The Elk County advocate. (Ridgway, Pa.) 1868-1883, October 16, 1873, Image 2

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    4
Editor
TRfjRSDAY. OCTOBBR 10, 1873.
Letter from Ohio.
Cincinnati, Ohio, )
October 13ih, 1873. j
Dbar Advocatk:
Arbyon not glad that tTie agony is
bout over? Iu fact it wilt bo completely
over by the" timo this reaches yoa, nnd
tTie good quiet folks nil over Hie land
can have a season oi rest, and release
from this everlasiiug bore of politics,
which 19 the mainstay of the average
American, and, at the sain time his
bane. What would he do without' his
regular dish of political hash, served up
all seasons, 'and reeking with filth
and scandal and trickery of the other
party. l'leaiuut associations broken,
friends, estranged and memories embit
tered, the result of our insane tnania
for political excitement, constitute about
the sum total we attain, rn the present
mode of electioneering and electing. It
is not my place, perhaps, to ..attempt a
lecture. Political howiletics are Dot my
fortey oo d if they were, I'm too much
disgusted, just at present, to ascend the
pulpit: I've just left a political meeting
at Mozart Hall, and perhaps tbot may
account for my present frame of mind. I
won't intimate which party was holding
a lovefeast. They aro all tarred with
the same dirty stick, and the slang flung
nt the Democrats is pretty generally re
paid in kind. Perhaps it's jus: ns well.
By and by the people will bcin to re
alize tho great nccccssity for their1 tak
ing an active part in affaiis which con
cern themselves ' and the luturc : but
they will need a great many terrible re
minders, beloro they rise in their
strength, and, cleaning out the filth of
the political stables, at the same time do
away with the leeches aud vampires eut
ing out their substance, and ciushing
out their manhood, whether" they crawl
under the name of. Credit Mobilcr asso:
ciations, Salary grabbers, Custom House
or Court Ilouse Rings. When the peo
ple do this, and refuse to be leu routid
by the nose by any man or set of men,
the country-at large will be the better
for it. Not until then. For the prea
errt, thank goodnoes the politicians,
teDt is folded, aud all over the labd be
is silently stealing away, which is true
in a double sense I'm not blood-thirsty
but am about ready to consent that the
Royal North American Republican
found only within the limits of the
States should be led outside and very
carefully slaughtered.
THE PANIC
Still shakes its grim visaged front at
us, and when the end will come and
what it will be no one can foretell. 0n
'change the announcement is daily made
that the financial out-look is growing
brighter; and so far as this assertion
goes, the same out-look by this time
should be too bright to look upon.
While our Ranks are paying out, as
usual, to their depositors, the ugly fact
stares us in the face that the great man
ufacturing establishments of the city,
are either closing entirely or running on
half time. A great many thoughtful
people here, look on this panio simply
as the forerunner of the storm. There
has been so much extravagance I am
not now speaking as a partizan in the
National, 'State; County and'Muncipal
governments ; so much wi'd speculation
in stocks, so great extravagance, 'especi
ally on the part ol women, in our do
mestic ecoDomy,that a day of reckoning,
I think, must surely and speedily come.
Nations are but men of larger growth,
and in their political economy should be
gnided by the rules which in bis domes
tic economy gives the individual a
healthy prosperity. One good effect of
this panio, will undoubtedly, be the
death-blow to fancy stock dealings.
Till! MELANCHOLY DAYS
have come, so far as regards any news
items. which might bo of interest. Prac
tically the election Is over. The un
wonted crowds on Vine Street, to-day,
(Sunday) in tie neighborhood of the
Enquirer office, and a like gathering on
4th St., near the Republican Headquar
ters, in their feverish looks, aud nervous
actions shew the final struggle is at
band. There is more earnest determiua
tion shown this year, perhaps, than at
aDy previous election. The two old
parties are, most undeniably, exercised
over the front the new and lately despised
People's Party, is showing. It is equally
undeniable that the ablet speakers and
most experienced stumpers .and wire
pullers, have joined this new movement.
On the Democratic 'side we miss such
men as ex-Seoafor Pugh, Judge Cald
well, the Eiving family, Judge Headley
and Oliver; while the places which .
were filled by. Fred. Haussarek, a most
brilliant speaker and a man of genius;
Enoch T. Carson the shrewd politician ;
Judge Stallo and ex-Governor Cox,
both men of profound Bcbolardhip,andof
great ability as lawyers, in the Republi
can rauks are now vacant. And all
these men tie working heartily and
daily in tho ranks cf the People's Party
Henry A. Parsons, Jr.
