The Elk County advocate. (Ridgway, Pa.) 1868-1883, August 01, 1872, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    &Vx founts ptimate.
IlENftT A. Parsons, Jr., -' - Editor.
THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 1872.
NATIONAL N0HHUT101T3.
FOR PRESIDENT,
tJLYSSES 8. GRANT,
Of Illinois.
JOR VICE-PRESIDENT,
HENRY WILSON,
Of Massachusetts.
HErUBLICAlT STATE TICKET. .
FOR governor:
Mai. Gen. JOHN F. HARTRAN5T,
Montgomery County.
tor supreme judge:
non. ULYSSES MERCUR,
Bradford County. '
FOR AUDITOR GENERAL:
Brig. Gen. HARRISON ALLEN,
Warren County.
CONGRESSMEN AT LARGE:
General LEMUEL TODD,
Cumberland County.
Gen. CHARLES ALBRIGHT,
Carbon County.
GLENNI W. SCOFIELD,
Warren County.
MPTJBLICA1T COUNTY TICKET.
FOR CONGRESS.
Col. C. B. CURTIS,
Erie County.
Greeley and Secession.
It is well settled that a man may be
convicted of crime by circumstantial
evidence provided tbe circumstances
and their connection are of such char
acter as to leave his innocence wholly
;nvmsiRtent with their existence and
connection.
Wns Horace Greclev a secessionist
during our late rebellion, or was he
loyal but cowardly? are questions that
now unbidden present themselves ior
the consideration and discussion of all
alike, the ex-iebel and the continuously
loyal.
Mr. Greeley is to some extent a his
toric character in our late struggle, as
much so in bis sphere, and accoiding to
bis capacity as Jeff Davis. Much that
he has said has passed into history, and
hower much he and his friends may de
sire that what he has said were blotted
out and no more remembered, yet they
are of record, and must so stand whether
honor or dishonor shall come upon the
author.
As a journalist it becomes us, indeed
it is our duty, to state facts and leave
the publio to draw conclusions. If from
the facts in the case it should appear
that Mr. Greeley was loyal but cowardly,
then it is evident that ho was entirely
too dictatorial to those in posts of dan
ger and peril, where he dare not go him
self. What right had Mr. Greeley or
any other coward to dictate offensively
to those who had periled life itself, to
eay nothing of the sacrifice of all that
made lite dear, and the world desirable,
when ho bad not tbe courage to come
within the sound of the clash of arms, or
fnr a sinffle dav endure the
o "
privations of the camp and field.
And yet every soldier, and every
citizen knows that Horace Greeley
was the most inexorable grumbler and
fault-finder that lived north of Mason's
and Dixon's line. He found fault with
the soldiers of all grades, from the
private to fhe general commanding,
because they refused to adopt visionary
tactics and lines of operation existing
nowhere else but in the cowardly brain
of "II. G." He found fault with the
Congress, and the President because
they did not see fit to follow his political
prescriptions, which so far as followed
proved disastrous, and if continued
must have proved fatally so to the life of
the nation.
But was be a secessionist? If so,
then he wa the Jannes of the nation,
laving a face ior both Bides of the line
that determined the boundary between
loyalty and treason to the government.
If be was a secessionist, then we can
account for the readiness of his left
handed dagger to strike covertly tbe
fatal blow that should hasten the doom
of the best human government the
sun ever shone upon.
As to whether Mr. Greeley was, or
was not a secessionist we will simply
Btate tbe facts with but little argument,
and leave the ereat national publio
North and South to render its verdict
acoordiog to tbe law and the evidence,
that judgment may be . entered accord
ing. The facts in the case will con-
gist chiefly in what Mr. Greeley has
paid and done, said and done too, at a
time when from the memory ot tne nv
?n it cannot be effaced, and under cir
cumstances that make bis utterances and
doinffs as abiding as time.
