The Elk County advocate. (Ridgway, Pa.) 1868-1883, November 04, 1880, Image 2

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    Henry A. Farsons, Jr., -
Editor
THURSDAY, NOV. 4, 1880.
Entered at the Post-office at
Ridgway, Pa., as second class
vail matter.
After Election.
The election Is over and Garfield Is
elected Just as everybody expected he
would be. The State of Indiana still
holds to the Republican record made
In October, while the State of New
York goes for Garfield by a large ma
jority. The Republicans lose the
States of California, Oregon, Nevada,
and Colorado, which together with 138
electoral votes In the solid south and 9
in New Jersey gives them 162 electoral
votes all told, while Garfield has 207
or 22 more than Is necessary for a
choice. Since the elections held in
Indiana and Ohio no one has doubted
the ultimate success of the Republican
eau3e. The business men had aroused
themselves throughout the country
and putting their shoulders to the
wheel helped in a great measure to
urge on the fast rising wave of public
sentiment. The Democrats vainly en
deavored to sweep back the tide, but
they might as well have attempted to
sweep back the waves of old ocean
with a wisp broom. The Morey letter,
the fertile imagination of a disordered
brain, was distributed by the million
as a last resort to bolster up a losing
cause. The 329 dodge changed many
votes to the Republican side. The
"Solid South" scare and the good
times were two other causes that made
it impossible for the Democrats to
win. The State of New York, it
seems, however, was lost to the Demo
crats by a local fight for Mayor in the
city of New York, and as with this
State Hancock would have had elec
tors to spare it is seen by what small
threads the sword of political success
sometimes hangs. We will not com
ment on what would be the state of
affairs under Democratic rule, but
this much we will say: Let well
enough alone, the country is prosper
ous at present and there is no use
trying to upset things by having a
new party go into power. The House
of Representatives is in doubt ana
may be about evenly divided between
the Republicans and Democrats, leav
ing the Greenbackers holding the
balance of power.
Thanksgiving Proclamation.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 26th, FIXED
AS THE DAY.
Washington, Nov. 1st, 1880. The
following was issued yesterday.
By the President of United States of
America. A Proclamation.
At no period in their history since
the United States became a nation
has this people had so abundant and
so universal reasons for joy and grati
tude at the favor of Almighty God, or
been subject to so profound an obliga
tion to give thank for His loving
kindness, and humbly to implore His
continued care and protection.
Health, wealth and prosperity
thro ughout all our borders; peace,
honor and friendship with all the
world; firm and faithful adherence by
the great body of our population to the
principals of liberty and justice.which
have made our greatness as a Nation,
and the wise institutions and strong
frame of government, and society,
which will perpetuate it for all these
let the thanks of a happy and con
tented peopie, as witn one voice, as
cend in devout homage to the Giver of
all Good.
I therefore recommend that on
Thursday the 25th day of November
next, the people meet in their respec
tive places of worship to make their
acknowledgments to Almighty God
for His bounties and to offer to him
prayers for their continuance.
In witness thereof I have hereunto
Bet niy hand and caused the seal of
the United States to be affixed.
Done at the city of Washington
this first day of November, in the
year of our Lord one thousand eight
hundred and eighty, and of the inde
pendence of the Uuited States the one
hundred and fifth.
(Signed) R. B. Hayes.
By the President,
Wm. M. Everts, Secretary of State
"Don't know half their Value"
"They cured me of Ague, Bilious
ness and Kidney Complaint, as recom
mended. I had a half bottle left
which I used for my two little girls,
who the doctors and neighbors said
could not be cured. I would have lost
both of them one night if I had not
given them Hop Bitters. They did
them so much good I continued their
use until they were cured. That is
why I say you do not know half the
value or nop fitters, ana uo not re
commend them high enough." B
Rochester, N. Y. See other column.
American Rural Home.
Henry Holtenburg bad black hair
and a- ruddy complexion when he
married Miss Schwarz, at Nashville, a
year ago. She supposed he was about
forty, though he made no statement
on that point. The honeymoon was
scarcely over before his hair become
gray, his eheeks lost their color, and
he showed at least sixty years. The
fact was that be had discontinued the
use of dye and rouge. The angry
wife wanted to sue for divorce, but the
lawer told her that the grounds were
not sufficient. The worst she could do
was to desert him. which she lost do
time in doing,-.