There can bo but littlo doubt they and
others of less fame, working with them
will carry enough of their Legislative
ticket to give them tho balance at Col
umbus. Tbis means the shelving of
Senator Thurman and olumbfts Delano,
both aspiring to tho Senate, and the
probable sclcctioti of Judge Ilendlcyor
Tom Erving. Jr. A tolerable good
point wus made on this immaculate
People's pary by Senator Thurman at
Mozart Hall latnly. Ex-Senator Pugh,
in one of his speeches, gave as a reason
for the establishment of tho new party,
the terrible corruption of both tho Re
publican and Deuiocrutin parties. And
that corruption was described as only
Pugh can do it. A little further on,
he.snid', tho People's Party recognised
neither Democrat nor Republican ; but
expected and intended, from those par
tics, to found the new organization
which would have as its platform ''Re
form; and future honesty in publio af
fairs." And just how they were going
to form a perfect honest party, out of
two parties described as foul, rpttcn cor
rupt and notoriously dishonest, was,
Thurman said, what he eould not com
prehend. I think so too. There are,
undoubtedly, occasions wheo party
trammels Bhouldtbe pitched over board;
example, w.heu a ring or clique obtains
control of party machinery for party
ends, instead of the good of the people.
These great refiners, howeverrit seems to
me should have set to work, inside their
respective parties, aud thrown off the
corrupt and dishonest leaders; for the
masses, whether Republican or Demo
cratic are neither corrupt nor naturally
dishonest. And this moJe would have
attained puYity and lasting reform in tho
body politic, mu'ch more speedily than
by the formation of this new party:
which, its leaders say publicly, will not,
perhaps, for years, control the country,
and, knowing this tact, these wonderfully
pure men aro willing to see the country
robbed ani plundered, while their honest
rosebud, growing from (as they say
themselves) a dishonest root, comes to
maturity; instead of scraping off the
mud they profess to see on the two
powerful engines already fitted for the
sreat work and using them. Reform a
tion should have been begun at home.
Rut . we shall see.. If any good come
from this Nazareth no one will -be sorry.
THE YELLOW EEVER
is sending Citizens of Memphis, by the
hundred, to Cincinnati, where they arc
received kindly, and have their needs
generously supplied. By all accoun's
the fever is raging with the greatest
violence in Memphis. Tiie Howard
Association, the Sisters of Mercy, and
the various , Masonic bodies in the
stricken city aro evidently doing the
nobless service of charity. The hospit
als under the care o' the Sisters are
already overcrowe'ed with tho dying and;
the dead. Their Orphan Asylums liave
been converted into temporary Hospitals,
the children having been sent to the
country; the good Sisters whom words
never can sufficiently praise and, in
deed, they do not labor for worldly
praise devote their time inside the
Hospitals, while the Howard Associa
tion and Masonic bodies give their time
to the noble work of seeking out the
sick, and removing them, if possible, to
the Hospitals; or, if the patient bo too
far gone, they relieve him, to the ut
most of their ability, at his house, aud
see that he receives decent burial. The
Hebrews, too, always noted for their
charities are in the van in the good
fight. Truly is the virtue ef charity
the greatest; in the face of a terrible
death gentle women do not flinch, aud
men forget their annimosities of race
and religion, seeking only the good of
their. neighbor. In times of publio ca
lamities, such as we witness now, and
as wc saw in the burning of Chicago
and Boston, how contemptible becomes
the cry of the pedant that "mankind is
daily degenerating." Perhaps ho is
physically. But there is a fountain in
every heart, aud the cry of distress uever
fails to start the pure stream of charity.
These are the times to make us proud of
our r&ce; and the Almighty fcelH not
that it repented Him, that He had made
man. There is no degeneration of the
hcarf L. J. B.
A man recently appeared in Doyles
town, Pa., driving a bor&e which U de
scribed as being without a panicle of
hair, atid without maiu or tail, the ani
mal's hid resembling that of an ele
phant. A young man was discharged for Au
burn prison last Saturday morning who
had earned $400 by overwork during
his four and a balf jears of confinement.
He was a skillful workman engaged in a
tool shop.
The discovery is said to have been
made that it is not necessary to groove a
rifle barrel tbe whole of its length, but
that a tew inches of grooving near the
muzzle will give the bullet all the need
ful amount of spin.