On the 9th of November, 1860, when
treason was arming against tbe govern
ment. Mr. Greelev. as he supposed very
wisely and very much like a philosopher
published in the columns of his Trilunt
the following paragraph)
"If the Cotton Slates eh nil decide that
they can do better out of the Union than
in it, we mslet on letting them go in peace.
The right to secede may be a revolutionary
one, but it exists, nevertheless; and we do
not see how one party can have a right to
do what another party has a right to pre
vent, we must ever resist tbe asset-tea
right of any stale to remain in the Union
and nullify or defy the laws thereof. To
withdraw from the Union is quite another
mat ter. And, whenever a considerable sec
tion of our Union shall doliberatoly resolve
to go out we shall resist all coercive meas
ures designed to keep it in."
This paragraph was repeated again in
the Tiibune on the 17th and 24th of
December, 1860; again February 23d,
1861, and again affirmed by Mr.
Greeley in his letter to Mr. II. Mo
Chesney of Troy, N. Y., dated Sept.
23d, 1862, and published in his Tribune
Sept. 2Gth, 1862.
It will be seen that Mr. Greeley makes
a ludicrous effort at playing the role of
the statesman, philosopher, and philan
thropist. He evidently intends hand
ing bis name down to posterity as the
later Jefferson, as well as tbe "Later
Franklin " It will be seen that Mr.
Greeley perverts the Declaration of In
dependence when he holds secession to
be revolutionary, and revolution to be a
right, against which no coercive measure
Bhould be brought to bear, and if coer
cive measures were employed he should
oppose them. Now what was, and is the
difference between Horace Greeley and
Jeff Davis. Davis claimed the right to
seceed, and was sorely annoyed at the
coercive measures employed by the gov
ernment to prevent secession, and only
desired to be ' let alone," that they
might "go in peace," and in peace tear
up the government of th9 United States,
and out of the ruins thereof, build up
a confederacy whose chief corner stone
should be slavery.
Greeley places this right to eecced on
the famous declaration that governments
der'ne "their just powers from the con
sent of the governed, and that whenever
any form of government becomes
(instructive of these ends it is the
right of the people to alter or abolish it,
and to institute new governments, ttc,
etc." Now this was precisely the posi
tion taken by Jeff Davis, and his coad
jutors in rebellion, but neither Davis
nor Greeley, nor any other secessionist
tells us when or in what particular the
government of the United States with
held any right guaranteed to the govern
ed by the constitution and laws of the
country. When and by whom was any
right either state or individual, with,
held by the Federal Government from
any state or citizen before the rebellion?
Neither Greeley, nor his coadjutor Jiff
Davis, have informed us when the trov
ernmeut of the United States, deprived
national honor and making ours in very
deed the "Land of the free and the
land of tbe brave."
During all the years of that fearful
struggle, Greeley was not the man to
utter a word in behalf of the 4,000,000
of human beings then in the very
woist form of servitude the sun ihooe
upon, so intent was he on his peace
business according to the notions of se
cessionists and armed rebels.
That Greeley was in sympathy with
secession is further confirmed by his
speech at Vicksburg (not long ago
either), when he expressed the hope
that the time was not far distant when
the soldier who fought with Lee, and
Johnson, would occupy as proud a po
sition in the hearts ot the American
people as the soldier who fought with
Grant and Sherman, and Thomas. Is
it to be wondered at that Jeff Davis,
Wade Hampton, N. 13. Forest, and
others whose bitterness toward the gov
crnment is notoriously unrelenting
should favor their old friend Horace,
who stands committed to the proposition
of pensioning disabled rebel soldiers,
sbouid ne oe eieetea rresiaenr.. .how.
from the lacts we nave ottered to our
mind it is evident that Greeley was
either a coward, or in sympathy with
secession, during the rebellion. If he
was a coward then he was and is simply
o inteoopt ible and as such was and is the
enemy of bis race. If he was
in svmpathy with tho rebel move
ment, then should loyal men and espec
ially every soldier hold him in execra
tion, and remember him in this the day
of his impudence in asking the suffrage
ol good men and true, for the Chief
Magistracy of a great and free people.
