The Potter journal. (Coudersport, Pa.) 1857-1872, April 22, 1863, Image 2

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    --SLIDELL IN DESPAID.—The telegrams
from Washington are not always reliable,
but on the hypothesis that a retie can
have a spark of reason left, it is quite
possible that the statement that Slidell,
who was captured on the Trent and then
released, has sent home word-to 'the reb
els that the best thing they.ean do is to
maize the best terms possible - and return
to the Union. It is well for Slidell that
be is in Europe. Such advice, however
judicious, would (not be listened to in reb•
(Abut, and it would probably cost him 'a
larger imprisoutneut than he was subjept
to in , Boston Harbor, should hellow ,re
pm ;
,Davis 'Coo federatO may,
listedto this advice, but bread
kriti, Snell as :have already broken out in
It;chmoind and Petersburg, will force the
`matter upon his attention, and may final
.ly constrain him to heed thp advice of his
• :`forein.n agent.
EETING' JAFFICULTY:—Sneb largo
:Portions of the , Confedericy" 'have been
"subjugated" and oceqied by Federal
'troOps,lhat the / Jeff. Davisites at Rich;
iiton4l.begin7tO fear that they cannot lung
'be able' toilloose members of Congress
to get over the difficuilt3i bY going back to
ihe'gineral ticket system ,' so that a few
towns in Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri,
eon - elect the entire numbeed Con
gresSmen to which each State may be
entitled: The next, step will probably
bit aliow th e Rebeli Who have 'fled from
thase States. to hold an
_election at any
place they may appoint—say in Rich.
tuund. •
BEL.The report of the Congressional
Committee on the conduct of the has
at last been published, and it effectually
deenolishes the last vestige of Gen. Geo.
13. McClellan's military reputation ' if he
Intd(aby left. It shows that, in the Pen.
insole campaign, in the language of
1171kes' Spirit of the Times, "while he
misconceived every operation, and mis•
inansged every movement, he ran away,
persistently, from every haulm"?
The New York Daily Times, in briefly
reviewing the evidence, remarks :
~"We think the country and the world,
in 'view of the facts stated in this report,
i linist come, however , reluctantly, to the
conelusion, that the failure of this army
lai been wholly and exclusively owing
to the incompetency of _its commandin,
Veneral ;
- ai3d those who do not adopt
this explanation must fall back on one in
finitely legs to his credit, namely,.that
Gen. MoClellan did not think the wan
try was to be served and the Union saved
by crushing the rebel armies, and that he
acted' upon this conviction, rather than
upon - bts - duty and hie orders as a tali,
tary•commander. We can see no escape
from one of these two conclusions."
Two free-born colored boys, who went
out as servants to souie of the officers in
the
,42d Massachusetts Regiment, and at
the capture of -Galveston were taker"' by
the rebels, have been sold into slavery by
their captors. What a commentary-upon
the rboasted•ciVilization of the age is this
'enslavement of free-born Northern boys.
The Government should demand their re
lease, on the principle that ; whom the
Meg 'overs the :Cation will protect. Sup-
TroSe the Rebels had- undertaken .to sell
two White servants into SLvery; is. it
voisible to doubt that this GoVerrkment
would have interfered? Justice and hu. I
Inanity and policy alike require that they
0611iie rescued from' the hell to which
6'or capture has consigned them. '
"I HAVE TAKEN ME GROUND that
ice hare gone far enough in this wa.. 1
ann not here to retract anything I have
said." So said ex-Governor T. 11. Sey
tnour,-.-tho defeatedcaudidate for Gayer
-I,dr in Connecticut `'the man mbo headed .
the party which the Post called "gallant
eaitorratives," and hoped forAheir sue
cess,;saying: "We hope for a oonserva
tivo Victory, but dread 'the, odds against
US 'will prove s too powerit4 'to be over
eat:to." Sore enough;' l ‘i:s" were beaten
very badly ;. bat it . Was nothing to . what
happen - to."ui" in Pennsylvania next
Wt4ier.