Three cargoes of flour, aggregating
48,300 baraels, have lately been ship
ped from San Francisco to Liverpool,
and the Bulletin speaks of the movement
as a novel and interesting feature of the
export trade of that port.
Columbus, -Ga., boasts of a young
mm who is said to receive a salary of
$1,200 per annum,' and has Baved since
the war some 97,000. He boards at
the free luucb counter and sleeps on the
lee side of a fence.
The Trade in Petroleum.
Hardly one man in a hundred has any
idea of tho extraordinary trade in petro
leum between this city and Europe, con
stituting, as it docs, at least one-third of
our exports, and giving employment, in
all its details, from its source in West
ern Pennsylvania and West Virginia, to
its final destination in the Old World,
to a small army of workmen. The les
son taught by this new article of neces
sity is most suggestive. It is the only
great product that may be said to be ex
ported f. ora America in large quantities
in a finished condition, and there is
scarcely any pott in the world which is
not supplied with Pennsylvania or West
ern Virginia petroleum. Our petroleum
ships trade between eighty-three ports
ou both coutincnts, ao.i the growth of
Philadelphia as the favorito depot may
bo estimated from the fact that whereas,
in 18G3, there were shipped fross New
York 19,674,897 gallons and from
Philadelphia 4,939,708 gallons, in 1865
there were shipped from New York 14,
393,586 gallons and from Philadelphia
12,714,585 gallons. Tbis proportion
must increase in our favor in conse
quence of the extraordinary preparations
of Peter Wright & Sons to accommodate
tbe trade at their great works and
wharves at tbe mouth of the Schuylkill
in tbis city, and also from our direct
connection with the oil wells via the
Alleghany Valley and the Penesylvania
Railroad, and the fact that wo are one
hundred miles by rail nearer water than
New York. This oil is all shipped in a
refined and finished state, and is ready
for use immediately on its arrival in Eu
rope. The extent of tho demand will
bo realized by the number of ports to
which it is forwarded. Take the great
contrasting staple of cotton, which is
sent abroad in a raw condition almost to
the English, French, and German ports.
Suppose, like oil, cotton could be ex
ported, as it ought to be, in a manufac
tured t-hape; suppose the Southern
country had as many cotton factories as
Western Pennsylvania and Western
Virg'n'a have oil wells, is it not reason
able to predict that we should be tbe
rivals in many of the markets of the
world with the British and French, and
that hundreds of millions of dollars now
spent for foreign fabrics wonld he kept
at home? What more powerful argument-could
bs presented in favjr of do
mestic manufactures than this startling
coutrast between finished oil and unfin
ished cotton? Forney's Press.
A number of young ladies of Macon,
Ga., have resolved to attend the State
fair clad in homespun.
A Maine inventor is said to Lave pat
ented a poly-morphous article of furni
ture, combining a wardrobe, bedstead,
dining table and easy chair,
Ned O'Baldwin, the pugilist, has been
scafen'ced, in Peiladulphia, to 2 years iu
the Penitentiary for ag'jravtjd assault
and battery.
The nyiter packing trade of Baltimore
is an enormous one, aud in connection
with fruit aud vegetable packing the
business employs a capital ol about 825,
000,000. A young Atlanta, Ga., . lawyer,, who
was conducting a case in which his
father was to make a plea, gracr fully, al
luded to the old gentleman as "my dis
tinguished associate."
A large number of ladies in Spring
field, Mass, huve been poisoned while
gathering forest leaves this fall One
physician has twenty, cases of poisoning
by alder leaves.
UTICA
mi
(Fomuslt Wood A ttura.) fj
STITIOKIRY t PORTABLE
Steam Engines.
Tie Best & Most Complote Assortment
in the Market ,
These Engfaes have alwuvn mawtMnod the rrry
highest standard of excUerico. We make the
manufacture of Engine. Boiler nod Buw Mills a
specialty. We have the largest and most complete
works of the kind in the oouatry, with muchiaery
specially adapted to the work.
We keep oouatuntly in process largo numbers of
Engines, which we furnish nt the very lowest priced
ana on the shortest notice. We build Enpinea
specially adapted to Miueit, Saw Mill, Grist Mills,
Tanneries, Cotton Uiiu, Thredhera aud aUchusea
Of manufacturing.
We are now building ths oelcbntted Lane Circu
lar 8uw Mill, the best aud must eoinplute saw mill
ever invented.