On the 4tb of November, 1872, Horace
Greeley and his peers in tho work of
overturning our National Government,
will be taught a lesson that they will
remcmbor to their life's latest hour,
when ninety-niue out of every hundred
of the surviving "boys iu blue," will
announce through the ballot box that
this is a loyaf man's government, made
by and for loyal men, to be maintained,
sustained, and carried on by loyal men
without regard to nationality, religion,
or creed."
W. S. oLRVICE-
GO AND SEE!
IT WILL PAY!
THE LARGEST STOCK
OP TIIE BEST NO OTHER IN STOCK
S TO TE SI
JF YOU WANT TO BUY
GOODS CHEAP
GO TO
THAYER & HAOERTY
Main Street, Ridgway, Fa.
DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, BOOTS,
SHOES, HATS AND CAPS,
GLASS AND QUEENS-
WARE, WOOD AND
WILLOW.WARE,
TOBACCO AND CIGARS.
A Large Stock of
Groceries and Provisions.
The BEST BRANDS of FLOUR
Constantly on hand, add sold as cheap
as the CHEAPEST.
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS IN
ENDLESS "V ARIETY.
PRICES WILL SUIT!
GOODS WILL PLEASE!
j sill mnm
or attempted to deprive the people of
Republican form of government, or a
proper representation in tho legislative
branch of the government according to
leal forms before the rebellion, thereby
making secession and revolution a duty
as well as a right.
Again Greeley shouts "On to Rich
mond" and so far as was possible for one
man to do so, precipitated the first battle
of Bull Run, befuro anything was in
readiness for such a conflict, and then
counseled a cessation of hostilities.
Again in 18GI when President Lin
coln called out an army of 300.000 men,
Greeley was loud in regrets at what he
regarded as a very unfortunate course,
but inasmuch as there could be no re
cession, he counseled the President to
make but one effort with that army and
if unsuccessful make overtures ot peace
on any terms. Hostilities must cease
no cost of national honor is too great in
his and the estimation of his compatriot
Colorado Jewott compared with what
they called by the high sounding title of
fratracidal war.
Greeley made appeals in his Tribune
to the people over nis own signaturo
urging tbe neceessity by attempts at
argument, but especially by bis old time
honored system so natural to him, viz
denunciatorv siemida against the
President, against the army, the navy
in fine one and all in any way connected
with the work of putting down the re
bellion, except in his way, and accord
ing to bis suggestions,
Horace Greeley sat in counsel with
George Saunders and others, pretended
representatives of of the Rebel Confed
eracy, and promised the influence of his
paper to eflect a peace at any cost of na
tional houor He put himself in corres
pondence with the French minister wbe
that magnate offered the mediatory ser
vice of bis master Napoleon III on pre
tence of humanitv. When Blair Sr.
set about a self-oonstructed peace com
mission to tbe dfsgust of the loyal peo
Die of the Unitod States. Horace
Greeley was bis fugleman heralding h
praise as a benefactor to mankind.
From the hour that Sumpter was
fired upon, to the taking of Richmond
Greelev had no encouraging; word to
WW
offer to tbe noble President whose firm
ness and patriotism brought us
POWELL & KIMK.
Powell & Kimc
Having erected a large and well arranged
new Store House on the old site, sinoe the
fire, and filled It from oi liar to garret with
BUSINESS CARDS.
I A. RATHBUN,
" JC Ridgway, Pa.
Attorney. at-Lsw,
2 2tf.
1-OHN O. HALL, Attorney at law, Kig.
O way, Elk county Pa. mar.22'861
AS. HILL, Physioiau and
, Kersey, Elk Co. Pa.
J O. W. BAILEY,
ATTORNET-ATLAW.
Surgeon
vlnioyl. Ridgway, Elk County, Pa.
Agent for the TraVeWn T.lf A I.
the choicest goods of all descriptions, that J dent Insurance Co., of Hartford, Conn.
can be found in any market, are fully pre
pared to receivethelr old customers, and
supply their wants at bottom figures
JTEVNOLOS
vln2.
