj. THE MANSION HOUSE Corn.rof baoobdaod Mark.1 btraeti Cl.t:AHFll.l:i, PA rpiJIS old .ad .oaaodioa. Hotel hu,4ani L Ua pa.1 ,.ar. b..a .alarg.d h (ora.r ..pc't, for lb. .auruioa.ai f (Wt " g.r. .a. ga.su. Tb. wh..l. b.il.ia. u vj. , , ... r r - 'ti .para pales lo raad.r kl. go..u e.alorubl. okii. auvlog with bia. rrb. 'Maaaloa lloaa." Oa.iboi h ad froa lb. tl.pol .a lb. arrival ... .,,," ,1 .Mb Irala W. C 111,1.... " " " P-si, h eter.WfjCKw rrf J propnei..,,,, Ik J A AV 111 1 MVV Hut H ftraMil. furmorl leunarj ll.tie, belug ItsMl tbe AlifbfB- (! bia tera thorobjajlilr rwp4irtJ aiVeeei, dim. shed, ard gat-eta will Iu4 it a f-'fasem iiiiiff iUea. 'I lie ttl'le will be tU.ilirl u, brei ul everythtaj; ie the mrt.ei. ai it Mill te f.mi-t I be tst inf etui ,,unrt i. i lebln.f ettar-utid. H li. h. blUUUY, Hr-pti SUAW liUUsE, (Cur. of Market A IWl ttrfM CLKAKHELU, PA. Tbe endenigned having Ultea charge ut ihi llutal, would rettpeetfally eollcit imMie ,urt,tut Janl'Tt I. K If V LUti IU.V ' WASiUNGToN HOUSK, NEW WASHIStiToX, u Tbia new and well furniahed b"e bu u taken by the nnJeraigued. He freli eut,ti-bt( being able to render etlefaetion t ltin .(.., t, faror bin with a eal I. May 8, 1171. O. W. IAVS, W.r. LOYD IIOUSeT" Main Ptrert, PIULIPiSKUKO, PEN3TA. Table alwaya anpplted wltb the bM th ett'ts afford. Tbe trevreling pub He p invited t,.r-n jan l.'7S. KOHKKT LOYIt f. . AH -OLD. ft. W. AHNfJI-n. F. K. ARNOLD 4. CO lIiiiik?iM and lfirolu'r, HeyuoldaWlle, Jeffer-aou Co., . Money reeeired efti dpoeit. Di tenant- t m drrete ratea. Km tern and Foreign Kirb;inx-tJ. were on hunl and wjHrtionn prompt Ir Biade Reynnt larille, De IH, l74.-ly County National Bank, OF CLEARFIELD, PA. UOOM In Maaonir Building, one door B -Mfa n, C. D. Wataon'a It rug Store. Paetajfe Ticket to and from Lirerpiw,!, (jurti town, (ilaeguw, London, Pari and ('ni-mt xin Alao, Draft for aale on tbe Rnyal Bank of relon and Imperial Bank of L"n-lnn. JAMFR T. LEONARD, PrWt W. M. 81! AW, Cabirr. 1 :; DREXEL & CO., No. 31 (South Third Htreet, Plill. lrlM, And Dealers in Government Securities, Applieatioa by mail will reeoive prwaptatie, tfon, and all Information cheerfully rurni,be4 Ord.r .olieted. April ll-ir. Jrntistiy. I'ull t of srtllirlal leelh. -Mlule Met of Artiurial Teelh, . HMMI t.S.IMI Dks. HILLS & IIEICWIOLD, DENTISTS. rl.FARFIULO PEXN'A. lir. A M Italia would inform hi. friend, sis patirals Ibet he haa es'oUted with hiia, ia th. prarlte. of denti'try, Or. J. t H. Ilcchh'ild. s geutlein.o wlium b. Sen reeointnend writ ra M aesuranee of gi.tog .etielacii ,n. ab'tul I berh.nee to be u.l of the utnee. All verb guarnnlred I. gir. eall.fattnn. A.M Hll.t.S. 0,1. IS, 'IB tf. J. L.R. UKICIMIOlD. STEWART & BLACKBDEN, DENTISTS, Curweu.sille. C'leardeld County, Puin'a. (Offine ie Qetea' New tl.ildi.g.) Ceiweniville, Joe II, IS?S-ly. DR. E. M. THOMPSON, (OSr. ia Bank Building,) Curweuavllle. ClearHeld t o.. Pa. ehi2'7Str. MEAT MARKET. F. M. CAED0S & BRO., On Market tt , one doer Weat