We make the manufacture of Saw Mill outfit a
tpecial feature of our biuiness, aud coa furnish
complete on the ahortest notice.
Our aim in all casus is to furnish the best ma
chinery in the market, and work absolutely un
cqualud for beauty of desijni, economy and strength.
bund fur Circular and Price List.
UTICA STEAM ENCINE CO.
I lit A, W. T.
ADVERTISE
BY MAIU 25 CENT3
""1 M. PAHK HOW
til mi in i
STEAM ENGINE
THE ELK ADVOCATE.
THE OLDE3T PAPER IN THE
COUNTY,
HAVING TIIE LARGEST CIRCU-
A TION, IT IS THEREFORE
THE ADVERTISING MEDI
UM IN THE COUNTY
$tvttt& to the &txttttt$.t tht gJtouU
o( (Silt Caunttj.
TEP.MS:.$2.00 PER YEAE.
BRING ALONG YOUR ADVER
TISEMENTS AND GET THEM
INSERTED IN TIIE
ADVOCATE, AT LOW JUTES.
If you want to sell anything, Jet the
people know it through the Apvocate,
the great advertising medium.
Job
Printing Office.
Id the Court House, Ridgway, Pa.
The best work done, arid at the
very lowest prices.
Blanks kept constantly cn hand
at this office.'
Hand bills printed at the shortest notice
Call in and get our prices for advertis
ing and jobbing. Satisfaction warranted
Orders by mail promptly attended to
Addkess,
nENRY A. PARSONS, JR.,
Bidgway Pa.
WO
NEW STORE AND NEW GOODS.
HOUSEWARE, AND HOUSEPURNISHING GOODS.
Carpenters' Tools,
Blacksmiths Tools,
Farmers Toos,
Lumbermens Tools.
In fact everything usually kept
in a first-class Hardware Store.
a FlFST-OLtSS TIN SiOPj
Employing none but first-class
Workmen and nothing but first
class material used.
OPPOSITE THE COURT HOUSE, RIDGWAY, PA.
W- S-
-tf.
1
F YOU WANT TO BUY
GOODS CHEAP
00 TO
JAMES II- HAGERTY
Main Street, Eidgwoy, l'a.
DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, BOOTS
SHOES, HATS AND CAPS,
GLASS AND QUEENS
WARE, WOOD AND
W1LLOW-WARE,
TOBACCO AND CIGARS.
A Large Stook of
, Groceries and Provisions.
Tbe BEST BRANDS of FLOUR
Constantly on hand, add sold as cheap
as the CHEAPEST.
JAMES II. HAGERTY.
GIVEN AWAY.
A Fine German Chromo.
WK SEND AH KLEQANT CUBOMO, M0UHTID
AID BIADT TOR FRAMING, FEII TO
BVXBT AGINT FOB
Underground .
OR,
LIFE BELOW THE SURFACE
BY TnOS. IT. KNOX.
942 Pages Octavo. 130 Fine Engravigs.
Relates Inoidets and Accidents beyond
tbe Light of Day ; Startling Adventures in
all parts of the World ; Mines and Mode of
Working them ; Uudencurrents of Society ;
Gambling and its Horrors ; Caverns and
their Mysteries; The Dark Ways of Wick
edness; rrisous and their Secrets; Down
in the Depths of the Sea; Strange Stories
of the Deteotion of Crime.
The book treots of experiences with
brigands; nights in opium dens and gamb
ling hells; Life in prison; Stories of exiles;
adventures among Indians ; journeys
through Sewers anp Catacombs; accidents
in mines; pirates and piracy ; tortures of
the inquesions ; wondertul burglars ; un
derworld of the great cileis, tec, eto.
for this work. Exclusive territory given.
Agents can make $100 a week in selling
this book. Send for circulars and terms to
agents.
J. II. liurr & Hyde,
HARTFORD, CONN., oa CHICAGO, ILL.
Elk County Directory.
President Judge L. D. Wetmore.
Additional Law Judge Hon. Jno. F
Vinoent.
ABSooiate Judges Chas. Luhr, J V.
Houk.
District Attorney J. K, P, Hail.
Sheriff D, C. Oyster.
ProthonoUry Jo., Fred. Schoening.
Treasurer 3. R. Earley.
County Superintendent Rufus Lucore.
Commissioners Robt. Campbell, John
Barr, Geo. Ed. Wets.