THAYER & II AG ERTY.
The Improved Gerard Orotd
Gold Watch 8,
$9.00 12.00 115.00 $18.00 .
XTTE have recently brought our Oroide
T T Gold metal to such perfection that
it is difficult for the best judges to distin.
quish it from gold. Tho $9 watches are
with patent escapement movements; in ap
pearance and for time equaling a gold one
oosting $100. The $12 are full jeweled
patent lever, equal to $150 gold watch.
The $16 are the same as tbe last but a finer
finish, nickle movements, equal to one cost'
ins $175. And the $18 watohes are of
fine finish with full jeweled American lever
movement, equaling a gold one costing
$200.
TV. .11 tm LnntlnM nn una nnnf'i nnrl
' Indian aivaa and oMia.rn.nf pari for t.imn And
wear by special certificate. Also elegant
designsof gent s and ladies chains from 51
to $4, and jewelry of all kinds.
Goods sent C. 0. D. Customers per
mitted to examine what they order before
paying bill, on payment of express t harges.
When six watches are ordered at one
time we will send an extra watch of the
same quality free.
t or further particulars send tor circular.
Address JAMES GERARD & CO.,
85 Nassau Street, New York,
P. O. Box 3,301
Nov. 80, 1872-vln37mC.
WHOLESALE OR RETAIL.
Their assortment is now comploto, com
prising DRY GOODS
GROCERIES,
CROCKERY,
HARDWARE,
HOUSE,
REYNOLDSVILLE, JEFFERSON CO, PA.
H. S. BELNAP, Proprietor .
JS. Bordwell, M. D. Eclectio Physioan
, Office and residenoe opposite the
Jail, on Centre St., Ridgway, Pa. Prompt
attention will be given to all calls. Offioc
hours: 7 to 8 A. M-i 12 to 2 P t ,
6 to 7 P. M. Mar. 22. 66-tf.
TR. G. WHIPPLE,
Dental Sursreon.
Office at thh Drntr Ht.nr nt TT.rlo
Whipple, Walker's new building, Main
street, Ridgway, Pa. Will visit Kane,
oucox, ana et. Mary's.
vln2yl. s
TS. HARTLEY. M. D
Physician and Surgeon,
Ridgway, Pa. Office in Walker's Building.
Special attention given to Surgery. Office
house from 8 a. m. to 10 p. m. Residence
on corner of South and Court streets, op
posite the new School House. All calls
promptly attended to.
vln2yl.
i1 G. MESSENGER,
VJ Dru
Druggist and Parmaoeutigt, corner
Main and Mill streets, Ridgway, Pa. A
full assortment of carefully selected For
eign andsDomestio Drugs. Prescriptions
carefully dispensed at all hours, day or
night. vln3y.
STOVES DELIVERED AND SET
THE TICKET COMPLETE.
The State Central Committee met
yesterday and, as will be Reen by., the
proceedings published in auother part ot
to-day's Telegraph, completed the State
ticket by the nomination of an additional
-..lector at large and two candidates tor
Congress at large.
Gen. Chas. Albright, tho nominee for
Congress at urge, from the oastorn part
of tho State, is well known to every
loyal man in the Commonweulth. Dur
ing the dark hours of the rebellion he
eft bis peaceful pursuits and lricnds at
home to share the horrors ot war wim
our noble standard bearer for Governor,
General Hartranft, and General Allen,
the candidate for Auditor General.
It was especially through his exertion
end influence that the stronghold ot
Democracy in which he resided, and
which is so well known Carbon, Le
high, Northampton and Luzerne turu.
1 out so many soldiers to hjiht on the
I'uion side, lie raised a regiment in a
very shore time, at the head of which he
was placed as Uo'onel. He was alter
wards promoted to a lirigadicr General
ship for gallant services on the battle-
held.