OF HOARDING SMALL COIN 7--
Those people who now hoard cents and
three cent pieces, do it, probably in the
belief t.lkt . sbey . ere Much more valuable
than the — re.ular paper currency.. We
suppose they do not übderitpt4 that cents
and three emit pieces are'oet worth what
they pass for, and that they are not a le
gal tender for the paytnept of debts
atriounting to wore than thirty cents. A
peripn way hoard three !cent-pieces to
the amount of hundreds o . dollars, but he
eennot pay debts With them:or use theta
at Atli. in business transaction's, beyond the
aniount specified, if others refute to take
.
t
In ;- and with cents the ease is still
. . Such hoarding is foolish busi
.
nes.. These small .coins were wade to
uirculato as °flange, and_thes were made
to circulate as change, and They Were
made to : past for more than. -they pre• in
trinsically worth, , in, order to keep then,
in.circulation; therefore let them circu
late.--NpriVnien Herald.
; The Algua. nioartie over the defeat of
Seymour. - .• But the Argus inhere cop).
harry in :its grief. Jeff. _Davis will .
"mourn." The Richmond Enqu'rer will
icreourn.l. .So will the Louden Times.- . --
the. eoemipe. of our cause, every
where. On the .heory that t 'lnieerY loveo
company," our - neighbor- ought to feel
halitqlegeo in its" team—Many—Jour-
Victor Rugo ha's writtoo a •tragedy of
WI4LU 91d Jvi.n Bwhvu is t e ucgo.
THE JOURNAL.
Coudersport.. Pa. 1
Wednesday, Apr. 1803.
',::- M. W.! 3IcALARitE Y, EmToi. '::
STATE CONVENTION.
The Union State Ccmmittee have issued the
following call for a State Cocvention :
The loyal citizens of Pennsylvania, without
distinction of party, Who desire cordially- to
unite in sustaining the National and State Ad
ministrationsiin their patriotic efforts to sup
press a sectional and unholy-rebellion against
the unity of the Republic - , and who - -d3sire to
support by every power of the Government
our heroic brethren in arms, who arebraving
disease and the peril'Of tho'field, to preserve
the Union of cur fathers, are requested to se
lect the number of delegates equal.to.the Leg
islative representation of-!the State, at such
times and in t such manner us will best respond
to the spirit Of this cal), to meet - in - State Con
vention at Pittsburg; on 'Wedtieticitiy, - die Ist
day of July next, at.ll o'clock. A.. M., on the
said day to nominate candidates' for the offi
ces of Governor and Judge of the Suprernh
Court; and tli`talte Such measures tie may be 'I
deemed necessary to strengthen -the Gayest*
merit in this season of common peril to a com
mon country . . C. P. MARPLE.
uitaarman of M e Li nton Jtate,Gonsmulee.
The following resolution was• adopted. by
the Committee: .
Resolved, That it. be recommended to the
loyal, citizens. of. Pennsylvania, without dis
tinction of party, to organize in each election
district of the State a Union 'LeAgue, for the
purpose of sustaining the Go - vernment in MT
pressing this; causeless and wicked rebellion,
which now .leeks to divide and destroy
_the
Republic. !
The Voice of the . 53d •Penn'a.
`Below wepublish the resolutions plan
i9ously adopted by the • Fifty-Third Pa.
Regiruentat their camp before Frederlcks
brirg:- 1 - Ve also hive a series of resolu
tionsjfroin the 137th regiment, and from
the itimateS of the Hospital at York, Pa.
We cannotipublisl them for lack of room'
but can assure our readers that they
are animated by that hostility to treason
and copperheadism which has asserted
itself in eery northern - regiment. The
majority of# the officers are ,dernoerats.
WHEREAS, It has - come to our knowl7
edge that there are certain partiesin the
North,• who, by their, recent acts and
speeches, have shown that they coincide
and sympathiie with those in rebellion
against tbe_government of the 'United
States, and are bolding meetings both in
publio, and private, denouncing. the Ad.-,
ministration and lb° Officers and Soldiers
in the. field, who are fightinc , to uphold
the Constitution and the enforcement of
the Laws tberefore be it
Resolyed, That. we regard all those per
sons, Lading such feelings as the above,
and- living under the 'protection- of our
Glorious Old Flag as infinitely deeper
dyed traitors than those in open Rebell
ion,
Resolved{ That we aioßegiment,,will
to the best; of our ability and powerAtn
dearer by even the sacrifice of life itself,
to uphold the PreSident of these United
States in the enforcement of the Coma:
tution andithe Laws against open trillion
or 'hidden f'oes. „..: • ..•
Besolvee, That ire place firm- reliance
land implicit confidence in our brave4ind
noble leader Major Gene4.l.Joseph Hook
er and believe him• to fit-ii - capable and
iorie s o commander.