Auditors Clark A. Wiloox, George D.
Messenger, and C. W. Barrett.
County Surveyor Geo Wilmsley.
Jury Commieabners. Joseph Kerner.
nd Charles Mead,
SERVICE & CO-
SEND FOR CATALOGUES
Uovello's Cheap Music.
Novelio's Glees, Part Songs, etc., 6 to 12
ctnls.
Novelio's Church Music, b to 12 cents.
Novelio's Octavo Edition of Operas.
Prce $1; or $2, bound in cloth, gilt edges.
N vello's Octavo Edition of Oratorios.
I i paper from U0 cents to $1; cloth with
gi! edges, $1 te $2 each.
Novelio's Cheap 'Editions
OF PIANO-FORTE CLASSICS.
Bach's 48 Preludes and Fugues.
Cloth,
o uo.
Beethoven's 88 Sonatas. Elegantly
und. Full gilt $3 hi).
Beethoven's 34 Piano Pieces,
bound. Full cilt, $3 UU.
Elegautly
Chopin's Vals es. Stiff paptrcovers. ISO
Chop in 'g Polonaises ' " 2 UU
Chopin's Nocturnes " " 2 00
Chopin's Mazurkas " ' 2 00
Chopin's Ballads " " Jj 00
Chopin's Preludes " ' a.iio
Chopin's Sonatas ' " 2 50
Mendelssohn's Complete Piano Works.
Elegant Folio Edtition. Full gilt. Com
plete in 4 volumes $20 00
The Same. 8vo. Full gilt. Complete
in 4 volumes $14 00.
The Same. 8vo. Paper, Complete in
4 volumes $10 CO.
Mendelssohn's Songs Without Words,
folio Ediliou. Full gilt $6 60.
Ootavo Edition. Full gilt 3 50.
Octavo Edition. Puper covers 2 50.
Mozart's 18 Sonaias. Elegantly bound.
Full gilt 8 00.
Schubert's 10 Sonatas. Elegantly bound.
Fall gilt 8 00.
Schubert's Dances. Complete. Elegantly
bound. Full gilt 2 00.
Schubert's Piano Pieces. Elegauily
bound Full gilt 2 00,
Schumauu's Forest Scenes. Nine Easy
PiecaH. Paper covers 80 couts.
Schumann's Piuuo Forte Album. Ele
gautly bound, lull gill li t0.
The Same. Puper covers 1 50.
MOTHER GOOSE,
or National Nursery Rhymes.
Set to. Music by J. W. Elliott, with Co
beautiful Illustrations engraved by the
Brothers Dulziel' Bourds $1.50. Splen
didly bound in cloth, gilt edges, $2.0U.
ASK FOR NOVELLO'S EDI HONS.
Address. S. L. PETERS,
090 Broadway, New York.
Agent for Novelio's Cheap Mubw. 22t9.
NEW LIVERY STABLE
IN
DAN SCRlBNEli WISHES TO LN
form the Cittzens of Ridgway, and the
publio generally, that be baa started a Liv
ery Stable and will keep
GOOD STOCK, GOOD CARRIAGES
ad Buggies, to let upon the most reaeona
ble terms.
JL.He will aho do job teaming.
Stable on Broad street, above Main.
All orders left at the Post Office will meet
prompt attention
Aug 20 1870. tf.
BUSINESS CARDS.
2. A BATHBW, Altorney-at-U,
JT Ridgway, Pa. 2 tf.
11 ALL le Al'VAULiiy,
Attorney i- nt-Lw.
Office in New Brick Building, Main St
RitlKirriy, Elk Co., Pa. TSniitX.
J O. W. BAILET,
ATTORNEY-AT.tAVr.
Ridgway, Elk County, P.
Agnnl, lot the Traveler's life and Ate!
dent Insurance C., f Hartford, Conn.
RUFUS LUCORB, Attorney-at-Law,
Kidgvuy, Elk Co., Pa. Office in
Hall's new liiiek Building. Claims for
collodion promptly attended to.
T3nlly.
EVNOLOS HOUSE,
REYNOLDSVILLE, JIFFEHSCN CO, U.
11. S. BELNAP, pRornrKTOR.
JAMES A. FULLERTON,
Surgeon Dentist, having permanently lo
cated in Higwny, offers his professional ser
vices to the citizens of Ridgway and sur
rounding country. All work warranted.