329
329
The tirnnd Triumph.
Philadelphia Press.
General James A. Garfield has been
elected President by an overwhelm
ing majority. The victory Is com
plete.declsive and magnificent. When
the Whigs were engaged in the
great log-cabin campaign of 1840 Mar
tin Van Buren said it would be either
a farce or a tornado, and the crafty
politician was buried beneath the
storm. This resplendent triumph.
like that, Is a sweeping tornado. It
is a majestic, popular and patriotic
upraising, like the mighty and irre
sistible surges of public feeling during
the war. It is indeed, the old war
glow rekindkled and all ablaze once
more, under the insolent threat and
the grave danger of a Solid South.
The clear head, and the true heart,
and the strong right arm of the pat
rlotic hosts saved the Nation then,
and they have saved it again.
Never were the lines more sharply
drawn never was the triumph more
emphatic and crushing. It Is Justice
against oppression; equal rights
against proscription; an honest ballot
against systematic fraud; honest
money against false dollars; protection
against free trade; peace and pros
perity against doubt, uncertainty and
danger; the principles of Lincoln and
Seward against thoseof Lee and Jack
son; in a word, the National Cause
against the Lost Cause. Nay more,
on the one side it was the worst ends
aimed at by the worst means. The
Democratic managers flung all pre
tense of principles to the winds. They
trampled upon their own platform,
stultifed their own declarations, ant
and belied their own pledges. Tlies
threw aside all show of fair discussion
and entered upon a shameful crusade
of slander, defamation and crime.
And this glorious result is the verdict
of the people not merely upon tin
odious Democratic cause but upon tin
scandalous Democratic method
fraud, falsehood, forgery and ;i
pretense.
The triumph is grand .or its in,
mediate effects it is grander still In.
cause it shows that the heart of tlii
people is sound and trusty. The loy.
masses have risen in their majesty,
and by their sturdy fidelity have res
cued the imperiled interests of the
nation. They have declared that u
Solid South shall not rule the Repub
lic it fought to destroy. They have
proclaimed that the cause which was
lost on the field shall not be regained
in the forum. They have given notice
that no ruthless hands shall strike
down the protective principle which
has built up our splendid industries.
They have thundered out that they
will not have a change which would
beclould and endanger their present
brilliant prosperity. And they have
reaffirmed their continued confidence
in the Republican party and in the
cause it represents. The Republican
party can review the canvass and hail
the victory with unmixed pride. It
was true to principle. It was brave,
honest and manly. It was courteous
and just to Hancock. It fought the
battle on high grounds. The people
have planted its banner more firmly
than ever on the ramparts of govern
mens; the sweep of their condemna
tion has stranded the shipwrecked
Democracy on the rocks; and who can
tell its dismal and demoralized fu
ture. The great victory which we cele
brate to-day will carry joy from Maine
to California. It means peace and
prosperity. It means a splendid
career of business and industrial ac
tivity. It means the ascendency of
the grand, free, progressive civiliza
tion of the North over the reactionary
spirit of the South. It means a long
lease of power to a faithful, prudent,
honest Republican party. And it
means the overthrow perhaps the
complete dissolution of the Demo
cratic party, which has tried every
device to defraud and to deceive the
people, and which, loaded with its of
fensive record and its wicked purpose
has now been buried beneath a crush
ing weight of popular reprobation.
We have beaten the incendiaries of
the South and the tricksters of the
North. It remains now to be true to
the great cause intrusted to our keep
ing, and the Republican party will
enter upon as grand a mission and as
lofty a career as even the lustrous his
tory of lis post.
329
Elk Couuty Court Proclamation.
WHEREAS, the Hon. L. D. Wet-
more, i'resiuent judge lor me Tmrty
seventh Judicial District of Pennsyl
vania, and Julius Jones, and George
Ed. Weis, Esquires, Associate Justices
in Elk county, have issued their pre
cepts, to me directed, for the time of
holding or the urpnaivs court, court
of Common Pleas, General Quarter
Sessions and Oyer and Terminer, at
Ridgway, for the county of El k on
the THIRD MONDAY IN NOV
18b0, being the 15th day of the month
to continue one ween.