R e.sc ,' ;:f i t ', 'That we earnestly call - Upon.
the North to ferret
all Loyal Frc,7mo 'of
out, expose and p l iC.63l.oll:"Copperheads'f
now in their midst as we wIN endeavor - to,
the t.nemyltrittir front . Isrlte:.3 oite'a thore
led forwqrd. • - •
ResolUte That we look 'forward witu
great expeCtattol4. from the Loyal League
Associations now being formed in the.dif
ferent cities of the North we earnest
ly urge the establishment of such associa
tions threughout the entire country.
Resolved, That there be no compromise
made with the traitors of the South who
are endenyering to destroy the best goy
ertitnenOOri 'the face of the earth-be•
dueaihe : =to us by our forefathers and
bought with their blood—except in their
entire submission of the Constitution and
Laws ()filth° United States. •
lisoleed, That the reports now being
eirenlateld by the disloyal 'parties of the
North ill regard to the detnoralilation 'et
this army, are fatsr in every particular, as
it was never in better-Condition, discip
line 6nd:,l4pirit - 4 than at the present-time.
R. - MCMICHAEL, Prea.'
A. B. MANN, See.
gre . at deal is said nbciut the extrava
gance of the. War Department. The
Nashvile' *Union in criticisfnethis fault
findinespirit,, catls attention 'to the fact
that the!,Utah expedition; which VOniiit
ed Of 16,090 men. ant}' laStedlonlya feiv
months,rfcost six millions of dollars. At
the same rate, the cost of the pre`gent War,
with nearly a million of men would, up,to
this' timb; have been seven billions of dot=
lar i ! l,• • - • • •
Gen. ;Asboth, commanding the Depart
ment of; Tennesse, has .issued au order: to
the effect:that if any • Northern copper
head shalt be found guilty before a Court
Martiabof harboring, feeding or clothing
deserters from the army, er ferrying them
across 4reams, or furnishing them other
faciliti4 to escape, be shall suffer .death.
If wq hang the rebels who attempt to
poison Onr soldiers with Strychnine and
ratsbane ' ' bat should 'svo do with' the
pretended logy lists, who do_the same mur
derous lob' with horrid whiskey? •
'The ;Cincinnati rcunicipat electimj re.
suited,: in the defeat of Lac Copperheads.-
•
The War News.
The studied silence as to the move
ments by Gen..lleoker'e army is broken
at Our Washington correspondent
states thiit our forces, comprising cavalQ„
infantri, and artillery, under Gen:-,Stone :
'man, the Chief of Cavalry, after Making
feinto(elessing at Kelly's Ford,',crossed .
the Rappahannock some distance higher
up, and. rapidly pushed on to Culpeper
and Gordonsville. They now occupy the
latter place, "havingdril , en out the enemy
This movepent took-place Thursday, we
presume. What more might have been
done but, for the inoieportuile storm—the
thitd'Or foirtri` that has failhP Upon the
Army tet'lleii linfornad" - tit - a most oriti6al
moment=we'etin only"guess: • By•the
oc
cupation of Gordonsville, the Rebels lose
the use of the. - Virginia Central Railroad,
and are practically flanked at Fredericks
burg. Perhapi this movement may ac
count for the otherwise unaccountable
suspension' of the grand ; Rebel effort to
cepture'Foiter'aind,retake Newberti, Suf
folk and the Sounds.
The Navy Departmetit-has received an
IPccount,
.ota little tight in the Napsemond
River on-Tuesday last..- (TheNapserpond
is the_Attesun_rhitififtinto the James nest
above Elizabeth River, and is the reguler
water communication with Suffolk, in
which neighborhood the-Rebels have been
operating all the Week.) • , The report
states that on Tuesday• ruorning,solue of
our vessels came down—from 'Suffolk,
propably—the Mt. Washington, steamer,
being disabled. About neon the Rebels
opened, and our vessels at once got into
action. At 1 o'clock the Mount Wash
ington got ag round, and the Reheliniade
her a specia l target at only.