Ollico in Service & Wheeler's Building, up.
stairs, first door to the left, 73-n-82-ly
J. S. EORLWELL, II, D,
Eclectic Physician and Surgeon, hns remov
ed his ollico from Centre street, to Main st.
Ridgwny, Pa,, in the second story of the
new brick building of John G. Hall, oppo
site Hyde's store.
Office hourn: 8 to 9 .- m: 1 to 2 p, ra, 7
8 p, m, jan U 73
GO. MESSENGER,
Druggist and Paraccutist corner of
Main and Mill slrectf, Kidgwoy, Pa. A
full assortment of carefully selected For
eign and Domestic Drugs. Prescriptions
carefully dispensed at all hours, day r
night. vln3y.
11 8. HARTLEY, M. D.,
Physician'and Surgeon,
Kidgway, Pa. Office in Walker's Building.
Special attention given to Surgery. OSes
house lrom 8 a. in. to 10 p. m. Residence
on corner of South and Court streets, op
posite the new School House. All calls
promptly attended to. vln2yl.
(CHARLES HOLES,
J Watchmaker, Engraver and Jeweler,
Main street, Ridgway, Pa. Agent lor tht
Howe Sewing Machine, and Morton Gold
Pen. Rcpsiring Watches, eto, done with
he same Accuracy as heretofore. Satis
actioa guaranteed. vlnly.
HYDE HOUSE,
Ridgwat, Elk Co., Pa.
W. II. SOHKAM, Proprietor.
Thankful for tho patronage hereUfvra
so liberally bestowed upon him, th aew
proprietor, hopes, by paying strict at
tention to the comfort and convenience of
gueBts, to merit a continuance si the
same.
Oct SO 18G9.
rpHK OLD BCCKTAIL'S HOTEL,
I Kane, MoKean Ce., Fa
R. E. LOOKER, Proprietor.
Thankful for the patronage heretofore sa
liberally bestowed upon him, tho new pre
prietor, Mopes, tty paying strict attention
to the comfort aud convenience of gutsu.
to merit a continuance of the same. The
only stables tor horses in Kane and well
kept night or day. llall attacned to ta
Hotel. ln23yl.
HALL. Ss I3HO
Attorneys - at Law
ST. MARY'S,
ELE COTOTYPNNSYmiTIA.
JO,tNQ. HALL JAS. K. P. HAL
KERSEY HOUSE,
Cgktuevilli, Co., Pa.
Joi'im Collins, Proprietor.
Thankful for the patronage heretofore
so liber illy bestowed upon him, the nw
proprietor, hopes, by paying strict at
tention to tne comfort und convenience
of guests, t merit a continuance of the
Binno.
JAMtS PtNFIELD,
(Succ-sor to W. C. Healy,)
DEALER IN
LEY COOLS, GE0CEEI2S, PROVISIONS,
PRODUCE, FRUITS, &o.
vSoTtf. West End, Ridgway, Pa.
S. A. ROTE,
PH O TOGBAPHEBi
AND DEALEB IN
Cbromos, Stereoscopic Views, Picture
Frames, &o.
WEST END, RIDGWAY, ELK CO. PA
v2n2tf.
RED. SCHOENING,
WHOLESALE AND I1ETA1L DSJL1B !
PIANO-FORTES, ORGANS,
SHEET MUSIC,
and xMUSIC BOOKS
Pianos and orsans to rent and rental an-
plied if purchased.
frotuonotary'i umce, Ridgway, Fa.
v2u20tf.
N
EW STAGE ROUTE.
J. C.BUXNg, Proprietor.
The subscriber havlno- !!,
tract for carrying the U. 8. Mail between
REYNOLDSYILLE It BROCKWAYVILLB
has placed on that road a line of hacks"
Hacks leave tha Vl,.
Reynoldville every Tuesday, Thondftand
oaiuruay on tne at rival or tbe iSrookvil'e
stage, and return the same day. These
uncus couueo t at crockway villa wit a the
Ridgway stag eg, making connection wi k
trains ou the P. & . Road, both east and
west. Every attention to tbe comfort ef
iion wi vi mis ime win oe given, ana
liberal patronage solicited.
Aug. 18-72tf.
JOHN W. FKAZEE,
Attorney- t-Law and Solicitor of
patents and claims,
Speoialy i of PATENT eases.
Office, 909 7th ST., WASHINGTON, D. C.
Refers by permission to Hon, Henry D
Cooke, Governor of tbe Diet., of ColureW