Notice is therefore given to the Cor
oner, Justice or the Peace ami ;on
stables in and for the county or Elk
to appear in their own proper persons
with their records, inquisitions, and
remembrances, to do those things
which or their otnees and in tueir be
half appertain to be done, and all wit
nesses and other persons prosecuting
in behalf of the Commonwealth against
any person or persons, are requested to
be then and there attending, and not
to depart at their peril. Jurors are
requested to be punctual in their at
tendance at the appointed time, agree
able to notice.
Given under ray hand and seal, at
the Sheriff's office, in Ridgway, the
20th day of October In the year of our
Lord one thousand eight hundred and
eighty. -
D. C- OYSTER, Sheriff.
A Wise Deacon.
"Deacon Wilder, I want you to tell
me how you kept yourself and family
well the past season when all the rest
oj us have been sick so much, and
have had the doctors visiting us so
often."
"Bro. Taylor, the answer is very
easy. I used Hop Bitters in tine; kept
my family well and saved the do, tor
bills. Three dollars' worth of it kept
us able to work all the time. I'll war
rant it has cost you and the neighbors
one to two hundred dollars apiece to
keep sick the same time.''
"Deacon, I'll use your medicine
hereafter."
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
LIST OF CAUSES
SET down for trlnl at the Novembe
Term of Court of Common Pleas oi
Elk County !
1. L. Saltonstall et al., vs. J. S.
Hyde et al. No. 64, August Term. 1807.
2. Jordan 8 Neel vs.John Wingart.
No. 26, September Term 1878
3. J. B. Sterley vs St. Marys Ind.
Fire Co. et al. No. 42, November
Term 1878.
4. H. M. Rolfe vs. C. R. Earley.
No. 17, January Term, 1879.
6. Peter Volk, for use, vs. Lorenzo
Vogel. No. 14, September Term, 1879.
6. Zenas M. Webb vs. Frank C.
Bowman. No. 68, September Term
1879.
7. D., A. Pontius vs. Conrad Mover,
Jr. No. 35, November Term, 1879.
8. Chas. A. Lyon vs. P. X. Sorg
No. 79, May Term, 1880.
9. The Township of Fox vs. John
McMackin et al. No. 80, May Term,
1880.
FRED. SCHCENING, Clerk.
hop bitters;
(A medicine, not a Drink.)
CONTAINS
HOPS, BmiU, MANDRAKE,
DANDELION,
And tk Pvitm and Bhst Mkdtcal Quajlx
TIM Or AU. OT1LSB BlTTIBS.
THEY CURE
AU Diseases of the Stomach, Bowels, Blood
Liver, Kidneys, and Urinary Organs, Ner-
SIOOO IN COLD.
Will be paid for a case thejr win not cure or
oeip, or lur anyming impure or lDjunoua
found la them.
Askyonr dropfflBt for Bop flitters and try
Ui e in before you sleep. Take no other.
D I. C. Is an absoluteandtrreslstlblecure for
uruQicennesa, use or opium, looacco ana
narcotics.
Bind fob Cibculab.
AM abOTt loldbvdrunrftU.
Hop Blturt Mfft. Co., Rochester, N. Y., 4 Toronto, On.
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Eighth Normal School District.)
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Manhood: How Lost, How Restored!
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The Specific Medicine is sold by all
Druggists at $1 per package, or six
packages for $5, or will be sent by
muil on receipt of the money by ad
dressing. THE GRAY MEDICINE CO.,
No. 1 Mechanics' Block. Detroit. Mlnh.
BaTSold in Ridgway by all Druggists,
everywhere.
Harris & Ewing, wholesale Agents,
Pittsburgh. nl2-ly
Get your note-heads, letter-heads
i . . ...
uu iu,ciujmi ueuujr printed at I HE
Advocate office.
,
Note paper and envelopes, In
large or small quantities at The Ad
vocate office. Call and see our stock
before purchasing elsewhere.
Scrap pictures and shelf paper at
The Advocate office.
Scrap pictures, shelf paper ma
chine made, and note paper and en
velopea atT he Advocate office.
Note paper and envelopes at this
office.
-Hair oil, perfumery, brushes and
combs at Joel Miller's.
Visiting cards at this office.
The new Bakery this week.
Fresh Rolls. Cakes and Pies at T.
F, Bullers' Masonic builtting ' .
is