.700 yards.--
At, high water the stearper ; ,Steppingi
Stones hauled the blount,Washington off,
and at 5 p. w. the Rebel batteries were
silenced. Our loss Was slight, only five
killed and eighteen wounded. Our Ves
sels were to anchor for, the night just where
they bad fought all day. "The object of
the enemy was to cross the river, so as to
get in the rear, of Suffolk; but at the
date•cf this report they had not done so,
and it was thought thatlhey were in , re
treat
_From Richmond'', papers of the 16th
we learn that all was quiet at Charleston
(on the 15th, we presume.) : Union
- imps occupy Coles, Kiantah, .and .Sea
brook, Islands. Seabrook lies at the
mouth of the North Edisto River. Hie
wah lies immediately above Seabrk,
from which it is separated by a narrow
creek. Coles .Island lies at the junction
of the. FollY and Stono Inlet. Coles Is
land was occupied before the late attack
by two or three Union regiments, who ad
vanced inland some:distance, driving-the
Rebel picket's before them. -
By way of St. lipuis, we. have a word
from Arkanias:- dispatch from Col.
Phillips, dated the 11th, at Park Hill, in
the Cherokee Nation, states that he has
elexed the Rebels frowilie north Ride of
Arknnsas -Elver, and part of his command
now hold Fort Gibson,. Park Hill is on
the,road -from Fayetteville to Tahlequah,
and 'Pint Gibson is nn old Government
post heyCridlablegnah, on the . Neosho,
near its lonetiou. with =the Arkansas.-•=4
Col. Thiflips,,flad received overtures of
loyalty', , The
Rebels were in force on the south side of
he" Arkatine, and held all the fords.
- „
WO'fbave„extracts by telegraph from
Rickinpnd papers, of, the 13th. They
have diSpatolm, from Jackson, Miss. r of
the 10th, saying that "fifty-three Yankee
guii.bpAs have gone up. the Coldwater
Itiyer, The !Coldwater it Oo stream
running, from Yazoo Pass ! ,to -.the the;
hatchie. If this exaggerated number of
gunboats Or any number have gone, there,
j,,; it another attempt to get into the rear,
of Vick:!% 9 .rg And they say "ifp", the
Coldwater, w --;: 1011, could -lead nowhere but
into the Mississipli! ; *hid!. river : oe
Yazoo expedition' long - ; . ;ticArf:returned.'
They further say thatio• Blaeit Bayou,
stream a -Hide north of Vieksbitrgoon,
neated with Sunflower Pass, the Yankees ,
are retreating and laying waste• the coun•
try as therge. ' .And again, "Our- river
(Mississippi, we preaume), patrolmen r&
pore•that tOrd , Yankee gunboats, convey:
lug five cavalry transports, passed np the
tiver.on the 7th inst.; also 19 transports
with ' , infantry, and 40 -freight ' boats."
Rebel. Vicksburg dispatches to the 10th
report' all. quiet; two trans
ports went up.. the 'river on that day;
loaded wtth troops, and others were pre
paring 'to go. Of:affairs . near Memphis
they say the Yankees are re-enforeing all
their depots on 'the Memphis nod' Ohio
Railroad ; • and :thirty transports: and i
twelve gunboats have gone from Mem
-Iphis•to operate On the COmberland..fleavy
shipwents and being. made on the Mein•
phis and Ohio Road; the Corinth Mer
chants are: shipping their Foods north,
and the sutlers are . selling :their Wagons
!g./k great strategic movement ts afloat."
If these.staternenta arcvmeorrect, the con
clusion about tt—stracegie movement is
equally so: Our "'Union advicen have
vaguely shadovireffsomething of the kind',
but thus far'We have - not sufficient Public
data to' ipeCulato upon the directiiiii or
purposes of the
.ruoTeuient.
A' ebel dispatch states that a. Union
force, mostl3r . ea negro troops, landed at
Pascagoula, Miss. (on the Gulf of 3.lexi.
en, the first put west of Mobile), on the
10th. They mere: attacked by Rebel
Cavalry and lost 15 killed, Rebel loss,
two wounded. ,"The' Yankee . gunboats
put back to Ship Island "withtheir
wounded. Re.enforcernents htige`..Vesn
sent up to renew the action." As.the
Ilebele do not boast of a victpry,„we Wray
safely conclude that our side wi:llOt'de.