The General is a ready speaker, able
to address his fellow citizens in German
and English, and we hope to hear him
in this country before the present cam
paign closes.
lion. Glenni W. Scoficld is one of
the ablest and truest men in the State; he
has represented the largest Congression
al district in the State, composed of the
counties of Eric, Warren, M'Kean,
Forest, Elk, Cameron, Jcflerson and
Clearfield, for the past tcu years, and
bis record in Congress will bear tbe
scrutiny of all honest and upright men.
On the floor of Congress he stands in
the first ranks ; he is a ready debater,
i . -lit t . i
ana our citizens win ue aoie to near
him, no doubt, betore the campaign
closes.
Philadelphia beinir the largest Repub-
hcan city in tbe btate, was awarded an
additional Elector at large, and we are
glad that the selection has fallen on
such an able gentleman as Wm. D. For-
ten, Esq. Jlr. r.is an educated cen
tlcman ot tne highest order, and one ot
the best stump speakers in the Slate.
i he ticket is now complete, and tho
selections made yesterday give great
satisfaction and will add five thousand
to the large majority now predicted for
the wnole state ticket, lhe sections of
the Stato which heretofore imagained
that they were badly treated have re
ceived all they asked for at the hands of
tbe committee, and express themselves
satisfied.
From all the reports we received yes
terday the election of the whole State
ticket is placed beyond a doubt. Active
work has already commenced in nearly
all the counties of the State, and all ot
them promise better results and larger
majorities than they gave us last year
Buckalew and hit Fishing Creek con
fedcracy are doomed to an ignominious
defeat on the tecond Tuesday of Vcto
ber next. The question now is only as
to what majority tee shall give. Not
less than twenty thousand in October
will satiev the loyal hearts of the
country, and that will be increased to
fifty thousand m November Harns-
FREE1 FItEE! F11EE1
CALL AND EXAMINE!
A PLEASURE TO" SHOW
GOODS!
W. S. SERVICE,
No. 1 Masouio Hall Building,
Ridgway, Pa,
4 GENTS WANTED! For the fastest
f and most popular book with GO II
lustrations, likenesses of all the Presidents
beutifully bound, and printed on tinted
a per.
THE NATION,
Its Rulers and Institutions,
1M ENGLISH AND GERM AM
Nothing like it. Strikes everybody as
just the book they need. It is tin hncyclo-
rxeuia ot the Uovernmeni. single pagci
in it. are ot themselves worm me price oi
the book over 500 patjet and only Jf'.OO.
1CH HARVEST, for t'unvasscrs
ladies and eenllcmen fanners, teachers
and students. One agent took 75 ordert in a
few dait, with circular alone, before the book
pnpeared. S20 A DAY enn be cleared in
air territory. Write at once ior circular
and information. NEW WORLD PUB
L18HING CO., Cor. "th and Market Streets,
Philudolphia. vlnJjl.
D0013 AND SHOES,
CLOTHING. riHARLES HOLES,
j lyaicumnKcr, engraver ana jeweler,
Main street, Ridgway, Pa. Agent for tbe
Howe Sewing Machine, and Morton Gold
Pen. Repairing Watches, etc, done with
h e same accuracy as heretofore. Satis
actio a guaranteed. vlnly.
HATS AND CAPS,
IT
SHAVER nOUSE.
RAILROADS-
NOriONrf.Jetc, etc.
PHILADELPHIA AND ERIE RAILROAD.
SUMMER TIME TABLE.
Nandnftcr MONDAY, .JUNE 3d, 1872,
the trains on the Philadelphia &
Erie Rnilroad will run as follows:
WESTWARD.
.Mail Train leaves Philadelphia.il. 30 p. m.
" Ridgway is.Uo p. m.
arrive at Erie 7.30 p. ra.
Erie Exp leaves Philadelphia. ..12.30 p. m
" " " ludgway i.io a. m.
" " arrive at Erie 7.40 a. m.
Accomodation, leaves Renova, ...2.00 p. m.
' Ridgway,..!). 14 p. ni.
" nrr at Kane 7.30p.m.
EASTWARD.
Mtk'.l Train leaves Erie 11.25 a. m.