ot MitU'tun lloew, CLEAKF1KI.D, PA. Oar arrangrmenle are f the moat eoini.Mi rharncter mr furniahiag the puMte with Frk M rata of nil kiad, and of tbe very beat quality. We alao deal in all nmde f AgrtenlUral 1 in pie men t a, which we kevp n exbitjition lr tbe txa. eQt of the publie. Call around when In t.ti, and take a look at thing, or eddreea m P. -".. CARDON A DR0. CUarflcid, Pa., July II, 1871 tf. FRESH MEAT-XEW SHOP. The nnderfigned beby in form a ibe euhiie ia gcewral that they keep en head, regu rlr, at thir ahop, a-ljom tog JUH N U U LlCil d mroiiara Motna, opposite the Court llouae, 'he BEST rttKSH BEEF, VEAL, MVTT0X LAMB, f'Uttk', ETC, AT RRDUCKU PRICKS, FOR CASH. Market mom ing Tuoadny, ThanJay, and Saiurdare. Meat de'ered at reaidaatw wliaa destn-d. A aha-o f patronage la rerpes-tfallr eolkited. Maroh I, ltt; ly. 8TAUK A NOKKll. E W C A B IX K T M A K 1 N tf Si I i 0 P. M. B. SPXCKMAN Darea to announce to tbo public that ha bu pence a CABINET MAKING SHOP IN CLEARFIELD, Where be wiU KERPON HAND F TJ n IT I T TJ R X f Ard do all hind of PARINET WORK atd KE PAIR FI'HNITI'RK or all hii-d. n fhnrt notie end In toe lvt prmihle manner. lh p na F-.unb atnrt, o.pnite Park A M rritl' Cxmage hnp. . Aug 1, ", y. JOHN TROUTMAN, DKAI.RK IS tfURNIT URK, ?I lTTftFSSi;H, AND Improved Spring Beds, MARKET STREET, NEAR P. 0. Tbe an!erlgnod brge lere te Infbna the dtl aena of ClearHeld, nnd tbe puhlie gfaerally. thai he hai nn hand a fine aaaortrnrnt of FurRiiara, vrh a Walnut, Cheat out and Painted Ctiamhrt uitea, Parlnr Rultet, Neelining and KtrnsiR Cbaira, LaHii-a' and llrnie' Kay Chair, tbr Vrf fornted Dining and (Sit lor Chair. Cane fi4 Windaor t'haire, Clnthea BHra, Htrp and Kitte aion Laddera, Hat fleck, 8cmhbtng Draibo, Aa MOULDINO AND PICTURE FRANKS. Looking (llaeeea. Cbromoa, Ae., whieb would eui tattle for llolalty preecnta. km 171 Jt)HN TROUTMAN. READING FOR ALU! BOOKS A- STAT10SERY iHerkrt M, flearfleld, (at the Poet ttfflrr.) THE nnderaigned bega leara to ann uaie te the eitlirna of Clt-arfield and riciaiir. that ha baa At ted up a mom nnd haa Jest returned from tbo eity with a large a mount ef reading matter, eon a I ting in part of Bibles aud Miscellaneous Books, RUnk, Aomunt and Paaa Book of everr de aoripiion j P,ip-r and Kuvolopea, French preel And plain t Pen and Pencil; It lank Legal Paper, Dee-ta, Mortgagee j Judgmeft, Ktewe tltju and Prmiaarv notea; White and I'arrh men i Drier, Lrgnl Cap, Heeord Can. and lti'1 C'i rbeel Muaie, lr eltiier Piano, Tata or Vn-lia, , eonatantly on hand. Any book or itatitmary deetred that I may not bavo oa bend. will be urdered by Arat oipreea, nnd nold at wboleaale or retail to ealt 0u torn ere. I will alee keep periodical literature, aucb aa Magaiinee, Newpaperi, Ae. P. A. liAULIN. Cloartl.ld. May t, IMA tf II. A. Kit ATZ K K i KRAT2ERA LYTLE, a. Lea i DRY dOOlie, NOTIONS, B0QT3, IllOfts, lEATHKR, CaPITI OIL CL11 H, WALL rAMlt, IND0W SUAVoS, trc. Market Htreet, Clearteld, re. Jai i, urr.tr