hated. We have n„ thing` about the
matter, hoF s ever, from Unten.amiumes.„..-
The Suite of Georgia--Alie-of ex 4the
Confederaey —bothers : Dada; Avery,
way. ''Fir‘t, Alexander Siepltani'ilgiir;
ottsly:opptitedaeceSioti ; then - Gov. Brown
stuck: up pettinabiciugy, far - State . Rights
and fought usainst drafts and compulsory :
taiety; then:the State - Judges pronounced
the Cotisciiption law unconstitertioua4
now there is financial tiouble;•Daijs-de:
mends that the States shall legislatinly
indorse-the bonds of, the . Confederacy;
but the deorgia Senate refuse to do- it,
mid 'pass it bill submitting the , matter to
Ott-veto-Of:the people - 7 —always a popular
wove,, and in 'this 'itistince - boding .do l i
good to Davis. In the llodie,Stephens
tVice President of the Confederacy) of-
fared a resolution not to indorse' these
bonds, ad it came within' two votes of
beingcarried. • '
from New s Charleston report that the
old steaMer Leopord,' now Called the
Stonewall Jackson, was burnt on the llth,
while trying to run the blockade with a
choice 'cargo for the:•Rebels. 'The 'crew
and 'passengers escaped, taking' the mail
with them. Dispatches of the 10th.rep
'resent ail quiet.
MR. EDITOR :' I cannot' understand
he impart of the meaning of the •Presi
dent's PrOelatuation for a National Fast.
He,fsayS, "may we not fear that - the
awful calamity of war -which now
desolated the land; may be buta.punish
ment inflicted upon us for ' our pr.suynp•
tious sin's." I take a Very different-view
of it. If the caning Of Sumner, if other
violent acts in and out , of The balls of
emigre* if 'that long and terrible strug
gle of the Slaieocracy. to idake.Slavery
national instead sectional ) , if, the re
petifea injUries' and insults heaped upon
unOffeeding citizens from the north, who
resided le?tho south, if the opening . , of
mail bags, 'and the firing upon kart
Sumpter. are charg,able upon us, then we'
have justly called down the "calamity"
of this civil war, and ought to repent of
our .'presumptions sins." I shall'devote
the dayqats the President requires, but
my prayer will be- for the success of our
arms, and that the war Way not stop arid!
Pharaoh lets my people go. em not
guilty Of my brother's blood. It is as
they will have it. .pleased to have
the 'Executive call on us to invoke the
Divine blessing, and certainly every one
should respond to the call, but we should
have a Specific object, a national object;
and that object should be the removal
of the cause or 'our calamities. There.
fore r take'exception to that clause of the
Proclaniatien, and consider it unsorted
and nag:noble. H.
April 20, 1863
. Rhode lels \ nd, Maine and lowa are the
only,Stitteti which as yet have signified
to the General. Land Office their accept
acme of the grant of land to the several
States for the establishment of Agrieul•
tural Ccilleges.
Chicago *led 970,264 hogs during
the lastleesson ; Cincinnati oily 268,582.
Chicago - now-.claims to take the lead as
the greatest lumber, pork, beef and grain
market in the world.
All the contracts for iron•olads (twelve
in all) have been awarded.
.The prices
for these will raoge from 8350,000 to
8400.000.-- , They are to be finished and
added to the navy in : about sia'manths.
A great bread rtot has recently- taken
place in. Aiehmond. The riaters,_ were
composed of about 3.000 Romeo, armed
witb.clu i ts i gutts . and stones. , They broke
open the Government and priiite stores;'
l and took' b'reitdi-olothing and whqtever
' else theywanted The militia Were or:
•
tiered out to check the riot, but, failed. to
0.50.. :Jeff: ,Davis and other officials
triode speeches, and told them they should
have what: they needed. They then be-'
came calm, and order was 'once more re.
stored: read is now distributed gratis
;o fawilies of soldierti. '
A bread riol;hal also occurred h 3, Pe
tersbur,,r.a, wOm,en beiug th'e
leaders and the starch outZes of
speculators. ; ; -
In PeenSyliania, Last falt,A,ooo
were *Red, of whoin not more'ittlia'l£3 ) :
000 or 20,000:were foithcOming, the re- .
mainder, having delerte'd"orproeurett
emptions. ;gov;Cettin, ho'.ds 'that. it i&
the busnyvi,of, the general. boyerinnent
to hut)t np the desertera, and husiisited
WashitOon to logic that the State shalt
receive:credit for the maim nttmber of,
her volititteers and.drafted men in the en:;i
forcetnent.of the Conscription act: , :I
• About fifteen or twenty women of At
lents/ O'a., wives , of, Confederate soldierlr
a few days titic,,,after effecting government:
prices far,bacon and beinglefrifed,
quietli t seiied abtut two hundred povlnde
orliacon, some of thern standing , gutfhl
with drairn revolvers , while the rest re
rtfored, , r the4beti. They 'had laige - "fami
lies to 'suppo• rt • '
.•
. Gen; Rosencranz telegraphi,do ihe War
Department_ that Gen. Stanley has re•
tared, from 'his scout ;(in Southern
Tennessee) bringing in soma forty or fit
ty prisoners and 300 serviceable horses
and Mules. "
Sala the Richmond .4nquiror : "It re
quired; forty : years to „effect dissolution'.