" " Ridgway..... 4.50 p. ra.
" " arrive at l'liilud'a... 6.40 a. m.
Erie Express loaves Erie 7.50 p. m.
" " " Ridgway. ..12. 38 a. m.
" " an-at Philadelphia.. 1.20 p. m.
Accomodation, leaves Kane 7.30 a. m.
" " Ridgway... 8.40 a.m.
orr nt St. Marys 9.12 am.
' arr at Renovo 12.10 p.m.
Mail East "connects cast and well at Erie
with L S & M S R W and at Corry and
Irvineton with Oil Creek and Allegheny R
R W.
Mail West at Corry and Irvineton with
Oil Creek and Allegheny R R W.
Warren Accommodation east and west
with trains on L S and M S R east and
west and at Corry with 0 C and ARR tV.
Erie Accommodation East at Corry and
Irvineton with O C and ARR W.
WM. A. BALDWIN.
Gen'l Sup't.
NEWTIME TABLE.
Commencing November 20th, 1871.
ALLEGHENY VALLEY R. R.
the best Route between Pitts
burgh ANDPOIXTSON THE
PIllL'A. & ERIE R. R.
PORK. FLOUR. SALT.
Feed.Beana, Butter,
DRIED APPLES,
DltlUD PEACHES,
D. D. COOK, Proprietor,
Cor. Mill and Centre Sts., Ridgway, P.
The proprietor takes this method of an'
nouncing to the public that he has refitted,
revised, and improved, this well known
hotel, and is prepared to entertain all
who favor him with their patronage, in the
best ttyle and at low rates. vln30tf.
w. c. healy!
DEALER IX
EE7 GOODS. GH00EEIE3, PR0VISI0K3
PRODUCE, FRUITS, 4o.
vlu8tf. West End, Ridgfay, Pa.
HYDE HOUSE,
Ridgway, Elb Co., Ta,
XV. 11. SCI1KAM, Proprietor.
Thankful for tho patronage heretofore
so liberally bestowed upon him, the oevr
proprietor, hopes, by paying striot at
tention to the comfort and convenience of
guests, to merit a continuance oi the
same.
Oct 80 18C9.
T
Canned Goods,
OOINO SOUTH.
Day Express leaves Oil City at
Arrives at 1'iltsburgu
Sigh
THE GREAT CAUSE
of Human Misery.
Just Published, in a Scaled Envelope, Price
six cents, A Lecture on the Nature, Treat
ment, and Radical cure of spermatorrha-a,
induced by eelfAbuse, Involuntary emiss
ions, Impotency, Nervous Debility, and la
pediments to Marriage generally; Con
sumption, Epilepsy, and Fits; Mental and
rnysicat incapacity, sc. uy nou. j.
CULVERWELL. M. D., author of the
"Green Book," &o.
The World-renowned author, in this ad
mirable Lecture, clearly proves from his
own experience that the awful consequences
of Self-Abuse may be effectually removed
without medicine, and without dangerous
surgical operations, bougies, instruments,
rings, or cordials, pointing out a mode of
cure at once certain and effectual, by which
every sutterer, no matter wbat bis condition
may be, cure himself cheaply, privately and
radioally. This lecture will prove a boon
to thousands and thousands.
Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to
any address, on receipt of six oen ta, or two
postage stamps, by addressing the publish
era. Also, DR. CCLVERWELL'S "Mar
riage Guide," price 60 cents. Address the
Publishers.
CHAS. J. C. KLINE & CO.
127 Bowery, New York. P. 0. Box 458fl.
vln47ylcl.
triumph to the end, with no sacrifice of burg Telegraph. 28 tost.
Wood's New Iron Mower.
AGENTS WANTED.
For Ciroulars, particulars, etc, address,
SELLEW, ADAMS & CO.,
Gowanda, N. Y.
Manufacturers of the
Gowanda Plow,
the best made. For sala in Ridgway
by POWELL. & KIME
April 18tb, '72-3m.