Their friends in the North say it was
effected, in 1860,, by„ Lin celn's eke
-don • bit _o . they'course;;knOci.thev
when. - they - say
ed." • ,
'tilierwarm friendship, like,hot potatoes
are ciniilly;dropped. -
NEW
1116
Purchased during
decline in
f
DRY
Ladies
•'
HA.Ts
BOOTS
ramp]
PRO
1E!
CKERY,
Fan
Ea
Wool, Twin
NAILS;
woo
We respectfully
lean, feeling confident
,
hat we can supply,
wants of all on terms
ct •
their sciisfacti.i,
gi ing better Goods for
ess MONEY than
can
House in Potter o
•
djouning conntaes.
We hare also adde
'of goods, a new nd
co .:pletc stock . of
PIIR
DRUGS.
=I
Medicin
IMI
®IN
Paints 0
Glues,
Mil
LE SOAP.
Sponges.
rks. Bottles
Vials art
Eamp-Glob!Eso
MI
MI
~~
WHICH
be sold
i the
-• • -
.7 RATES.
vLRir fAo
oit
IMMEEI
SH.
MEI
to Cali and See !
Donn,F
EOM
BI3INS &Ct).
P. A. S
CORNER OP A
: !1D SECONDSTREETEt
, v
3, 1 •t . . ,• • •
.BPORT; P 4.
cOpDE
Mini
INIEI
oDs
IT
Cez4, panic itid-gitfat.
den New York.
opps,
ess Goods,
•
Olothing,
3ah CAPS.
na SIIQES;
RIES
- lONS,
G00d.4;
EIM
Wall• Paper,
GLASS,
0,2
-WARE.
be had at any ether
GROCERIES,
lone well-known-stock
Hats & Caps,
EaTdware,
Chemicals,
Varnishes,:
Together with some i:of thibest
ye Stuffs
KEROSENE OIL,' .
far superior to the Oil Creek or Tidioute Oil,
LAMP &LAMP FIXINGS,
• POCKET CUTLERY,
MEM
Also a few more of those superior.
CANDOR PLOWS,•,
SLEIGH SHOES;
GLASS, SASH, PUTTY,. .
INK, PAPER, ENVELOPES,
And other kinds of . •
&c.
WALL PAPER,
=ZEE
WINDOW CURTAINS
And other articles which time alone_ for
bids' is tiimentiou, all of which be
sold as low as the WAR PRICES win
allow—for 'strictly _
READY-PAY !!
And for those articles we take, the high
est market' pries will be paid.
We are also General : Agents for-;
DR. D. J AYNE'S Family Medicines.
DR. AYER'S Medicines, '
BRANEORETH'S Pills,.
KENNEDY'SIMedicaI Discovery,
.
And all the standard Medicines of the day
CALL AND SEC
.
' NAV. 'The payifor the Goods mast be eir
hand: when:the Goods are delivered; as we are.
determined to live to, the motto of "Pay air
Yon Go:" • .; •*.
Jiiit one thing more.. Jiikinents,notes
and 'book accounts mach gee bare: on bead
must be settled and closed up immediately or
we fear they will be inc - eased faster than the
usual rate of limiest. =-- Dec /31
.ONES' COLUMN
_NEW GOODS
AND
*SOMETHING E-LNE
_,
.. i
MED
NEW!
11
T HE subscribers at, their .
OLD STAND ON BLAIN SW?"
COUDERSPORT,
Offer l, to their old customers end the publiii
:enendly for Cash, United States .Treinnui
Notes (which by the warare. tagen.at Par,)
Wheat, Corn, Oats, Buckwheat, BUtter,Cheesor
Hides, Pelts, Deer Skins, and till other kind*
of Skins, such as Calf skins, &c., also, Beim,
Bens, Venison, and some other thine this
can't be thought of,
A LARGE AND 'WELL-SELECTED
ASSORTMENT.. OF
DRY. GOODS,
BOOTS '& SHOES,
DEADYMADE CLOTHING
PROVISIONa
S !MEDICINES,
Paints, Oils l iand Dye Stairs,
STATIONARY.
C: S. & E. A; JONES.
i
Iron, Nallsi,