2 25pm
8 65 p m
9 30 p m
6 40 a m
9 45 a m
0 00 p m
7 15am
10 15 a m
glit Express leaves Oil City
Arrives ot Pittsburgh
Mail loaves Oil City
Arrives at Pittsburgh
Parker's AecomJ leaves Oil City
Arrives at. Parkei's
Kiltanning Accom. leaves Oil City 4 00pm
Arrives at Kittanniug 910pm
fiOINO NORTH.
Day Express leaves Pittsburg at 7 50 a m
Arrives at Oil City at 2 25 p m
Night Express leaves Pittsburgh 8 20 p m
Arrives at Oil City 5 45 am
Way Pussenger leaves Pittsburgh 11 50 am
A arrives at Oil City 7 26 p m
Parker's Accom. leaves Parker 6 00 p m
Arrives at Oil City 9 15pm
Kittaning Accom. leaves KlUn g 7 05 a m
Arrives at Oil City 12 20 p m
Close Connections made at Corry for
Pittsburgh with trains East and West on
P. & E. R. R.
Pullman Pallace Drawing Room Sleep.
ing Cars on Night Express Trains between
Corry and Pittsburgh.
Ask for lickets via Allegheny Valley R.
R.
J. J. LAWRENCE. Gen. Sunt.
In short everything wanted in thn'Conntry
by
LUMBERMEN, FARMERS, ME
CHANICS, MINERS, TAN
NERS, LAliOltlNG.MEN,
EVERYBODY
HE OLD BUCKTAIL'S HOTEL,
Kane, McKean Co., Pa
R. E. LOOKER, Proprietor.
Thankful for the patronage heretofore to
liberally bestowed upon him, the new pro
prietor, hopes, by paying strict attention
i to the comfort and convenience of guests,
to merit a continuance of the same. The
only stables for horses in Kane and well
kept night or day. vln23yl.
HALL & BRO
Attorneys - at - Law
ST. MARY'S,
ELK COUNTY F1TNSYL7AUIA,
JO, IN d. HALL JAS. K. P. BILt
KERSEY HOUSE, .
Centbsvillk, Elk Co., Pa.
John Collins, Proprietor.
Thankful for the patronage heretofore
so liberally bestowed upon him, the new
propriolor, hopes, by paying strict at
tention to the comfort and convenience
of guests, to merit a continuance of the
same.
S. A. ROTE,
PHOTOGRAPHER,
AND DEALEB I
Chromos, Stereoscopic Views, Picture
Frames, io.
WEST END, RIDGWAY, ELK CO. PA.
v2n2tf.
H. W1LBER,
Also full stock'of
MANILLA ROPE
DAGUSCAHONDA EAILEOAJD.
From and after Monday. Feb. 6th 1871.
Trains will run on this Road as follows;
Leaves Earley 7.30 a. m., arrives at
Dagusoalionda Junction 8.10 a. m., con
necting with Accom. east 8.14 a. m., and of the'best manufacture, of suitable sizes
wiiu man west at a.io a. m. i
Leaves Daguscahouda at 9.20 a. m., I tor rafting and running purposes.
aruves at Parley lu.uu a. m. Leaves
Earley 8.30 p. m., and arrives at Dae-
uscanonaa at o.uu p. m., connecting
with Mail east at 5.09 p. m., and Ac
commodation west at 5.40 p. m.
In case P. & E. trains are late. Damis.
Tickets should always be procured
DcioTe leaving stations.
n TJ Tj 1 T T w
v. . messes. lidgway, Pa., Mareh , 1871
J.
One Door East of the Post Office, Main
ot., ludgway, Pa.
Vegetables of all kinds re-
ceivea aaiiy.
Choice oranges and lemons.
vlnltf.
P. W. HAYS,
DEALER IN
Try Goods, Notions, Groceries,
and General Variety,
FOX, ELK CO., PA.
Earley P. O- '
vln47tf.
J.D
PARSONS,
Manufacturer and Dealer in Roots
Shoes,
Ham at., opposite uotei,
v27,
Wucox Pa,